diff --git "a/data/processed/nyt.test02.jsonl" "b/data/processed/nyt.test02.jsonl" new file mode 100644--- /dev/null +++ "b/data/processed/nyt.test02.jsonl" @@ -0,0 +1,1500 @@ +{"question": "What was the dish considered?", "paragraph": "Which makes it a weekend dish, probably? Not necessarily. You could set the currants in vinegar in the morning and let them sit all day. Make the dressing in early evening as the squash roasts and cools. Then lay out the half moons across a platter that\u2019s warmer than your room. And drape the sauce \u2014 thick and almost clumpy \u2014 across them, and onto the negative space between them as well. It seems like a lot of sauce. It isn\u2019t, though, when there\u2019s good bread to mop it up as your companions stab at the squash, at the little nuts, at the small dice of cheese. \u2018\u2018I eat a lot of vegetarian food at home,\u2019\u2019 Baumgart said. \u2018\u2018But I don\u2019t necessarily like a vegetarian entree. I don\u2019t like that as a concept at all. I\u2019d pair this salad with a plate of braised greens, some good bread, and I\u2019d be all set.\u2019\u2019 You will be, too.", "answer": "weekend dish", "sentence": "Which makes it a weekend dish , probably?", "paragraph_sentence": " Which makes it a weekend dish , probably? Not necessarily. You could set the currants in vinegar in the morning and let them sit all day. Make the dressing in early evening as the squash roasts and cools. Then lay out the half moons across a platter that\u2019s warmer than your room. And drape the sauce \u2014 thick and almost clumpy \u2014 across them, and onto the negative space between them as well. It seems like a lot of sauce. It isn\u2019t, though, when there\u2019s good bread to mop it up as your companions stab at the squash, at the little nuts, at the small dice of cheese. \u2018\u2018I eat a lot of vegetarian food at home,\u2019\u2019 Baumgart said. \u2018\u2018But I don\u2019t necessarily like a vegetarian entree. I don\u2019t like that as a concept at all. I\u2019d pair this salad with a plate of braised greens, some good bread, and I\u2019d be all set. \u2019\u2019 You will be, too.", "paragraph_answer": "Which makes it a weekend dish , probably? Not necessarily. You could set the currants in vinegar in the morning and let them sit all day. Make the dressing in early evening as the squash roasts and cools. Then lay out the half moons across a platter that\u2019s warmer than your room. And drape the sauce \u2014 thick and almost clumpy \u2014 across them, and onto the negative space between them as well. It seems like a lot of sauce. It isn\u2019t, though, when there\u2019s good bread to mop it up as your companions stab at the squash, at the little nuts, at the small dice of cheese. \u2018\u2018I eat a lot of vegetarian food at home,\u2019\u2019 Baumgart said. \u2018\u2018But I don\u2019t necessarily like a vegetarian entree. I don\u2019t like that as a concept at all. I\u2019d pair this salad with a plate of braised greens, some good bread, and I\u2019d be all set.\u2019\u2019 You will be, too.", "sentence_answer": "Which makes it a weekend dish , probably?", "paragraph_id": "5d700662c8e4820a9b66ab4b"} +{"question": "How old is Paige Decker?", "paragraph": "Paige Decker sustained a career-ending concussion in November 2013 when she was playing for Yale and was blindsided by a check that sent her head crashing to the ice. Decker has visited more than 40 physicians throughout North America, searching to alleviate the daily pains that saturate her nerves and muscles. She often leaves only with misdiagnoses and thousands of dollars in bills that her insurance does not cover. She compared her constant headaches to barbed wire constricting her brain. Decker, 23, left a consulting job in Boston a year ago because of her health. She is largely confined to her parents\u2019 house in Connecticut.", "answer": "23", "sentence": "Decker, 23 , left a consulting job in Boston a year ago because of her health.", "paragraph_sentence": "Paige Decker sustained a career-ending concussion in November 2013 when she was playing for Yale and was blindsided by a check that sent her head crashing to the ice. Decker has visited more than 40 physicians throughout North America, searching to alleviate the daily pains that saturate her nerves and muscles. She often leaves only with misdiagnoses and thousands of dollars in bills that her insurance does not cover. She compared her constant headaches to barbed wire constricting her brain. Decker, 23 , left a consulting job in Boston a year ago because of her health. She is largely confined to her parents\u2019 house in Connecticut.", "paragraph_answer": "Paige Decker sustained a career-ending concussion in November 2013 when she was playing for Yale and was blindsided by a check that sent her head crashing to the ice. Decker has visited more than 40 physicians throughout North America, searching to alleviate the daily pains that saturate her nerves and muscles. She often leaves only with misdiagnoses and thousands of dollars in bills that her insurance does not cover. She compared her constant headaches to barbed wire constricting her brain. Decker, 23 , left a consulting job in Boston a year ago because of her health. She is largely confined to her parents\u2019 house in Connecticut.", "sentence_answer": "Decker, 23 , left a consulting job in Boston a year ago because of her health.", "paragraph_id": "5d702552c8e4820a9b66d1ba"} +{"question": "Who moved into abandoned houses such as Mr. Shoul's?", "paragraph": "POUZE KHOON, Iran \u2014 The early-morning sun meagerly brightened the gloom of this sad township, a collection of empty, crumbling houses along a highway through the dusty desert landscape in southeastern Iran. Until a decade or so ago, Amin Shoul would come here every year to help his father harvest pistachios, the nuts that are as much a symbol of Iran as caviar. Now, with the last reserves of groundwater tapped out, the family\u2019s grove and the seemingly endless fields beyond it are filled with dead trees, their bone-colored branches a deathly contrast to the turquoise sky. Mr. Shoul, 32, a journalist, said he and his family had moved away years ago, leaving the house to squatters, unemployed laborers living off meager government stipends \u2014 and even they had started to leave. \u201cI don\u2019t see how we can ever return to the past,\u201d he remarked, matter-of-factly.", "answer": "squatters", "sentence": "Mr. Shoul, 32, a journalist, said he and his family had moved away years ago, leaving the house to squatters , unemployed laborers living off meager government stipends \u2014 and even they had started to leave.", "paragraph_sentence": "POUZE KHOON, Iran \u2014 The early-morning sun meagerly brightened the gloom of this sad township, a collection of empty, crumbling houses along a highway through the dusty desert landscape in southeastern Iran. Until a decade or so ago, Amin Shoul would come here every year to help his father harvest pistachios, the nuts that are as much a symbol of Iran as caviar. Now, with the last reserves of groundwater tapped out, the family\u2019s grove and the seemingly endless fields beyond it are filled with dead trees, their bone-colored branches a deathly contrast to the turquoise sky. Mr. Shoul, 32, a journalist, said he and his family had moved away years ago, leaving the house to squatters , unemployed laborers living off meager government stipends \u2014 and even they had started to leave. \u201cI don\u2019t see how we can ever return to the past,\u201d he remarked, matter-of-factly.", "paragraph_answer": "POUZE KHOON, Iran \u2014 The early-morning sun meagerly brightened the gloom of this sad township, a collection of empty, crumbling houses along a highway through the dusty desert landscape in southeastern Iran. Until a decade or so ago, Amin Shoul would come here every year to help his father harvest pistachios, the nuts that are as much a symbol of Iran as caviar. Now, with the last reserves of groundwater tapped out, the family\u2019s grove and the seemingly endless fields beyond it are filled with dead trees, their bone-colored branches a deathly contrast to the turquoise sky. Mr. Shoul, 32, a journalist, said he and his family had moved away years ago, leaving the house to squatters , unemployed laborers living off meager government stipends \u2014 and even they had started to leave. \u201cI don\u2019t see how we can ever return to the past,\u201d he remarked, matter-of-factly.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Shoul, 32, a journalist, said he and his family had moved away years ago, leaving the house to squatters , unemployed laborers living off meager government stipends \u2014 and even they had started to leave.", "paragraph_id": "5d701d5cc8e4820a9b66c8f8"} +{"question": "What would the deal improve?", "paragraph": "If the deal is a political earthquake for Greece, it also puts the country on course for a major economic shake-up. It aims to force Greece once again to tackle many issues it has kicked aside for years, from simple ones like getting reliable economic statistics to more complex ones like opening up product and service markets, further streamlining the pension system, improving tax collection and moving ahead on privatization. Yet even if the Greek Parliament passes a spate of reforms this week, Athens has a spotty track record at carrying out tough changes. As a result, Mr. Tsipras has now agreed to have the International Monetary Fund survey every move he and his government make.", "answer": "tax collection", "sentence": "It aims to force Greece once again to tackle many issues it has kicked aside for years, from simple ones like getting reliable economic statistics to more complex ones like opening up product and service markets, further streamlining the pension system, improving tax collection and moving ahead on privatization.", "paragraph_sentence": "If the deal is a political earthquake for Greece, it also puts the country on course for a major economic shake-up. It aims to force Greece once again to tackle many issues it has kicked aside for years, from simple ones like getting reliable economic statistics to more complex ones like opening up product and service markets, further streamlining the pension system, improving tax collection and moving ahead on privatization. Yet even if the Greek Parliament passes a spate of reforms this week, Athens has a spotty track record at carrying out tough changes. As a result, Mr. Tsipras has now agreed to have the International Monetary Fund survey every move he and his government make.", "paragraph_answer": "If the deal is a political earthquake for Greece, it also puts the country on course for a major economic shake-up. It aims to force Greece once again to tackle many issues it has kicked aside for years, from simple ones like getting reliable economic statistics to more complex ones like opening up product and service markets, further streamlining the pension system, improving tax collection and moving ahead on privatization. Yet even if the Greek Parliament passes a spate of reforms this week, Athens has a spotty track record at carrying out tough changes. As a result, Mr. Tsipras has now agreed to have the International Monetary Fund survey every move he and his government make.", "sentence_answer": "It aims to force Greece once again to tackle many issues it has kicked aside for years, from simple ones like getting reliable economic statistics to more complex ones like opening up product and service markets, further streamlining the pension system, improving tax collection and moving ahead on privatization.", "paragraph_id": "5d701a55c8e4820a9b66c615"} +{"question": "How did Jamal the Pepsi competition", "paragraph": "Jamal and Cookie continue meeting furtively in studios at night, the two building a saccharine sound that is less progressive or scene-changing than their wildly satisfied grins let on. But the clandestine collaboration is endearing, if mostly because mother and son are bonding again despite the constant surveillance of Lucious and Thirsty. (If Cookie\u2019s bedridden romp last week with The Man with the Longhorn Tattoo inspired fear that Delgado might destroy her too, her defense of her son against Delgado\u2019s aggression provided a needed assurance). Loyalty lines across Cookie\u2019s scrappy startup and Lucious\u2019s rickety Wall Street behemoth have been eroding for quite some time, and Jamal\u2019s nomination to be the next face of Pepsi surfaces as the fault-line. Jamal baits Cookie and Lucious into coming to a studio session, hoping that the two might meld their angelic flutes and brutish percussion into one electronic monster. Their petulance prevails, however, but it\u2019s more a bruise to Jamal the son than a setback to the Jamal the Musician. Jamal ends up cutting and pasting the two songs together himself and winning the Pepsi competition. The rap battle between Freda and Hakeem was unambiguously presented as the episode\u2019s cathartic zenith, and according to the performance logic undergirding the differences in street and studio rap, it was laughably obvious Freda would bring the carnage. Prep scenes showed Hakeem satisfactorily riffing on word associations, Freda annihilating her opponent with daggered lyrical quips. To me, and likely every viewer marginally familiar with commonly agreed-upon rules of battle rap engagement, Freda was obviously the winner. She zeroed in on Hakeem as her target, deftly weaving sophisticated lyrical attacks athletically and flamboyantly. And although it was meant to cut her opponent down, Freda\u2019s expression of admiration for Cookie\u2019s hustle makes me wonder what a Gatz/Dynasty track would sound like.", "answer": "angelic flutes and brutish percussion", "sentence": "Jamal baits Cookie and Lucious into coming to a studio session, hoping that the two might meld their angelic flutes and brutish percussion into one electronic monster.", "paragraph_sentence": "Jamal and Cookie continue meeting furtively in studios at night, the two building a saccharine sound that is less progressive or scene-changing than their wildly satisfied grins let on. But the clandestine collaboration is endearing, if mostly because mother and son are bonding again despite the constant surveillance of Lucious and Thirsty. (If Cookie\u2019s bedridden romp last week with The Man with the Longhorn Tattoo inspired fear that Delgado might destroy her too, her defense of her son against Delgado\u2019s aggression provided a needed assurance). Loyalty lines across Cookie\u2019s scrappy startup and Lucious\u2019s rickety Wall Street behemoth have been eroding for quite some time, and Jamal\u2019s nomination to be the next face of Pepsi surfaces as the fault-line. Jamal baits Cookie and Lucious into coming to a studio session, hoping that the two might meld their angelic flutes and brutish percussion into one electronic monster. Their petulance prevails, however, but it\u2019s more a bruise to Jamal the son than a setback to the Jamal the Musician. Jamal ends up cutting and pasting the two songs together himself and winning the Pepsi competition. The rap battle between Freda and Hakeem was unambiguously presented as the episode\u2019s cathartic zenith, and according to the performance logic undergirding the differences in street and studio rap, it was laughably obvious Freda would bring the carnage. Prep scenes showed Hakeem satisfactorily riffing on word associations, Freda annihilating her opponent with daggered lyrical quips. To me, and likely every viewer marginally familiar with commonly agreed-upon rules of battle rap engagement, Freda was obviously the winner. She zeroed in on Hakeem as her target, deftly weaving sophisticated lyrical attacks athletically and flamboyantly. And although it was meant to cut her opponent down, Freda\u2019s expression of admiration for Cookie\u2019s hustle makes me wonder what a Gatz/Dynasty track would sound like.", "paragraph_answer": "Jamal and Cookie continue meeting furtively in studios at night, the two building a saccharine sound that is less progressive or scene-changing than their wildly satisfied grins let on. But the clandestine collaboration is endearing, if mostly because mother and son are bonding again despite the constant surveillance of Lucious and Thirsty. (If Cookie\u2019s bedridden romp last week with The Man with the Longhorn Tattoo inspired fear that Delgado might destroy her too, her defense of her son against Delgado\u2019s aggression provided a needed assurance). Loyalty lines across Cookie\u2019s scrappy startup and Lucious\u2019s rickety Wall Street behemoth have been eroding for quite some time, and Jamal\u2019s nomination to be the next face of Pepsi surfaces as the fault-line. Jamal baits Cookie and Lucious into coming to a studio session, hoping that the two might meld their angelic flutes and brutish percussion into one electronic monster. Their petulance prevails, however, but it\u2019s more a bruise to Jamal the son than a setback to the Jamal the Musician. Jamal ends up cutting and pasting the two songs together himself and winning the Pepsi competition. The rap battle between Freda and Hakeem was unambiguously presented as the episode\u2019s cathartic zenith, and according to the performance logic undergirding the differences in street and studio rap, it was laughably obvious Freda would bring the carnage. Prep scenes showed Hakeem satisfactorily riffing on word associations, Freda annihilating her opponent with daggered lyrical quips. To me, and likely every viewer marginally familiar with commonly agreed-upon rules of battle rap engagement, Freda was obviously the winner. She zeroed in on Hakeem as her target, deftly weaving sophisticated lyrical attacks athletically and flamboyantly. And although it was meant to cut her opponent down, Freda\u2019s expression of admiration for Cookie\u2019s hustle makes me wonder what a Gatz/Dynasty track would sound like.", "sentence_answer": "Jamal baits Cookie and Lucious into coming to a studio session, hoping that the two might meld their angelic flutes and brutish percussion into one electronic monster.", "paragraph_id": "5d700f6bc8e4820a9b66bb7d"} +{"question": "How many dinner guests were present?", "paragraph": "But American officials helped the Afghans choreograph some of the more poignant touches, such as inviting the widow of an American general killed in Kabul last year by an Afghan soldier to a speech Mr. Ghani delivered on Monday at the Pentagon, allowing the Afghan leader to thank her publicly for her family\u2019s sacrifice. There was also behind-the-scenes lobbying, and not all of it came for free. Shortly after taking office in September, Mr. Ghani\u2019s government hired the Podesta Group for $50,000 a month to lobby on behalf of Afghanistan and help with public relations, according to filings with the Justice Department. One of the founders of the firm is John D. Podesta, who served as counselor to Mr. Obama and represented the administration at Mr. Ghani\u2019s inauguration. Mr. Podesta is no longer involved with the firm. Mr. Podesta, in fact, was one of the 14 dinner guests on Tuesday to whom Mr. Ghani referred by name in his remarks. As a result of the groundwork laid by many of those guests, the Obama administration was largely in sync with Mr. Ghani even before this week\u2019s visit.", "answer": "14", "sentence": "Mr. Podesta, in fact, was one of the 14 dinner guests on Tuesday to whom Mr. Ghani referred by name in his remarks.", "paragraph_sentence": "But American officials helped the Afghans choreograph some of the more poignant touches, such as inviting the widow of an American general killed in Kabul last year by an Afghan soldier to a speech Mr. Ghani delivered on Monday at the Pentagon, allowing the Afghan leader to thank her publicly for her family\u2019s sacrifice. There was also behind-the-scenes lobbying, and not all of it came for free. Shortly after taking office in September, Mr. Ghani\u2019s government hired the Podesta Group for $50,000 a month to lobby on behalf of Afghanistan and help with public relations, according to filings with the Justice Department. One of the founders of the firm is John D. Podesta, who served as counselor to Mr. Obama and represented the administration at Mr. Ghani\u2019s inauguration. Mr. Podesta is no longer involved with the firm. Mr. Podesta, in fact, was one of the 14 dinner guests on Tuesday to whom Mr. Ghani referred by name in his remarks. As a result of the groundwork laid by many of those guests, the Obama administration was largely in sync with Mr. Ghani even before this week\u2019s visit.", "paragraph_answer": "But American officials helped the Afghans choreograph some of the more poignant touches, such as inviting the widow of an American general killed in Kabul last year by an Afghan soldier to a speech Mr. Ghani delivered on Monday at the Pentagon, allowing the Afghan leader to thank her publicly for her family\u2019s sacrifice. There was also behind-the-scenes lobbying, and not all of it came for free. Shortly after taking office in September, Mr. Ghani\u2019s government hired the Podesta Group for $50,000 a month to lobby on behalf of Afghanistan and help with public relations, according to filings with the Justice Department. One of the founders of the firm is John D. Podesta, who served as counselor to Mr. Obama and represented the administration at Mr. Ghani\u2019s inauguration. Mr. Podesta is no longer involved with the firm. Mr. Podesta, in fact, was one of the 14 dinner guests on Tuesday to whom Mr. Ghani referred by name in his remarks. As a result of the groundwork laid by many of those guests, the Obama administration was largely in sync with Mr. Ghani even before this week\u2019s visit.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Podesta, in fact, was one of the 14 dinner guests on Tuesday to whom Mr. Ghani referred by name in his remarks.", "paragraph_id": "5d70263ac8e4820a9b66d283"} +{"question": "What does Simon Magakwe do for a living?", "paragraph": "\u25a0 The South African sprinter Simon Magakwe will miss the 2016 Olympics after refusing to take an out-of-competition doping test, his national association announced. Magakwe was barred from international athletics for two years, ruling him out of the Rio Olympics and the world championships in Beijing this year. (AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE)", "answer": "sprinter", "sentence": "\u25a0 The South African sprinter Simon Magakwe will miss the 2016 Olympics after refusing to take an out-of-competition doping test, his national association announced.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u25a0 The South African sprinter Simon Magakwe will miss the 2016 Olympics after refusing to take an out-of-competition doping test, his national association announced. Magakwe was barred from international athletics for two years, ruling him out of the Rio Olympics and the world championships in Beijing this year. (AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE)", "paragraph_answer": "\u25a0 The South African sprinter Simon Magakwe will miss the 2016 Olympics after refusing to take an out-of-competition doping test, his national association announced. Magakwe was barred from international athletics for two years, ruling him out of the Rio Olympics and the world championships in Beijing this year. (AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE)", "sentence_answer": "\u25a0 The South African sprinter Simon Magakwe will miss the 2016 Olympics after refusing to take an out-of-competition doping test, his national association announced.", "paragraph_id": "5d7016adc8e4820a9b66c2cb"} +{"question": "What country in the first episode had a gorilla sanctuary?", "paragraph": "Was that venerable PBS venturing into the lowbrow world of veterinary television this week? Yes, it was, and Dr. Jeff should take a lesson. A three-part series called \u201cOperation Wild,\u201d which began on Wednesday on PBS, brings us stirring stories of veterinary teams around the globe engaged in unusual high-tech efforts to save sick or injured wild animals. The methods employed are often adapted from human medical care. The opening episode included the stories of an elephant in Laos that had been shot in the leg, a gorilla at a wildlife sanctuary in Cameroon with a damaged wrist, and an annual kite-flying festival in India that leaves hundreds of birds injured by the kite strings. Next week\u2019s installment offers efforts to give a rhinoceros a skin graft and to restore the sight of an orangutan.", "answer": "Cameroon", "sentence": "The opening episode included the stories of an elephant in Laos that had been shot in the leg, a gorilla at a wildlife sanctuary in Cameroon with a damaged wrist, and an annual kite-flying festival in India that leaves hundreds of birds injured by the kite strings.", "paragraph_sentence": "Was that venerable PBS venturing into the lowbrow world of veterinary television this week? Yes, it was, and Dr. Jeff should take a lesson. A three-part series called \u201cOperation Wild,\u201d which began on Wednesday on PBS, brings us stirring stories of veterinary teams around the globe engaged in unusual high-tech efforts to save sick or injured wild animals. The methods employed are often adapted from human medical care. The opening episode included the stories of an elephant in Laos that had been shot in the leg, a gorilla at a wildlife sanctuary in Cameroon with a damaged wrist, and an annual kite-flying festival in India that leaves hundreds of birds injured by the kite strings. Next week\u2019s installment offers efforts to give a rhinoceros a skin graft and to restore the sight of an orangutan.", "paragraph_answer": "Was that venerable PBS venturing into the lowbrow world of veterinary television this week? Yes, it was, and Dr. Jeff should take a lesson. A three-part series called \u201cOperation Wild,\u201d which began on Wednesday on PBS, brings us stirring stories of veterinary teams around the globe engaged in unusual high-tech efforts to save sick or injured wild animals. The methods employed are often adapted from human medical care. The opening episode included the stories of an elephant in Laos that had been shot in the leg, a gorilla at a wildlife sanctuary in Cameroon with a damaged wrist, and an annual kite-flying festival in India that leaves hundreds of birds injured by the kite strings. Next week\u2019s installment offers efforts to give a rhinoceros a skin graft and to restore the sight of an orangutan.", "sentence_answer": "The opening episode included the stories of an elephant in Laos that had been shot in the leg, a gorilla at a wildlife sanctuary in Cameroon with a damaged wrist, and an annual kite-flying festival in India that leaves hundreds of birds injured by the kite strings.", "paragraph_id": "5d703ae9c8e4820a9b66e260"} +{"question": "30,000 migrants travelling north from what country could become stranded in Slovenia?", "paragraph": "LJUBLJANA, Slovenia \u2014 Slovenia began erecting a razor-wire fence at its border with Croatia on Wednesday to stem the inflow of migrants, as winter closes in and countries to the north tighten their own border controls. A convoy of army trucks carrying barbed wire and construction equipment arrived in the border town of Veliki Obrez at dawn on Wednesday. Soldiers rolled out the wire along the Slovenian bank of the Sotla River, which forms part of the 400-mile border with Croatia. Slovenia is an important country on the migration route through the Balkans because its border with Croatia also forms the southern frontier of Europe\u2019s Schengen area, where passport-free travel is possible. Since Oct. 17, when Hungary closed its border with Croatia and redirected the flow, more than 180,000 migrants from Africa, the Middle East and Asia have entered Slovenia, a nation of two million people. Though the new fence threatens to block the route again just as winter is approaching, migrants have largely been able to find their way around such obstacles. Officials are anticipating that asylum seekers may now turn to Albania and Italy as an alternative routes to more prosperous European countries in the north. Most of the migrants moving through the Balkans have gone on to Austria and then Germany. Slovenia has been saying that it could manage the influx of about 6,000 to 8,000 asylum seekers a day as long as roughly the same number moved on each day. But Austria said recently that it could accept only 6,000 people a day from Slovenia, and Germany has started to tighten some controls on arrivals. As a result, the Slovenian prime minister, Miro Cerar, said that it was very likely that many of the 30,000 migrants who were traveling north from Greece could become stranded in Slovenia, which has limited room to accommodate them. \u201cIt\u2019s a big number,\u201d Mr. Cerar said at a news conference on Tuesday, after the government approved construction of the fence. \u201cIf we don\u2019t act now, we could have a humanitarian catastrophe on the territory of Slovenia,\u201d he said.", "answer": "Greece", "sentence": "As a result, the Slovenian prime minister, Miro Cerar, said that it was very likely that many of the 30,000 migrants who were traveling north from Greece could become stranded in Slovenia, which has limited room to accommodate them.", "paragraph_sentence": "LJUBLJANA, Slovenia \u2014 Slovenia began erecting a razor-wire fence at its border with Croatia on Wednesday to stem the inflow of migrants, as winter closes in and countries to the north tighten their own border controls. A convoy of army trucks carrying barbed wire and construction equipment arrived in the border town of Veliki Obrez at dawn on Wednesday. Soldiers rolled out the wire along the Slovenian bank of the Sotla River, which forms part of the 400-mile border with Croatia. Slovenia is an important country on the migration route through the Balkans because its border with Croatia also forms the southern frontier of Europe\u2019s Schengen area, where passport-free travel is possible. Since Oct. 17, when Hungary closed its border with Croatia and redirected the flow, more than 180,000 migrants from Africa, the Middle East and Asia have entered Slovenia, a nation of two million people. Though the new fence threatens to block the route again just as winter is approaching, migrants have largely been able to find their way around such obstacles. Officials are anticipating that asylum seekers may now turn to Albania and Italy as an alternative routes to more prosperous European countries in the north. Most of the migrants moving through the Balkans have gone on to Austria and then Germany. Slovenia has been saying that it could manage the influx of about 6,000 to 8,000 asylum seekers a day as long as roughly the same number moved on each day. But Austria said recently that it could accept only 6,000 people a day from Slovenia, and Germany has started to tighten some controls on arrivals. As a result, the Slovenian prime minister, Miro Cerar, said that it was very likely that many of the 30,000 migrants who were traveling north from Greece could become stranded in Slovenia, which has limited room to accommodate them. \u201cIt\u2019s a big number,\u201d Mr. Cerar said at a news conference on Tuesday, after the government approved construction of the fence. \u201cIf we don\u2019t act now, we could have a humanitarian catastrophe on the territory of Slovenia,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "LJUBLJANA, Slovenia \u2014 Slovenia began erecting a razor-wire fence at its border with Croatia on Wednesday to stem the inflow of migrants, as winter closes in and countries to the north tighten their own border controls. A convoy of army trucks carrying barbed wire and construction equipment arrived in the border town of Veliki Obrez at dawn on Wednesday. Soldiers rolled out the wire along the Slovenian bank of the Sotla River, which forms part of the 400-mile border with Croatia. Slovenia is an important country on the migration route through the Balkans because its border with Croatia also forms the southern frontier of Europe\u2019s Schengen area, where passport-free travel is possible. Since Oct. 17, when Hungary closed its border with Croatia and redirected the flow, more than 180,000 migrants from Africa, the Middle East and Asia have entered Slovenia, a nation of two million people. Though the new fence threatens to block the route again just as winter is approaching, migrants have largely been able to find their way around such obstacles. Officials are anticipating that asylum seekers may now turn to Albania and Italy as an alternative routes to more prosperous European countries in the north. Most of the migrants moving through the Balkans have gone on to Austria and then Germany. Slovenia has been saying that it could manage the influx of about 6,000 to 8,000 asylum seekers a day as long as roughly the same number moved on each day. But Austria said recently that it could accept only 6,000 people a day from Slovenia, and Germany has started to tighten some controls on arrivals. As a result, the Slovenian prime minister, Miro Cerar, said that it was very likely that many of the 30,000 migrants who were traveling north from Greece could become stranded in Slovenia, which has limited room to accommodate them. \u201cIt\u2019s a big number,\u201d Mr. Cerar said at a news conference on Tuesday, after the government approved construction of the fence. \u201cIf we don\u2019t act now, we could have a humanitarian catastrophe on the territory of Slovenia,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "As a result, the Slovenian prime minister, Miro Cerar, said that it was very likely that many of the 30,000 migrants who were traveling north from Greece could become stranded in Slovenia, which has limited room to accommodate them.", "paragraph_id": "5d7006ccc8e4820a9b66ac0d"} +{"question": "What did Kiev request that went nowhere?", "paragraph": "From the earliest days of the war, the government in Kiev had asked for military help from the United States. Its request for a sophisticated antitank missile went nowhere, as Washington feared it would just encourage Russia to send more weapons and men to Ukraine. What eventually arrived was basic training.", "answer": "antitank missile", "sentence": "Its request for a sophisticated antitank missile went nowhere, as Washington feared it would just encourage Russia to send more weapons and men to Ukraine.", "paragraph_sentence": "From the earliest days of the war, the government in Kiev had asked for military help from the United States. Its request for a sophisticated antitank missile went nowhere, as Washington feared it would just encourage Russia to send more weapons and men to Ukraine. What eventually arrived was basic training.", "paragraph_answer": "From the earliest days of the war, the government in Kiev had asked for military help from the United States. Its request for a sophisticated antitank missile went nowhere, as Washington feared it would just encourage Russia to send more weapons and men to Ukraine. What eventually arrived was basic training.", "sentence_answer": "Its request for a sophisticated antitank missile went nowhere, as Washington feared it would just encourage Russia to send more weapons and men to Ukraine.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026e1c8e4820a9b66d3af"} +{"question": "Mr. Wolf said the age of clients moving downtown is what?", "paragraph": "Among the early entries was the Marquand, from HFZ Capital Group, in partnership with Vornado Realty Trust, a prewar rental-turned-condo at 11 East 68th Street, with an average sales price of $4,400 per square foot, according to a spokeswoman for the project. Closings began in 2014, and only a $46.5 million penthouse remains to be sold. That the area might be starting to resemble other parts of Manhattan does not surprise Mr. Wolf, the architect, who believes neighborhood and status are a lot less important than before. Noting that clients in their 60s are moving downtown for the energy and clients in their 40s are moving uptown for the quiet, he said, \u201cThe boundaries have just broken down.\u201d", "answer": "60s", "sentence": "Noting that clients in their 60s are moving downtown for the energy and clients in their 40s are moving uptown for the quiet, he said, \u201cThe boundaries have just broken down.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Among the early entries was the Marquand, from HFZ Capital Group, in partnership with Vornado Realty Trust, a prewar rental-turned-condo at 11 East 68th Street, with an average sales price of $4,400 per square foot, according to a spokeswoman for the project. Closings began in 2014, and only a $46.5 million penthouse remains to be sold. That the area might be starting to resemble other parts of Manhattan does not surprise Mr. Wolf, the architect, who believes neighborhood and status are a lot less important than before. Noting that clients in their 60s are moving downtown for the energy and clients in their 40s are moving uptown for the quiet, he said, \u201cThe boundaries have just broken down.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Among the early entries was the Marquand, from HFZ Capital Group, in partnership with Vornado Realty Trust, a prewar rental-turned-condo at 11 East 68th Street, with an average sales price of $4,400 per square foot, according to a spokeswoman for the project. Closings began in 2014, and only a $46.5 million penthouse remains to be sold. That the area might be starting to resemble other parts of Manhattan does not surprise Mr. Wolf, the architect, who believes neighborhood and status are a lot less important than before. Noting that clients in their 60s are moving downtown for the energy and clients in their 40s are moving uptown for the quiet, he said, \u201cThe boundaries have just broken down.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Noting that clients in their 60s are moving downtown for the energy and clients in their 40s are moving uptown for the quiet, he said, \u201cThe boundaries have just broken down.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d70196dc8e4820a9b66c55e"} +{"question": "Who thought Westbrook was more of a dog?", "paragraph": "\u201cIs Russell Westbrook a cat or a dog?\u201d Westbrook is, in fact, the star point guard for the Oklahoma City Thunder, so this was a somewhat jarring question to pose to his fellow players during the National Basketball Association\u2019s All-Star weekend in 2013. Nonetheless, they played along. James Harden thought Westbrook was more of a dog. Dwyane Wade hedged. \u201cHe\u2019s a cat-dog,\u201d he said. Finally, Westbrook weighed in. \u201cWolf,\u201d he said. The cat-or-dog question came from a host of \u201cThe Basketball Jones,\u201d an N.B.A. podcast started in 2006 by three Canadian basketball fanatics who will bring their blend of deep basketball analysis and irreverent, goofy attitude to the N.B.A.\u2019s All-Star festivities this weekend in New York.", "answer": "James Harden", "sentence": "James Harden thought Westbrook was more of a dog.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIs Russell Westbrook a cat or a dog?\u201d Westbrook is, in fact, the star point guard for the Oklahoma City Thunder, so this was a somewhat jarring question to pose to his fellow players during the National Basketball Association\u2019s All-Star weekend in 2013. Nonetheless, they played along. James Harden thought Westbrook was more of a dog. Dwyane Wade hedged. \u201cHe\u2019s a cat-dog,\u201d he said. Finally, Westbrook weighed in. \u201cWolf,\u201d he said. The cat-or-dog question came from a host of \u201cThe Basketball Jones,\u201d an N.B.A. podcast started in 2006 by three Canadian basketball fanatics who will bring their blend of deep basketball analysis and irreverent, goofy attitude to the N.B.A.\u2019s All-Star festivities this weekend in New York.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIs Russell Westbrook a cat or a dog?\u201d Westbrook is, in fact, the star point guard for the Oklahoma City Thunder, so this was a somewhat jarring question to pose to his fellow players during the National Basketball Association\u2019s All-Star weekend in 2013. Nonetheless, they played along. James Harden thought Westbrook was more of a dog. Dwyane Wade hedged. \u201cHe\u2019s a cat-dog,\u201d he said. Finally, Westbrook weighed in. \u201cWolf,\u201d he said. The cat-or-dog question came from a host of \u201cThe Basketball Jones,\u201d an N.B.A. podcast started in 2006 by three Canadian basketball fanatics who will bring their blend of deep basketball analysis and irreverent, goofy attitude to the N.B.A.\u2019s All-Star festivities this weekend in New York.", "sentence_answer": " James Harden thought Westbrook was more of a dog.", "paragraph_id": "5d705660c8e4820a9b66ed1e"} +{"question": "In what month were celebrations held at the new United States Embassy?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt forms part of an established agenda,\u201d he said, noting that dissidents were not invited to celebrations at the new United States Embassy in August and that they were often avoided by visiting delegations. Meanwhile, he said, the state had started cracking down ahead of the pope\u2019s visit, detaining some dissidents and stationing police officers outside dissidents\u2019 houses.", "answer": "August", "sentence": "\u201cIt forms part of an established agenda,\u201d he said, noting that dissidents were not invited to celebrations at the new United States Embassy in August and that they were often avoided by visiting delegations.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cIt forms part of an established agenda,\u201d he said, noting that dissidents were not invited to celebrations at the new United States Embassy in August and that they were often avoided by visiting delegations. Meanwhile, he said, the state had started cracking down ahead of the pope\u2019s visit, detaining some dissidents and stationing police officers outside dissidents\u2019 houses.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt forms part of an established agenda,\u201d he said, noting that dissidents were not invited to celebrations at the new United States Embassy in August and that they were often avoided by visiting delegations. Meanwhile, he said, the state had started cracking down ahead of the pope\u2019s visit, detaining some dissidents and stationing police officers outside dissidents\u2019 houses.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt forms part of an established agenda,\u201d he said, noting that dissidents were not invited to celebrations at the new United States Embassy in August and that they were often avoided by visiting delegations.", "paragraph_id": "5d7015adc8e4820a9b66c1c4"} +{"question": "The outburst of global volatility was immediately caused by who?", "paragraph": "Here\u2019s how to make sense of what is a truly global story, stretching from the streets of Shanghai, where stock investing has become a middle-class sport in recent years, to the oil fields of both the Middle East and Middle America, to the hallways of power in the Federal Reserve in Washington. The immediate cause of the outburst of global volatility was China, where the sharp drop in stocks on Monday continued a rout that has been underway \u2014 with periodic pauses because of government interventions \u2014 all summer.", "answer": "China", "sentence": "The immediate cause of the outburst of global volatility was China , where the sharp drop in stocks on Monday continued a rout that has been underway \u2014 with periodic pauses because of government interventions \u2014 all summer.", "paragraph_sentence": "Here\u2019s how to make sense of what is a truly global story, stretching from the streets of Shanghai, where stock investing has become a middle-class sport in recent years, to the oil fields of both the Middle East and Middle America, to the hallways of power in the Federal Reserve in Washington. The immediate cause of the outburst of global volatility was China , where the sharp drop in stocks on Monday continued a rout that has been underway \u2014 with periodic pauses because of government interventions \u2014 all summer. ", "paragraph_answer": "Here\u2019s how to make sense of what is a truly global story, stretching from the streets of Shanghai, where stock investing has become a middle-class sport in recent years, to the oil fields of both the Middle East and Middle America, to the hallways of power in the Federal Reserve in Washington. The immediate cause of the outburst of global volatility was China , where the sharp drop in stocks on Monday continued a rout that has been underway \u2014 with periodic pauses because of government interventions \u2014 all summer.", "sentence_answer": "The immediate cause of the outburst of global volatility was China , where the sharp drop in stocks on Monday continued a rout that has been underway \u2014 with periodic pauses because of government interventions \u2014 all summer.", "paragraph_id": "5d701cddc8e4820a9b66c84c"} +{"question": "What do regulators say that Deutsche Bank didn't spot?", "paragraph": "Regulators around the world, but especially in the United States, are demanding that all banks reduce risk. Deutsche Bank was particularly vulnerable because of its large exposure to businesses that can be lucrative in good times but toxic in bad, like derivatives contracts. The bank said on Monday that it would stop offering some kinds of derivatives and retreat from other risk businesses like commodities trading. Meanwhile, aggressive law enforcement authorities last week extracted a $2.5 billion penalty from Deutsche Bank for misconduct related to an interest rate rigging scandal. The penalty, as well as criticism from regulators who said the bank failed to recognize signs of misconduct, damaged the reputation of the bank as well as Mr. Jain, who was head of Deutsche Bank\u2019s investment bank operations in London, where most of the mischief took place.", "answer": "signs of misconduct", "sentence": "The penalty, as well as criticism from regulators who said the bank failed to recognize signs of misconduct , damaged the reputation of the bank as well as Mr. Jain, who was head of Deutsche Bank\u2019s investment bank operations in London, where most of the mischief took place.", "paragraph_sentence": "Regulators around the world, but especially in the United States, are demanding that all banks reduce risk. Deutsche Bank was particularly vulnerable because of its large exposure to businesses that can be lucrative in good times but toxic in bad, like derivatives contracts. The bank said on Monday that it would stop offering some kinds of derivatives and retreat from other risk businesses like commodities trading. Meanwhile, aggressive law enforcement authorities last week extracted a $2.5 billion penalty from Deutsche Bank for misconduct related to an interest rate rigging scandal. The penalty, as well as criticism from regulators who said the bank failed to recognize signs of misconduct , damaged the reputation of the bank as well as Mr. Jain, who was head of Deutsche Bank\u2019s investment bank operations in London, where most of the mischief took place. ", "paragraph_answer": "Regulators around the world, but especially in the United States, are demanding that all banks reduce risk. Deutsche Bank was particularly vulnerable because of its large exposure to businesses that can be lucrative in good times but toxic in bad, like derivatives contracts. The bank said on Monday that it would stop offering some kinds of derivatives and retreat from other risk businesses like commodities trading. Meanwhile, aggressive law enforcement authorities last week extracted a $2.5 billion penalty from Deutsche Bank for misconduct related to an interest rate rigging scandal. The penalty, as well as criticism from regulators who said the bank failed to recognize signs of misconduct , damaged the reputation of the bank as well as Mr. Jain, who was head of Deutsche Bank\u2019s investment bank operations in London, where most of the mischief took place.", "sentence_answer": "The penalty, as well as criticism from regulators who said the bank failed to recognize signs of misconduct , damaged the reputation of the bank as well as Mr. Jain, who was head of Deutsche Bank\u2019s investment bank operations in London, where most of the mischief took place.", "paragraph_id": "5d7010a8c8e4820a9b66bd1c"} +{"question": "What type of customers are the companies?", "paragraph": "\u201cAbout 30 percent of our server business is now to cloud companies, and growing at a fast clip,\u201d said Diane Bryant, head of Intel\u2019s data center group, in a recent interview. \u201cIt\u2019s the new opportunity for our revenue stream.\u201d Intel is trying to enter the mobile business and sensors too, so far with little impact. The shift to more data center chips means lots of things will change for Intel, not least the kinds of customers it works with. Intel\u2019s mix of cloud-computing customers shows how much influence is wielded by just a handful of big operations. Of 200 cloud company customers that Intel tracks, just seven take one-third of those chips: Google, Amazon Web Services, Microsoft and Facebook, as well as Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent of China. While the rest are now growing at twice the rate of the top seven, Ms. Bryant said, the big companies are unusually demanding customers, even designing their own chip modifications to make their global clouds work better.", "answer": "unusually demanding", "sentence": "While the rest are now growing at twice the rate of the top seven, Ms. Bryant said, the big companies are unusually demanding customers, even designing their own chip modifications to make their global clouds work better.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cAbout 30 percent of our server business is now to cloud companies, and growing at a fast clip,\u201d said Diane Bryant, head of Intel\u2019s data center group, in a recent interview. \u201cIt\u2019s the new opportunity for our revenue stream.\u201d Intel is trying to enter the mobile business and sensors too, so far with little impact. The shift to more data center chips means lots of things will change for Intel, not least the kinds of customers it works with. Intel\u2019s mix of cloud-computing customers shows how much influence is wielded by just a handful of big operations. Of 200 cloud company customers that Intel tracks, just seven take one-third of those chips: Google, Amazon Web Services, Microsoft and Facebook, as well as Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent of China. While the rest are now growing at twice the rate of the top seven, Ms. Bryant said, the big companies are unusually demanding customers, even designing their own chip modifications to make their global clouds work better. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cAbout 30 percent of our server business is now to cloud companies, and growing at a fast clip,\u201d said Diane Bryant, head of Intel\u2019s data center group, in a recent interview. \u201cIt\u2019s the new opportunity for our revenue stream.\u201d Intel is trying to enter the mobile business and sensors too, so far with little impact. The shift to more data center chips means lots of things will change for Intel, not least the kinds of customers it works with. Intel\u2019s mix of cloud-computing customers shows how much influence is wielded by just a handful of big operations. Of 200 cloud company customers that Intel tracks, just seven take one-third of those chips: Google, Amazon Web Services, Microsoft and Facebook, as well as Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent of China. While the rest are now growing at twice the rate of the top seven, Ms. Bryant said, the big companies are unusually demanding customers, even designing their own chip modifications to make their global clouds work better.", "sentence_answer": "While the rest are now growing at twice the rate of the top seven, Ms. Bryant said, the big companies are unusually demanding customers, even designing their own chip modifications to make their global clouds work better.", "paragraph_id": "5d70202dc8e4820a9b66cbd9"} +{"question": "When was Pussy Riot arrested for protesting?", "paragraph": "As international attention to the women\u2019s case mounts, some rights advocates see echoes of the public relations maelstrom surrounding the female Russian dissident group, Pussy Riot, whose members were arrested in 2012 for their protests against President Vladimir V. Putin. Sophie Richardson, the China director at Human Rights Watch, said the five jailed feminists have drawn far more international attention than the scores of Chinese activists who have been detained during the previous two years of an intensified government drive against political dissent.", "answer": "2012", "sentence": "As international attention to the women\u2019s case mounts, some rights advocates see echoes of the public relations maelstrom surrounding the female Russian dissident group, Pussy Riot, whose members were arrested in 2012 for their protests against President Vladimir V. Putin.", "paragraph_sentence": " As international attention to the women\u2019s case mounts, some rights advocates see echoes of the public relations maelstrom surrounding the female Russian dissident group, Pussy Riot, whose members were arrested in 2012 for their protests against President Vladimir V. Putin. Sophie Richardson, the China director at Human Rights Watch, said the five jailed feminists have drawn far more international attention than the scores of Chinese activists who have been detained during the previous two years of an intensified government drive against political dissent.", "paragraph_answer": "As international attention to the women\u2019s case mounts, some rights advocates see echoes of the public relations maelstrom surrounding the female Russian dissident group, Pussy Riot, whose members were arrested in 2012 for their protests against President Vladimir V. Putin. Sophie Richardson, the China director at Human Rights Watch, said the five jailed feminists have drawn far more international attention than the scores of Chinese activists who have been detained during the previous two years of an intensified government drive against political dissent.", "sentence_answer": "As international attention to the women\u2019s case mounts, some rights advocates see echoes of the public relations maelstrom surrounding the female Russian dissident group, Pussy Riot, whose members were arrested in 2012 for their protests against President Vladimir V. Putin.", "paragraph_id": "5d701aabc8e4820a9b66c643"} +{"question": "What kind of blow back will there be?", "paragraph": "Some details still need to be worked out. In the coming months, the Labor Department will solicit public comment on how to adjust the new salary threshold so it does not erode all over again. The best option is to raise it in line with wages or prices, whichever is greater in a given year. There will also be inevitable blowback from business interests, but their Republican allies in Congress should think twice about backing them up: No party and no politician that opposes the new overtime rules can credibly claim to care about the middle class.", "answer": "There will also be inevitable blowback from business interests", "sentence": "There will also be inevitable blowback from business interests , but their Republican allies in Congress should think twice about backing them up: No party and no politician that opposes the new overtime rules can credibly claim to care about the middle class.", "paragraph_sentence": "Some details still need to be worked out. In the coming months, the Labor Department will solicit public comment on how to adjust the new salary threshold so it does not erode all over again. The best option is to raise it in line with wages or prices, whichever is greater in a given year. There will also be inevitable blowback from business interests , but their Republican allies in Congress should think twice about backing them up: No party and no politician that opposes the new overtime rules can credibly claim to care about the middle class. ", "paragraph_answer": "Some details still need to be worked out. In the coming months, the Labor Department will solicit public comment on how to adjust the new salary threshold so it does not erode all over again. The best option is to raise it in line with wages or prices, whichever is greater in a given year. There will also be inevitable blowback from business interests , but their Republican allies in Congress should think twice about backing them up: No party and no politician that opposes the new overtime rules can credibly claim to care about the middle class.", "sentence_answer": " There will also be inevitable blowback from business interests , but their Republican allies in Congress should think twice about backing them up: No party and no politician that opposes the new overtime rules can credibly claim to care about the middle class.", "paragraph_id": "5d700aafc8e4820a9b66b4bb"} +{"question": "What year is Senator Gillibrand attempting to get elected again?", "paragraph": "Ms. Berman, 34, will keep her name. She works in New York as the finance director and a senior adviser for the campaign to re-elect Senator Gillibrand in 2018. She graduated from Wesleyan. The bride\u2019s father is a trial lawyer in New York. Mr. Schrock, 29, is a manager in the internal consulting group at Pfizer, the pharmaceutical company, in New York. In May, he received an M.B.A. from Cornell, where he also received a doctoral degree in pharmacology. He graduated from Luther College in Decorah, Iowa.", "answer": "2018", "sentence": "She works in New York as the finance director and a senior adviser for the campaign to re-elect Senator Gillibrand in 2018 .", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Berman, 34, will keep her name. She works in New York as the finance director and a senior adviser for the campaign to re-elect Senator Gillibrand in 2018 . She graduated from Wesleyan. The bride\u2019s father is a trial lawyer in New York. Mr. Schrock, 29, is a manager in the internal consulting group at Pfizer, the pharmaceutical company, in New York. In May, he received an M.B.A. from Cornell, where he also received a doctoral degree in pharmacology. He graduated from Luther College in Decorah, Iowa.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Berman, 34, will keep her name. She works in New York as the finance director and a senior adviser for the campaign to re-elect Senator Gillibrand in 2018 . She graduated from Wesleyan. The bride\u2019s father is a trial lawyer in New York. Mr. Schrock, 29, is a manager in the internal consulting group at Pfizer, the pharmaceutical company, in New York. In May, he received an M.B.A. from Cornell, where he also received a doctoral degree in pharmacology. He graduated from Luther College in Decorah, Iowa.", "sentence_answer": "She works in New York as the finance director and a senior adviser for the campaign to re-elect Senator Gillibrand in 2018 .", "paragraph_id": "5d70355cc8e4820a9b66df91"} +{"question": "What was the victory score against the sharks?", "paragraph": "The 32-24 victory against the Sharks, from South Africa, in Wellington on Saturday night was a case in point. The Hurricanes scored four tries to claim a bonus point in the standings under Super Rugby\u2019s scoring system, but it was a physical and bruising match that saw the lead change hands several times before the New Zealanders landed the knockout blow in the final 10 minutes. The Sharks have struggled this season and were beaten, 48-15, by the Highlanders the previous week, also in New Zealand. But they could well have snatched victory from the Hurricanes but for a disallowed try midway through the second half.", "answer": "32-24", "sentence": "The 32-24 victory against the Sharks, from South Africa, in Wellington on Saturday night was a case in point.", "paragraph_sentence": " The 32-24 victory against the Sharks, from South Africa, in Wellington on Saturday night was a case in point. The Hurricanes scored four tries to claim a bonus point in the standings under Super Rugby\u2019s scoring system, but it was a physical and bruising match that saw the lead change hands several times before the New Zealanders landed the knockout blow in the final 10 minutes. The Sharks have struggled this season and were beaten, 48-15, by the Highlanders the previous week, also in New Zealand. But they could well have snatched victory from the Hurricanes but for a disallowed try midway through the second half.", "paragraph_answer": "The 32-24 victory against the Sharks, from South Africa, in Wellington on Saturday night was a case in point. The Hurricanes scored four tries to claim a bonus point in the standings under Super Rugby\u2019s scoring system, but it was a physical and bruising match that saw the lead change hands several times before the New Zealanders landed the knockout blow in the final 10 minutes. The Sharks have struggled this season and were beaten, 48-15, by the Highlanders the previous week, also in New Zealand. But they could well have snatched victory from the Hurricanes but for a disallowed try midway through the second half.", "sentence_answer": "The 32-24 victory against the Sharks, from South Africa, in Wellington on Saturday night was a case in point.", "paragraph_id": "5d7006dac8e4820a9b66ac27"} +{"question": "What are the names of the personalities mentioned by first and last name?", "paragraph": "Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas, with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis, have not abandoned podcasting. This season they introduced \u201cThe Drop,\u201d a weekly, podcast-only show that is downloaded 70 percent more frequently on average than the podcast of the daily \u201cThe Starters\u201d television show, according to the network. Last week\u2019s episode featured references to Katy Perry\u2019s Super Bowl halftime show and a discussion of some of the more handsome N.B.A. stars. \u201cThe Starters\u201d TV show has tried to incorporate the lighter elements of \u201cThe Basketball Jones\u201d podcast in a way that recreates the spontaneity of its hosts\u2019 old material. On their show last Thursday, in a segment called \u201cMeme Team,\u201d the hosts counted down some of the goofiest moments from the N.B.A. that week. Number one on the countdown was Westbrook\u2019s reaction to being stiffed on a high five by a teammate. In the video, he turned around sharply and glared at the offending player. \u201cThat screams cat to me,\u201d Mr. Elder said. \u201cCase closed, right? He\u2019s more like a cat.\u201d", "answer": "Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis", "sentence": "Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas, with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis , have not abandoned podcasting.", "paragraph_sentence": " Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas, with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis , have not abandoned podcasting. This season they introduced \u201cThe Drop,\u201d a weekly, podcast-only show that is downloaded 70 percent more frequently on average than the podcast of the daily \u201cThe Starters\u201d television show, according to the network. Last week\u2019s episode featured references to Katy Perry\u2019s Super Bowl halftime show and a discussion of some of the more handsome N.B.A. stars. \u201cThe Starters\u201d TV show has tried to incorporate the lighter elements of \u201cThe Basketball Jones\u201d podcast in a way that recreates the spontaneity of its hosts\u2019 old material. On their show last Thursday, in a segment called \u201cMeme Team,\u201d the hosts counted down some of the goofiest moments from the N.B.A. that week. Number one on the countdown was Westbrook\u2019s reaction to being stiffed on a high five by a teammate. In the video, he turned around sharply and glared at the offending player. \u201cThat screams cat to me,\u201d Mr. Elder said. \u201cCase closed, right? He\u2019s more like a cat.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas, with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis , have not abandoned podcasting. This season they introduced \u201cThe Drop,\u201d a weekly, podcast-only show that is downloaded 70 percent more frequently on average than the podcast of the daily \u201cThe Starters\u201d television show, according to the network. Last week\u2019s episode featured references to Katy Perry\u2019s Super Bowl halftime show and a discussion of some of the more handsome N.B.A. stars. \u201cThe Starters\u201d TV show has tried to incorporate the lighter elements of \u201cThe Basketball Jones\u201d podcast in a way that recreates the spontaneity of its hosts\u2019 old material. On their show last Thursday, in a segment called \u201cMeme Team,\u201d the hosts counted down some of the goofiest moments from the N.B.A. that week. Number one on the countdown was Westbrook\u2019s reaction to being stiffed on a high five by a teammate. In the video, he turned around sharply and glared at the offending player. \u201cThat screams cat to me,\u201d Mr. Elder said. \u201cCase closed, right? He\u2019s more like a cat.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas, with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis , have not abandoned podcasting.", "paragraph_id": "5d7057ccc8e4820a9b66ed84"} +{"question": "For what crime was imprisoned Samuel Harrell?", "paragraph": "On the evening of April 21 in Building 21 at the Fishkill Correctional Facility, Samuel Harrell, an inmate with a history of erratic behavior linked to bipolar disorder, packed his bags and announced he was going home, though he still had several years left to serve on his drug sentence. Not long after, he got into a confrontation with corrections officers, was thrown to the floor and was handcuffed. As many as 20 officers \u2014 including members of a group known around the prison as the Beat Up Squad \u2014 repeatedly kicked and punched Mr. Harrell, who is black, with some of them shouting racial slurs, according to more than a dozen inmate witnesses. \u201cLike he was a trampoline, they were jumping on him,\u201d said Edwin Pearson, an inmate who watched from a nearby bathroom. Mr. Harrell was then thrown or dragged down a staircase, according to the inmates\u2019 accounts. One inmate reported seeing him lying on the landing, \u201cbent in an impossible position.\u201d", "answer": "drug", "sentence": "On the evening of April 21 in Building 21 at the Fishkill Correctional Facility, Samuel Harrell, an inmate with a history of erratic behavior linked to bipolar disorder, packed his bags and announced he was going home, though he still had several years left to serve on his drug sentence.", "paragraph_sentence": " On the evening of April 21 in Building 21 at the Fishkill Correctional Facility, Samuel Harrell, an inmate with a history of erratic behavior linked to bipolar disorder, packed his bags and announced he was going home, though he still had several years left to serve on his drug sentence. Not long after, he got into a confrontation with corrections officers, was thrown to the floor and was handcuffed. As many as 20 officers \u2014 including members of a group known around the prison as the Beat Up Squad \u2014 repeatedly kicked and punched Mr. Harrell, who is black, with some of them shouting racial slurs, according to more than a dozen inmate witnesses. \u201cLike he was a trampoline, they were jumping on him,\u201d said Edwin Pearson, an inmate who watched from a nearby bathroom. Mr. Harrell was then thrown or dragged down a staircase, according to the inmates\u2019 accounts. One inmate reported seeing him lying on the landing, \u201cbent in an impossible position.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "On the evening of April 21 in Building 21 at the Fishkill Correctional Facility, Samuel Harrell, an inmate with a history of erratic behavior linked to bipolar disorder, packed his bags and announced he was going home, though he still had several years left to serve on his drug sentence. Not long after, he got into a confrontation with corrections officers, was thrown to the floor and was handcuffed. As many as 20 officers \u2014 including members of a group known around the prison as the Beat Up Squad \u2014 repeatedly kicked and punched Mr. Harrell, who is black, with some of them shouting racial slurs, according to more than a dozen inmate witnesses. \u201cLike he was a trampoline, they were jumping on him,\u201d said Edwin Pearson, an inmate who watched from a nearby bathroom. Mr. Harrell was then thrown or dragged down a staircase, according to the inmates\u2019 accounts. One inmate reported seeing him lying on the landing, \u201cbent in an impossible position.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "On the evening of April 21 in Building 21 at the Fishkill Correctional Facility, Samuel Harrell, an inmate with a history of erratic behavior linked to bipolar disorder, packed his bags and announced he was going home, though he still had several years left to serve on his drug sentence.", "paragraph_id": "5d701c00c8e4820a9b66c789"} +{"question": "Whose apartment did Ed visit?", "paragraph": "LONDON \u2014 In one of the more bizarre moments of a tight British election campaign, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, went in the dead of night Monday to the apartment of Russell Brand, a bawdy comedian, to give him an interview, which was posted Wednesday on YouTube. Mr. Brand, who is also known for his expletive-filled rants against politics and politicians, has publicly urged Britons not to vote at all. But he is popular with young people, and Mr. Miliband in a tight race needs every vote he can get to become prime minister after the May 7 election.", "answer": "Russell Brand", "sentence": "LONDON \u2014 In one of the more bizarre moments of a tight British election campaign, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, went in the dead of night Monday to the apartment of Russell Brand , a bawdy comedian, to give him an interview, which was posted Wednesday on YouTube.", "paragraph_sentence": " LONDON \u2014 In one of the more bizarre moments of a tight British election campaign, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, went in the dead of night Monday to the apartment of Russell Brand , a bawdy comedian, to give him an interview, which was posted Wednesday on YouTube. Mr. Brand, who is also known for his expletive-filled rants against politics and politicians, has publicly urged Britons not to vote at all. But he is popular with young people, and Mr. Miliband in a tight race needs every vote he can get to become prime minister after the May 7 election.", "paragraph_answer": "LONDON \u2014 In one of the more bizarre moments of a tight British election campaign, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, went in the dead of night Monday to the apartment of Russell Brand , a bawdy comedian, to give him an interview, which was posted Wednesday on YouTube. Mr. Brand, who is also known for his expletive-filled rants against politics and politicians, has publicly urged Britons not to vote at all. But he is popular with young people, and Mr. Miliband in a tight race needs every vote he can get to become prime minister after the May 7 election.", "sentence_answer": "LONDON \u2014 In one of the more bizarre moments of a tight British election campaign, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, went in the dead of night Monday to the apartment of Russell Brand , a bawdy comedian, to give him an interview, which was posted Wednesday on YouTube.", "paragraph_id": "5d7053ecc8e4820a9b66ec4a"} +{"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", "paragraph_id": "5d700a7cc8e4820a9b66b44b"} +{"question": "Which country two years ago was the top marketplace for Tupperware?", "paragraph": "Once a fixture in middle-class American kitchens, Tupperware has become a bit of an afterthought in its home country even as its popularity has risen abroad. (Germany was the top marketplace until Indonesia slid past it two years ago.) Indonesia is, in many ways, in Tupperware\u2019s sweet spot. As the economy has taken off in recent years, an expanding middle class now has more disposable income for containers of all shapes and sizes that are sturdier than those found in local markets. And, as in 1960s America, many women stay at home to keep house and raise their children, creating a captive audience for parties run by saleswomen who have begun to sidle past conservative social mores and into the work force.", "answer": "Germany", "sentence": "( Germany was the top marketplace until Indonesia slid past it two years ago.)", "paragraph_sentence": "Once a fixture in middle-class American kitchens, Tupperware has become a bit of an afterthought in its home country even as its popularity has risen abroad. ( Germany was the top marketplace until Indonesia slid past it two years ago.) Indonesia is, in many ways, in Tupperware\u2019s sweet spot. As the economy has taken off in recent years, an expanding middle class now has more disposable income for containers of all shapes and sizes that are sturdier than those found in local markets. And, as in 1960s America, many women stay at home to keep house and raise their children, creating a captive audience for parties run by saleswomen who have begun to sidle past conservative social mores and into the work force.", "paragraph_answer": "Once a fixture in middle-class American kitchens, Tupperware has become a bit of an afterthought in its home country even as its popularity has risen abroad. ( Germany was the top marketplace until Indonesia slid past it two years ago.) Indonesia is, in many ways, in Tupperware\u2019s sweet spot. As the economy has taken off in recent years, an expanding middle class now has more disposable income for containers of all shapes and sizes that are sturdier than those found in local markets. And, as in 1960s America, many women stay at home to keep house and raise their children, creating a captive audience for parties run by saleswomen who have begun to sidle past conservative social mores and into the work force.", "sentence_answer": "( Germany was the top marketplace until Indonesia slid past it two years ago.)", "paragraph_id": "5d700eb0c8e4820a9b66ba99"} +{"question": "What did Siporah say?", "paragraph": "Outside, shaking women wept into tissues. Stern men, rocking back and forth, blinked out tears. The grief was felt throughout the Orthodox neighborhoods of Brooklyn, and in Israel, where Ms. Sassoon had met her husband. Even as people failed to make sense of the seven deaths \u2014 the largest toll from a fire in New York City since 2007 \u2014 the mourners turned their thoughts to the mother who leapt out of her bedroom window and a sister who also somehow survived. \u201cMommy, Mommy, help me!\u201d one neighbor heard Siporah cry as she stumbled outside.", "answer": "\u201cMommy, Mommy, help me!\u201d", "sentence": "\u201cMommy, Mommy, help me!\u201d one neighbor heard Siporah cry as she stumbled outside.", "paragraph_sentence": "Outside, shaking women wept into tissues. Stern men, rocking back and forth, blinked out tears. The grief was felt throughout the Orthodox neighborhoods of Brooklyn, and in Israel, where Ms. Sassoon had met her husband. Even as people failed to make sense of the seven deaths \u2014 the largest toll from a fire in New York City since 2007 \u2014 the mourners turned their thoughts to the mother who leapt out of her bedroom window and a sister who also somehow survived. \u201cMommy, Mommy, help me!\u201d one neighbor heard Siporah cry as she stumbled outside. ", "paragraph_answer": "Outside, shaking women wept into tissues. Stern men, rocking back and forth, blinked out tears. The grief was felt throughout the Orthodox neighborhoods of Brooklyn, and in Israel, where Ms. Sassoon had met her husband. Even as people failed to make sense of the seven deaths \u2014 the largest toll from a fire in New York City since 2007 \u2014 the mourners turned their thoughts to the mother who leapt out of her bedroom window and a sister who also somehow survived. \u201cMommy, Mommy, help me!\u201d one neighbor heard Siporah cry as she stumbled outside.", "sentence_answer": " \u201cMommy, Mommy, help me!\u201d one neighbor heard Siporah cry as she stumbled outside.", "paragraph_id": "5d7008f7c8e4820a9b66b12f"} +{"question": "How old are the 2 surviving defendants?", "paragraph": "Two of the men had each spent almost 33 years in prison on arson and murder charges, the longest time served by any defendant whose conviction has been vacated under Ken Thompson, the Brooklyn district attorney. The third defendant died in prison. Now 70 and 66, the surviving defendants, William Vasquez and Amaury Villalobos, stood in State Supreme Court in Brooklyn. Next to them stood the widow and daughter of the third defendant, Raymond Mora. His daughter, who was 7 when he died in prison in 1989, held up a photo of her father. \u201cI don\u2019t know how this case managed to proceed,\u201d Assistant District Attorney Mark J. Hale, who oversees the Conviction Review Unit in the office, told Justice Matthew J. D\u2019Emic as he asked him to vacate the men\u2019s convictions. In February 1980, a townhouse at 695 Sackett Street burned to the ground. The third-floor tenants, a mother and her five young children, were killed.", "answer": "70 and 66", "sentence": "Now 70 and 66 , the surviving defendants, William Vasquez and Amaury Villalobos, stood in State Supreme Court in Brooklyn.", "paragraph_sentence": "Two of the men had each spent almost 33 years in prison on arson and murder charges, the longest time served by any defendant whose conviction has been vacated under Ken Thompson, the Brooklyn district attorney. The third defendant died in prison. Now 70 and 66 , the surviving defendants, William Vasquez and Amaury Villalobos, stood in State Supreme Court in Brooklyn. Next to them stood the widow and daughter of the third defendant, Raymond Mora. His daughter, who was 7 when he died in prison in 1989, held up a photo of her father. \u201cI don\u2019t know how this case managed to proceed,\u201d Assistant District Attorney Mark J. Hale, who oversees the Conviction Review Unit in the office, told Justice Matthew J. D\u2019Emic as he asked him to vacate the men\u2019s convictions. In February 1980, a townhouse at 695 Sackett Street burned to the ground. The third-floor tenants, a mother and her five young children, were killed.", "paragraph_answer": "Two of the men had each spent almost 33 years in prison on arson and murder charges, the longest time served by any defendant whose conviction has been vacated under Ken Thompson, the Brooklyn district attorney. The third defendant died in prison. Now 70 and 66 , the surviving defendants, William Vasquez and Amaury Villalobos, stood in State Supreme Court in Brooklyn. Next to them stood the widow and daughter of the third defendant, Raymond Mora. His daughter, who was 7 when he died in prison in 1989, held up a photo of her father. \u201cI don\u2019t know how this case managed to proceed,\u201d Assistant District Attorney Mark J. Hale, who oversees the Conviction Review Unit in the office, told Justice Matthew J. D\u2019Emic as he asked him to vacate the men\u2019s convictions. In February 1980, a townhouse at 695 Sackett Street burned to the ground. The third-floor tenants, a mother and her five young children, were killed.", "sentence_answer": "Now 70 and 66 , the surviving defendants, William Vasquez and Amaury Villalobos, stood in State Supreme Court in Brooklyn.", "paragraph_id": "5d7005dbc8e4820a9b66a9d9"} +{"question": "On what day did the toy campaign for Star Wars start?", "paragraph": "To grasp the impact of \u201cStar Wars\u201d and the world it helped create \u2014 and to understand both contemporary fandom and the entertainment industry \u2014 you have to accept that when George Lucas likened himself to a toymaker in the 1970s, he wasn\u2019t kidding. Toys were always part of the \u201cStar Wars\u201d world; they still are. On Sept. 4, at precisely 12:01 a.m., the Walt Disney Company, which now owns Lucasfilm, kicked off a merchandising extravaganza with retailers like Walmart called \u201cForce Friday.\u201d It was a pseudo-event that was dutifully and excitedly covered by news media and infotainment outfits, despite being just another stop on the rollout for Disney\u2019s \u201cStar Wars: The Force Awakens,\u201d which, in case you\u2019ve been stuck in another galaxy, opens Dec. 18.", "answer": "Sept. 4", "sentence": "On Sept. 4 , at precisely 12:01 a.m., the Walt Disney Company, which now owns Lucasfilm, kicked off a merchandising extravaganza with retailers like Walmart called \u201cForce Friday.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "To grasp the impact of \u201cStar Wars\u201d and the world it helped create \u2014 and to understand both contemporary fandom and the entertainment industry \u2014 you have to accept that when George Lucas likened himself to a toymaker in the 1970s, he wasn\u2019t kidding. Toys were always part of the \u201cStar Wars\u201d world; they still are. On Sept. 4 , at precisely 12:01 a.m., the Walt Disney Company, which now owns Lucasfilm, kicked off a merchandising extravaganza with retailers like Walmart called \u201cForce Friday.\u201d It was a pseudo-event that was dutifully and excitedly covered by news media and infotainment outfits, despite being just another stop on the rollout for Disney\u2019s \u201cStar Wars: The Force Awakens,\u201d which, in case you\u2019ve been stuck in another galaxy, opens Dec. 18.", "paragraph_answer": "To grasp the impact of \u201cStar Wars\u201d and the world it helped create \u2014 and to understand both contemporary fandom and the entertainment industry \u2014 you have to accept that when George Lucas likened himself to a toymaker in the 1970s, he wasn\u2019t kidding. Toys were always part of the \u201cStar Wars\u201d world; they still are. On Sept. 4 , at precisely 12:01 a.m., the Walt Disney Company, which now owns Lucasfilm, kicked off a merchandising extravaganza with retailers like Walmart called \u201cForce Friday.\u201d It was a pseudo-event that was dutifully and excitedly covered by news media and infotainment outfits, despite being just another stop on the rollout for Disney\u2019s \u201cStar Wars: The Force Awakens,\u201d which, in case you\u2019ve been stuck in another galaxy, opens Dec. 18.", "sentence_answer": "On Sept. 4 , at precisely 12:01 a.m., the Walt Disney Company, which now owns Lucasfilm, kicked off a merchandising extravaganza with retailers like Walmart called \u201cForce Friday.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d700f72c8e4820a9b66bb98"} +{"question": "What happened to the water in the Zayanderud River?", "paragraph": "More than 15 percent of the approximately 150,000 acres of pistachio trees in the main producing area in Kerman Province have died in the last decade or so. A nationwide network of dams, often heralded by state television as a sign of progress and water management, is adding to water shortages in many places while helping deplete groundwater. In Isfahan, the once-iconic Zayanderud River is now a dusty scar the size of the Seine snaking through the city, because officials were forced to divert its water to the desert city of Yazd.", "answer": "officials were forced to divert its water to the desert city of Yazd", "sentence": "In Isfahan, the once-iconic Zayanderud River is now a dusty scar the size of the Seine snaking through the city, because officials were forced to divert its water to the desert city of Yazd .", "paragraph_sentence": "More than 15 percent of the approximately 150,000 acres of pistachio trees in the main producing area in Kerman Province have died in the last decade or so. A nationwide network of dams, often heralded by state television as a sign of progress and water management, is adding to water shortages in many places while helping deplete groundwater. In Isfahan, the once-iconic Zayanderud River is now a dusty scar the size of the Seine snaking through the city, because officials were forced to divert its water to the desert city of Yazd . ", "paragraph_answer": "More than 15 percent of the approximately 150,000 acres of pistachio trees in the main producing area in Kerman Province have died in the last decade or so. A nationwide network of dams, often heralded by state television as a sign of progress and water management, is adding to water shortages in many places while helping deplete groundwater. In Isfahan, the once-iconic Zayanderud River is now a dusty scar the size of the Seine snaking through the city, because officials were forced to divert its water to the desert city of Yazd .", "sentence_answer": "In Isfahan, the once-iconic Zayanderud River is now a dusty scar the size of the Seine snaking through the city, because officials were forced to divert its water to the desert city of Yazd .", "paragraph_id": "5d701e80c8e4820a9b66ca1b"} +{"question": "What president is mentioned in the article?", "paragraph": "Separately, Bernadette Meehan, a spokeswoman for the council, said, \u201cPresident Obama has not opened the door to anything larger than an embassy force after 2016.\u201d Mr. Eggers\u2019s comments are in line with what other officials say is being debated within the administration, even if Mr. Obama\u2019s focus is currently on what to do next year, not afterward. Like so many of the plans for Afghanistan laid out in Washington since the war\u2019s outset in 2001, realities on the ground appear to again be forcing American officials to consider revamping their strategy for ending the war. Peace talks appear to be a far-off possibility after a stretch in February and early March in which it appeared that the Taliban might be willing to meet with the Afghan government. So instead of talking about how to end the war, Afghan and American officials are preparing for violence to intensify as the snow melts in the high passes that separate the insurgents from their safe havens in Pakistan and what is known as the fighting season gets underway. Afghan forces, which have done the bulk of the fighting and dying over the past two years, are still very much a work in progress. They managed to keep the Taliban from making significant gains last summer only with help from the American-led coalition.", "answer": "Obama\u2019s", "sentence": "Obama\u2019s focus is currently on what to do next year, not afterward.", "paragraph_sentence": "Separately, Bernadette Meehan, a spokeswoman for the council, said, \u201cPresident Obama has not opened the door to anything larger than an embassy force after 2016.\u201d Mr. Eggers\u2019s comments are in line with what other officials say is being debated within the administration, even if Mr. Obama\u2019s focus is currently on what to do next year, not afterward. Like so many of the plans for Afghanistan laid out in Washington since the war\u2019s outset in 2001, realities on the ground appear to again be forcing American officials to consider revamping their strategy for ending the war. Peace talks appear to be a far-off possibility after a stretch in February and early March in which it appeared that the Taliban might be willing to meet with the Afghan government. So instead of talking about how to end the war, Afghan and American officials are preparing for violence to intensify as the snow melts in the high passes that separate the insurgents from their safe havens in Pakistan and what is known as the fighting season gets underway. Afghan forces, which have done the bulk of the fighting and dying over the past two years, are still very much a work in progress. They managed to keep the Taliban from making significant gains last summer only with help from the American-led coalition.", "paragraph_answer": "Separately, Bernadette Meehan, a spokeswoman for the council, said, \u201cPresident Obama has not opened the door to anything larger than an embassy force after 2016.\u201d Mr. Eggers\u2019s comments are in line with what other officials say is being debated within the administration, even if Mr. Obama\u2019s focus is currently on what to do next year, not afterward. Like so many of the plans for Afghanistan laid out in Washington since the war\u2019s outset in 2001, realities on the ground appear to again be forcing American officials to consider revamping their strategy for ending the war. Peace talks appear to be a far-off possibility after a stretch in February and early March in which it appeared that the Taliban might be willing to meet with the Afghan government. So instead of talking about how to end the war, Afghan and American officials are preparing for violence to intensify as the snow melts in the high passes that separate the insurgents from their safe havens in Pakistan and what is known as the fighting season gets underway. Afghan forces, which have done the bulk of the fighting and dying over the past two years, are still very much a work in progress. They managed to keep the Taliban from making significant gains last summer only with help from the American-led coalition.", "sentence_answer": " Obama\u2019s focus is currently on what to do next year, not afterward.", "paragraph_id": "5d7004c7c8e4820a9b66a809"} +{"question": "How many times a day mishearing of what people say happen to his/her ?", "paragraph": "As my deafness increases, I am more and more prone to mishearing what people say, though this is quite unpredictable; it may happen 20 times, or not at all, in the course of a day. I carefully record these in a little red notebook labeled \u201cPARACUSES\u201d \u2014 aberrations in hearing, especially mishearings. I enter what I hear (in red) on one page, what was actually said (in green) on the opposite page, and (in purple) people\u2019s reactions to my mishearings, and the often far-fetched hypotheses I may entertain in an attempt to make sense of what is often essentially nonsensical. After the publication of Freud\u2019s \u201cPsychopathology of Everyday Life\u201d in 1901, such mishearings, along with a range of misreadings, misspeakings, misdoings and slips of the tongue were seen as \u201cFreudian,\u201d an expression of deeply repressed feelings and conflicts.", "answer": "20 times", "sentence": "As my deafness increases, I am more and more prone to mishearing what people say, though this is quite unpredictable; it may happen 20 times , or not at all, in the course of a day.", "paragraph_sentence": " As my deafness increases, I am more and more prone to mishearing what people say, though this is quite unpredictable; it may happen 20 times , or not at all, in the course of a day. I carefully record these in a little red notebook labeled \u201cPARACUSES\u201d \u2014 aberrations in hearing, especially mishearings. I enter what I hear (in red) on one page, what was actually said (in green) on the opposite page, and (in purple) people\u2019s reactions to my mishearings, and the often far-fetched hypotheses I may entertain in an attempt to make sense of what is often essentially nonsensical. After the publication of Freud\u2019s \u201cPsychopathology of Everyday Life\u201d in 1901, such mishearings, along with a range of misreadings, misspeakings, misdoings and slips of the tongue were seen as \u201cFreudian,\u201d an expression of deeply repressed feelings and conflicts.", "paragraph_answer": "As my deafness increases, I am more and more prone to mishearing what people say, though this is quite unpredictable; it may happen 20 times , or not at all, in the course of a day. I carefully record these in a little red notebook labeled \u201cPARACUSES\u201d \u2014 aberrations in hearing, especially mishearings. I enter what I hear (in red) on one page, what was actually said (in green) on the opposite page, and (in purple) people\u2019s reactions to my mishearings, and the often far-fetched hypotheses I may entertain in an attempt to make sense of what is often essentially nonsensical. After the publication of Freud\u2019s \u201cPsychopathology of Everyday Life\u201d in 1901, such mishearings, along with a range of misreadings, misspeakings, misdoings and slips of the tongue were seen as \u201cFreudian,\u201d an expression of deeply repressed feelings and conflicts.", "sentence_answer": "As my deafness increases, I am more and more prone to mishearing what people say, though this is quite unpredictable; it may happen 20 times , or not at all, in the course of a day.", "paragraph_id": "5d7023cac8e4820a9b66d004"} +{"question": "How many were killed?", "paragraph": "As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze. After an emotional 10-week trial, one of the longest and most complex in this state\u2019s history, it took a jury of nine women and three men about 12 hours of deliberation over two days to convict Mr. Holmes on all counts. He now faces a lengthy sentencing process in which prosecutors are seeking the death penalty. The jury\u2019s verdict roundly rejected arguments from his defense lawyers that he had had a psychotic break and was legally insane when he carried out the massacre inside the Century 16 theater in suburban Aurora, Colo., on July 20, 2012. His lawyers argued he was not in control of his thoughts or actions, but prosecutors said Mr. Holmes, despite being mentally ill, had plotted the shootings with calculation and knew what he wanted to accomplish when he started firing into the crowd.", "answer": "12 people", "sentence": "As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze.", "paragraph_sentence": " As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze. After an emotional 10-week trial, one of the longest and most complex in this state\u2019s history, it took a jury of nine women and three men about 12 hours of deliberation over two days to convict Mr. Holmes on all counts. He now faces a lengthy sentencing process in which prosecutors are seeking the death penalty. The jury\u2019s verdict roundly rejected arguments from his defense lawyers that he had had a psychotic break and was legally insane when he carried out the massacre inside the Century 16 theater in suburban Aurora, Colo., on July 20, 2012. His lawyers argued he was not in control of his thoughts or actions, but prosecutors said Mr. Holmes, despite being mentally ill, had plotted the shootings with calculation and knew what he wanted to accomplish when he started firing into the crowd.", "paragraph_answer": "As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze. After an emotional 10-week trial, one of the longest and most complex in this state\u2019s history, it took a jury of nine women and three men about 12 hours of deliberation over two days to convict Mr. Holmes on all counts. He now faces a lengthy sentencing process in which prosecutors are seeking the death penalty. The jury\u2019s verdict roundly rejected arguments from his defense lawyers that he had had a psychotic break and was legally insane when he carried out the massacre inside the Century 16 theater in suburban Aurora, Colo., on July 20, 2012. His lawyers argued he was not in control of his thoughts or actions, but prosecutors said Mr. Holmes, despite being mentally ill, had plotted the shootings with calculation and knew what he wanted to accomplish when he started firing into the crowd.", "sentence_answer": "As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze.", "paragraph_id": "5d701381c8e4820a9b66c01b"} +{"question": "Who is the trainer of the second ranked horse?", "paragraph": "Top contenders for the 141st running of the Kentucky Derby are listed in order of preference, with comments provided by Joe Drape and Melissa Hoppert of The New York Times. Churchill Downs recently adopted a point system to determine the Derby field, with points being earned by the top four finishers in designated prep races. The odds are from the Churchill Downs futures pool, and the records are starts-win-place-show. 1. Dortmund Trainer: Bob Baffert Jockey: Martin Garcia Record: 6-6-0-0 Points: 170 Odds: 6-1 J.D.: This colt gets the edge over American Pharoah for faring better in California. He has gotten better in each outing, and only illness, injury or a bad post position could slow him down. M.H.: He crushed a talented Santa Anita Derby field, winning by four and a quarter lengths. Like his father, Big Brown, he will enter the Derby with a perfect record, making him my top choice. 2. American Pharoah Trainer: Bob Baffert Jockey: Victor Espinoza Record: 5-4-0-0 Points: 160 Odds: 5-1", "answer": "Bob Baffert", "sentence": "Dortmund Trainer: Bob Baffert Jockey: Martin Garcia Record: 6-6-0-0 Points: 170 Odds: 6-1 J.D.: This colt gets the edge over American Pharoah for faring better in California.", "paragraph_sentence": "Top contenders for the 141st running of the Kentucky Derby are listed in order of preference, with comments provided by Joe Drape and Melissa Hoppert of The New York Times. Churchill Downs recently adopted a point system to determine the Derby field, with points being earned by the top four finishers in designated prep races. The odds are from the Churchill Downs futures pool, and the records are starts-win-place-show. 1. Dortmund Trainer: Bob Baffert Jockey: Martin Garcia Record: 6-6-0-0 Points: 170 Odds: 6-1 J.D.: This colt gets the edge over American Pharoah for faring better in California. He has gotten better in each outing, and only illness, injury or a bad post position could slow him down. M.H.: He crushed a talented Santa Anita Derby field, winning by four and a quarter lengths. Like his father, Big Brown, he will enter the Derby with a perfect record, making him my top choice. 2. American Pharoah Trainer: Bob Baffert Jockey: Victor Espinoza Record: 5-4-0-0 Points: 160 Odds: 5-1", "paragraph_answer": "Top contenders for the 141st running of the Kentucky Derby are listed in order of preference, with comments provided by Joe Drape and Melissa Hoppert of The New York Times. Churchill Downs recently adopted a point system to determine the Derby field, with points being earned by the top four finishers in designated prep races. The odds are from the Churchill Downs futures pool, and the records are starts-win-place-show. 1. Dortmund Trainer: Bob Baffert Jockey: Martin Garcia Record: 6-6-0-0 Points: 170 Odds: 6-1 J.D.: This colt gets the edge over American Pharoah for faring better in California. He has gotten better in each outing, and only illness, injury or a bad post position could slow him down. M.H.: He crushed a talented Santa Anita Derby field, winning by four and a quarter lengths. Like his father, Big Brown, he will enter the Derby with a perfect record, making him my top choice. 2. American Pharoah Trainer: Bob Baffert Jockey: Victor Espinoza Record: 5-4-0-0 Points: 160 Odds: 5-1", "sentence_answer": "Dortmund Trainer: Bob Baffert Jockey: Martin Garcia Record: 6-6-0-0 Points: 170 Odds: 6-1 J.D.: This colt gets the edge over American Pharoah for faring better in California.", "paragraph_id": "5d702aa8c8e4820a9b66d841"} +{"question": "How many people from Hong Kong were injured?", "paragraph": "Video taken at the scene showed the flames erupting within the crowd at the event \u2014 called Color Play Asia and organized by a group using the same name \u2014 about 8:30 p.m. on Saturday, after nightfall. Some people were shown carrying the injured from the scene in inflatable rafts, and others were shown running away, silhouetted by flames. The fire was quickly controlled, but not before hundreds were hurt. Taiwan\u2019s Ministry of Health and Welfare said on its website that Taipei-area hospitals had victims requiring skin grafts. The ministry said hospitals were also urgently requesting other medical supplies needed to treat burns. The victims were mostly from Taiwan, but among the injured were four people from Hong Kong, one person from the United States, one from Singapore, one from Japan, one from Macau and one from Malaysia, according to the local public health department.", "answer": "four", "sentence": "The victims were mostly from Taiwan, but among the injured were four people from Hong Kong, one person from the United States, one from Singapore, one from Japan, one from Macau and one from Malaysia, according to the local public health department.", "paragraph_sentence": "Video taken at the scene showed the flames erupting within the crowd at the event \u2014 called Color Play Asia and organized by a group using the same name \u2014 about 8:30 p.m. on Saturday, after nightfall. Some people were shown carrying the injured from the scene in inflatable rafts, and others were shown running away, silhouetted by flames. The fire was quickly controlled, but not before hundreds were hurt. Taiwan\u2019s Ministry of Health and Welfare said on its website that Taipei-area hospitals had victims requiring skin grafts. The ministry said hospitals were also urgently requesting other medical supplies needed to treat burns. The victims were mostly from Taiwan, but among the injured were four people from Hong Kong, one person from the United States, one from Singapore, one from Japan, one from Macau and one from Malaysia, according to the local public health department. ", "paragraph_answer": "Video taken at the scene showed the flames erupting within the crowd at the event \u2014 called Color Play Asia and organized by a group using the same name \u2014 about 8:30 p.m. on Saturday, after nightfall. Some people were shown carrying the injured from the scene in inflatable rafts, and others were shown running away, silhouetted by flames. The fire was quickly controlled, but not before hundreds were hurt. Taiwan\u2019s Ministry of Health and Welfare said on its website that Taipei-area hospitals had victims requiring skin grafts. The ministry said hospitals were also urgently requesting other medical supplies needed to treat burns. The victims were mostly from Taiwan, but among the injured were four people from Hong Kong, one person from the United States, one from Singapore, one from Japan, one from Macau and one from Malaysia, according to the local public health department.", "sentence_answer": "The victims were mostly from Taiwan, but among the injured were four people from Hong Kong, one person from the United States, one from Singapore, one from Japan, one from Macau and one from Malaysia, according to the local public health department.", "paragraph_id": "5d704cb9c8e4820a9b66ea0b"} +{"question": "What job did Cyndi Whitehead hold at Sprout Pharmaceutical?", "paragraph": "Cindy Whitehead, who oversaw a long, but ultimately successful, effort to bring to market the first prescription drug to enhance women\u2019s sexual drive, is leaving her post as chief executive of Sprout Pharmaceuticals. In August, the Food and Drug Administration approved Sprout\u2019s Addyi, often referred to as the \u201clittle pink pill,\u201d after rejecting it in 2010 and in 2013 on concerns about side effects and limited effectiveness. Shortly after the approval, Sprout, which was privately held, agreed to be acquired by Valeant Pharmaceuticals for $1 billion.", "answer": "chief executive", "sentence": "Cindy Whitehead, who oversaw a long, but ultimately successful, effort to bring to market the first prescription drug to enhance women\u2019s sexual drive, is leaving her post as chief executive of Sprout Pharmaceuticals.", "paragraph_sentence": " Cindy Whitehead, who oversaw a long, but ultimately successful, effort to bring to market the first prescription drug to enhance women\u2019s sexual drive, is leaving her post as chief executive of Sprout Pharmaceuticals. In August, the Food and Drug Administration approved Sprout\u2019s Addyi, often referred to as the \u201clittle pink pill,\u201d after rejecting it in 2010 and in 2013 on concerns about side effects and limited effectiveness. Shortly after the approval, Sprout, which was privately held, agreed to be acquired by Valeant Pharmaceuticals for $1 billion.", "paragraph_answer": "Cindy Whitehead, who oversaw a long, but ultimately successful, effort to bring to market the first prescription drug to enhance women\u2019s sexual drive, is leaving her post as chief executive of Sprout Pharmaceuticals. In August, the Food and Drug Administration approved Sprout\u2019s Addyi, often referred to as the \u201clittle pink pill,\u201d after rejecting it in 2010 and in 2013 on concerns about side effects and limited effectiveness. Shortly after the approval, Sprout, which was privately held, agreed to be acquired by Valeant Pharmaceuticals for $1 billion.", "sentence_answer": "Cindy Whitehead, who oversaw a long, but ultimately successful, effort to bring to market the first prescription drug to enhance women\u2019s sexual drive, is leaving her post as chief executive of Sprout Pharmaceuticals.", "paragraph_id": "5d7007a0c8e4820a9b66ae49"} +{"question": "Who created the sound work named \"Stars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand.\"", "paragraph": "\u201cMiami is a place of excess, of vacation and gluttony, but also the art market, with lots of consumerism going on,\u201d said Ms. Wise, who graduated from art school in Montreal in 2013. \u201cIt is a really interesting place to overhear things.\u201d And, apparently, to get on board with a new way to sell art. Miami is also where Ms. Wise first met David Gryn, a London-based curator who, along with the British collector and philanthropist Anita Zabludowicz, co-created Daata Editions. The website, which debuted during this year\u2019s Frieze Art Fair in New York, combines the growing online art sales scene with the mushrooming market value of new media art. Ms. Wise was one of 18 new-media artists invited to be part of the inaugural group to show on the website. The group includes Jon Rafman, Takeshi Murata, Hannah Perry, Ilit Azoulay and Stephen Vitiello. \u201cI have learned to say no to a lot in the art world, as you sense \u2018I do not trust this person,\u201d\u2019 said Mr. Vitiello, a Virginia-based sound and visual artist who created sound works for Daata with names like \u201cStars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Vitiello", "sentence": "\u201cI have learned to say no to a lot in the art world, as you sense \u2018I do not trust this person,\u201d\u2019 said Mr. Vitiello , a Virginia-based sound and visual artist who created sound works for Daata with names like \u201cStars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cMiami is a place of excess, of vacation and gluttony, but also the art market, with lots of consumerism going on,\u201d said Ms. Wise, who graduated from art school in Montreal in 2013. \u201cIt is a really interesting place to overhear things.\u201d And, apparently, to get on board with a new way to sell art. Miami is also where Ms. Wise first met David Gryn, a London-based curator who, along with the British collector and philanthropist Anita Zabludowicz, co-created Daata Editions. The website, which debuted during this year\u2019s Frieze Art Fair in New York, combines the growing online art sales scene with the mushrooming market value of new media art. Ms. Wise was one of 18 new-media artists invited to be part of the inaugural group to show on the website. The group includes Jon Rafman, Takeshi Murata, Hannah Perry, Ilit Azoulay and Stephen Vitiello. \u201cI have learned to say no to a lot in the art world, as you sense \u2018I do not trust this person,\u201d\u2019 said Mr. Vitiello , a Virginia-based sound and visual artist who created sound works for Daata with names like \u201cStars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cMiami is a place of excess, of vacation and gluttony, but also the art market, with lots of consumerism going on,\u201d said Ms. Wise, who graduated from art school in Montreal in 2013. \u201cIt is a really interesting place to overhear things.\u201d And, apparently, to get on board with a new way to sell art. Miami is also where Ms. Wise first met David Gryn, a London-based curator who, along with the British collector and philanthropist Anita Zabludowicz, co-created Daata Editions. The website, which debuted during this year\u2019s Frieze Art Fair in New York, combines the growing online art sales scene with the mushrooming market value of new media art. Ms. Wise was one of 18 new-media artists invited to be part of the inaugural group to show on the website. The group includes Jon Rafman, Takeshi Murata, Hannah Perry, Ilit Azoulay and Stephen Vitiello. \u201cI have learned to say no to a lot in the art world, as you sense \u2018I do not trust this person,\u201d\u2019 said Mr. Vitiello , a Virginia-based sound and visual artist who created sound works for Daata with names like \u201cStars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI have learned to say no to a lot in the art world, as you sense \u2018I do not trust this person,\u201d\u2019 said Mr. Vitiello , a Virginia-based sound and visual artist who created sound works for Daata with names like \u201cStars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d70720cc8e4820a9b66f1ea"} +{"question": "What is the name of the movie that stars Michael Keaton and Rachel McAdams?", "paragraph": "\u2018Spectre\u2019 (PG-13, 2:28) Bond, James Bond, etc. (Dargis) \u2605 \u2018Spotlight\u2019 (R, 2:07) A team of Boston Globe investigative reporters \u2014 played by Michael Keaton, Brian d\u2019Arcy James, Rachel McAdams and Mark Ruffalo \u2014 takes on the local archdiocese in this powerful fact-based newspaper procedural, directed by Tom McCarthy. The movie, with a superb cast and a tightly constructed script, is an unflinching investigation of systemic moral rot and a rousing defense of the values of professional journalism. (Scott)", "answer": "Spotlight", "sentence": "(Dargis) \u2605 \u2018 Spotlight \u2019 (R, 2:07)", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Spectre\u2019 (PG-13, 2:28) Bond, James Bond, etc. (Dargis) \u2605 \u2018 Spotlight \u2019 (R, 2:07) A team of Boston Globe investigative reporters \u2014 played by Michael Keaton, Brian d\u2019Arcy James, Rachel McAdams and Mark Ruffalo \u2014 takes on the local archdiocese in this powerful fact-based newspaper procedural, directed by Tom McCarthy. The movie, with a superb cast and a tightly constructed script, is an unflinching investigation of systemic moral rot and a rousing defense of the values of professional journalism. (Scott)", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Spectre\u2019 (PG-13, 2:28) Bond, James Bond, etc. (Dargis) \u2605 \u2018 Spotlight \u2019 (R, 2:07) A team of Boston Globe investigative reporters \u2014 played by Michael Keaton, Brian d\u2019Arcy James, Rachel McAdams and Mark Ruffalo \u2014 takes on the local archdiocese in this powerful fact-based newspaper procedural, directed by Tom McCarthy. The movie, with a superb cast and a tightly constructed script, is an unflinching investigation of systemic moral rot and a rousing defense of the values of professional journalism. (Scott)", "sentence_answer": "(Dargis) \u2605 \u2018 Spotlight \u2019 (R, 2:07)", "paragraph_id": "5d702140c8e4820a9b66cd2c"} +{"question": "What country was this museum located in?", "paragraph": "Religious images live switched-on, switched-off lives. I remember walking through the National Museum in Kyoto, Japan, some years back, taking in its rows of Buddhist sculpture, and being stopped by one piece, not because it was especially beautiful \u2014 it wasn\u2019t \u2014 but because a vase with a single fresh flower had been placed in front of it, like an offering in a temple. I stayed with the image because someone \u2014 a guard? a visitor? \u2014 was telling me, in terms I don\u2019t often think of in museums, that it was important, in a personal, spiritual way.", "answer": "Japan", "sentence": "I remember walking through the National Museum in Kyoto, Japan , some years back, taking in its rows of Buddhist sculpture, and being stopped by one piece, not because it was especially beautiful \u2014 it wasn\u2019t \u2014 but because a vase with a single fresh flower had been placed in front of it, like an offering in a temple.", "paragraph_sentence": "Religious images live switched-on, switched-off lives. I remember walking through the National Museum in Kyoto, Japan , some years back, taking in its rows of Buddhist sculpture, and being stopped by one piece, not because it was especially beautiful \u2014 it wasn\u2019t \u2014 but because a vase with a single fresh flower had been placed in front of it, like an offering in a temple. I stayed with the image because someone \u2014 a guard? a visitor? \u2014 was telling me, in terms I don\u2019t often think of in museums, that it was important, in a personal, spiritual way.", "paragraph_answer": "Religious images live switched-on, switched-off lives. I remember walking through the National Museum in Kyoto, Japan , some years back, taking in its rows of Buddhist sculpture, and being stopped by one piece, not because it was especially beautiful \u2014 it wasn\u2019t \u2014 but because a vase with a single fresh flower had been placed in front of it, like an offering in a temple. I stayed with the image because someone \u2014 a guard? a visitor? \u2014 was telling me, in terms I don\u2019t often think of in museums, that it was important, in a personal, spiritual way.", "sentence_answer": "I remember walking through the National Museum in Kyoto, Japan , some years back, taking in its rows of Buddhist sculpture, and being stopped by one piece, not because it was especially beautiful \u2014 it wasn\u2019t \u2014 but because a vase with a single fresh flower had been placed in front of it, like an offering in a temple.", "paragraph_id": "5d702440c8e4820a9b66d075"} +{"question": "On what channel is \"All That Jazz\" shown?", "paragraph": "Several reality series, some still in the planning stages, are centered on transgender people, like TLC\u2019s \u201cAll That Jazz,\u201d about the teenage transgender activist Jazz Jennings, and VH1\u2019s \u201cTransAmerica,\u201d about the model and activist Carmen Carrera. Nick Adams, the director of programs for transgender media at the gay rights organization Glaad, said that any time a transgender celebrity comes forward with his or her story, \u201cit goes a very long way toward educating people about who we are and the challenges that we face.\u201d \u201cEvery transgender person\u2019s journey is unique, and by choosing to share this story, Bruce Jenner adds another layer to America\u2019s understanding of what it means to be transgender,\u201d Mr. Adams said in a statement on Friday night. Mr. Adams, who is transgender, said that media portrayals of transgender people had improved since he transitioned 18 years ago. But, he said, such reports need to more fully explore what it means to be transgender.", "answer": "TLC", "sentence": "Several reality series, some still in the planning stages, are centered on transgender people, like TLC \u2019s \u201cAll That Jazz,\u201d about the teenage transgender activist Jazz Jennings, and VH1\u2019s \u201cTransAmerica,\u201d about the model and activist Carmen Carrera.", "paragraph_sentence": " Several reality series, some still in the planning stages, are centered on transgender people, like TLC \u2019s \u201cAll That Jazz,\u201d about the teenage transgender activist Jazz Jennings, and VH1\u2019s \u201cTransAmerica,\u201d about the model and activist Carmen Carrera. Nick Adams, the director of programs for transgender media at the gay rights organization Glaad, said that any time a transgender celebrity comes forward with his or her story, \u201cit goes a very long way toward educating people about who we are and the challenges that we face.\u201d \u201cEvery transgender person\u2019s journey is unique, and by choosing to share this story, Bruce Jenner adds another layer to America\u2019s understanding of what it means to be transgender,\u201d Mr. Adams said in a statement on Friday night. Mr. Adams, who is transgender, said that media portrayals of transgender people had improved since he transitioned 18 years ago. But, he said, such reports need to more fully explore what it means to be transgender.", "paragraph_answer": "Several reality series, some still in the planning stages, are centered on transgender people, like TLC \u2019s \u201cAll That Jazz,\u201d about the teenage transgender activist Jazz Jennings, and VH1\u2019s \u201cTransAmerica,\u201d about the model and activist Carmen Carrera. Nick Adams, the director of programs for transgender media at the gay rights organization Glaad, said that any time a transgender celebrity comes forward with his or her story, \u201cit goes a very long way toward educating people about who we are and the challenges that we face.\u201d \u201cEvery transgender person\u2019s journey is unique, and by choosing to share this story, Bruce Jenner adds another layer to America\u2019s understanding of what it means to be transgender,\u201d Mr. Adams said in a statement on Friday night. Mr. Adams, who is transgender, said that media portrayals of transgender people had improved since he transitioned 18 years ago. But, he said, such reports need to more fully explore what it means to be transgender.", "sentence_answer": "Several reality series, some still in the planning stages, are centered on transgender people, like TLC \u2019s \u201cAll That Jazz,\u201d about the teenage transgender activist Jazz Jennings, and VH1\u2019s \u201cTransAmerica,\u201d about the model and activist Carmen Carrera.", "paragraph_id": "5d700ffec8e4820a9b66bbf8"} +{"question": "What is Madonna working on?", "paragraph": "She continued: \u201cWhat started out as an invigorating, life-enhancing, joyous experience evolved into something quite crazy. A strange artistic process, but a sign of the time. We\u2019re all digital, we\u2019re all vulnerable and everything\u2019s instant \u2014 so instant. Instant success and instant failure. Instant discovery, instant destruction, instant construction. It\u2019s as splendid and wonderful as it is devastating. Honestly, to me it\u2019s the death of being an artist in many ways.\u201d We spoke in her sitting room, where a Fernand L\u00e9ger painting presides from above the fireplace. A large coffee table was neatly stacked with books and folders of photographs that Madonna has been using for research as she works on the screenplay for her next film project, based on the novel \u201cThe Impossible Lives of Greta Wells.\u201d Imposing cream-colored couches flanked the coffee table, but Madonna preferred sitting on the floor.", "answer": "the screenplay for her next film project, based on the novel \u201cThe Impossible Lives of Greta Wells.", "sentence": "A large coffee table was neatly stacked with books and folders of photographs that Madonna has been using for research as she works on the screenplay for her next film project, based on the novel \u201cThe Impossible Lives of Greta Wells. \u201d Imposing cream-colored couches flanked the coffee table, but Madonna preferred sitting on the floor.", "paragraph_sentence": "She continued: \u201cWhat started out as an invigorating, life-enhancing, joyous experience evolved into something quite crazy. A strange artistic process, but a sign of the time. We\u2019re all digital, we\u2019re all vulnerable and everything\u2019s instant \u2014 so instant. Instant success and instant failure. Instant discovery, instant destruction, instant construction. It\u2019s as splendid and wonderful as it is devastating. Honestly, to me it\u2019s the death of being an artist in many ways.\u201d We spoke in her sitting room, where a Fernand L\u00e9ger painting presides from above the fireplace. A large coffee table was neatly stacked with books and folders of photographs that Madonna has been using for research as she works on the screenplay for her next film project, based on the novel \u201cThe Impossible Lives of Greta Wells. \u201d Imposing cream-colored couches flanked the coffee table, but Madonna preferred sitting on the floor. ", "paragraph_answer": "She continued: \u201cWhat started out as an invigorating, life-enhancing, joyous experience evolved into something quite crazy. A strange artistic process, but a sign of the time. We\u2019re all digital, we\u2019re all vulnerable and everything\u2019s instant \u2014 so instant. Instant success and instant failure. Instant discovery, instant destruction, instant construction. It\u2019s as splendid and wonderful as it is devastating. Honestly, to me it\u2019s the death of being an artist in many ways.\u201d We spoke in her sitting room, where a Fernand L\u00e9ger painting presides from above the fireplace. A large coffee table was neatly stacked with books and folders of photographs that Madonna has been using for research as she works on the screenplay for her next film project, based on the novel \u201cThe Impossible Lives of Greta Wells. \u201d Imposing cream-colored couches flanked the coffee table, but Madonna preferred sitting on the floor.", "sentence_answer": "A large coffee table was neatly stacked with books and folders of photographs that Madonna has been using for research as she works on the screenplay for her next film project, based on the novel \u201cThe Impossible Lives of Greta Wells. \u201d Imposing cream-colored couches flanked the coffee table, but Madonna preferred sitting on the floor.", "paragraph_id": "5d705029c8e4820a9b66eb2b"} +{"question": "Who has written about the intentions of Deutsche Bank?", "paragraph": "Deutsche Bank will sell its Postbank network of branches in Germany by listing the unit on the stock market next year. But it will continue to operate a network of branches with the Deutsche Bank brand in Germany and some other countries, albeit in streamlined form. \u201cIf anything you would have to say this is a muddling through,\u201d said Mr. Smith, who has written about Deutsche Bank\u2019s strategy. Deutsche Bank remains enormously complex and difficult to manage, he said. \u201cIt\u2019s a big bull of a bank,\u201d Mr. Smith said. Mr. Smith pointed out that the name of the reorganization plan, Strategy 2020, means that even if Deutsche Bank meets all its goals, it will still have been 12 years since the beginning of the financial crisis \u201cbefore they get to some kind of equilibrium.\u201d Investors clearly shared Mr. Smith\u2019s pessimism. Deutsche Bank shares sank 4.6 percent on Monday in Frankfurt trading.", "answer": "Mr. Smith", "sentence": "\u201cIf anything you would have to say this is a muddling through,\u201d said Mr. Smith , who has written about Deutsche Bank\u2019s strategy.", "paragraph_sentence": "Deutsche Bank will sell its Postbank network of branches in Germany by listing the unit on the stock market next year. But it will continue to operate a network of branches with the Deutsche Bank brand in Germany and some other countries, albeit in streamlined form. \u201cIf anything you would have to say this is a muddling through,\u201d said Mr. Smith , who has written about Deutsche Bank\u2019s strategy. Deutsche Bank remains enormously complex and difficult to manage, he said. \u201cIt\u2019s a big bull of a bank,\u201d Mr. Smith said. Mr. Smith pointed out that the name of the reorganization plan, Strategy 2020, means that even if Deutsche Bank meets all its goals, it will still have been 12 years since the beginning of the financial crisis \u201cbefore they get to some kind of equilibrium.\u201d Investors clearly shared Mr. Smith\u2019s pessimism. Deutsche Bank shares sank 4.6 percent on Monday in Frankfurt trading.", "paragraph_answer": "Deutsche Bank will sell its Postbank network of branches in Germany by listing the unit on the stock market next year. But it will continue to operate a network of branches with the Deutsche Bank brand in Germany and some other countries, albeit in streamlined form. \u201cIf anything you would have to say this is a muddling through,\u201d said Mr. Smith , who has written about Deutsche Bank\u2019s strategy. Deutsche Bank remains enormously complex and difficult to manage, he said. \u201cIt\u2019s a big bull of a bank,\u201d Mr. Smith said. Mr. Smith pointed out that the name of the reorganization plan, Strategy 2020, means that even if Deutsche Bank meets all its goals, it will still have been 12 years since the beginning of the financial crisis \u201cbefore they get to some kind of equilibrium.\u201d Investors clearly shared Mr. Smith\u2019s pessimism. Deutsche Bank shares sank 4.6 percent on Monday in Frankfurt trading.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIf anything you would have to say this is a muddling through,\u201d said Mr. Smith , who has written about Deutsche Bank\u2019s strategy.", "paragraph_id": "5d700f9dc8e4820a9b66bbb3"} +{"question": "Who stabbed Mr. Watkins?", "paragraph": "But Mr. Hincapie now maintains he gave a false confession after a detective beat him. He testified in February he was walking down an escalator to the platform when the murder occurred. He was looking for a friend and had tarried at the turnstiles to flirt with some girls, he said. His story was buttressed by the testimony of Luis Montero, who testified he recalled Mr. Hincapie\u2019s being with him at the turnstiles just before the commotion erupted on the platform below. The police arrested Mr. Montero on suspicion of taking part in the mugging as well, but later dropped charges against him. He never confessed. Another man convicted in the attack, Anthony Anderson, took the stand and testified he did not remember Mr. Hincapie\u2019s being on the platform when another teenager, Yul Gary Morales, stabbed Mr. Watkins in the chest. Ms. Santana, a 45-year-old hospital worker, also corroborated Mr. Hincapie\u2019s claim. Having read about the hearing, she voluntarily came forward this year and swore on the stand she had seen the murder but had not seen Mr. Hincapie among the men attacking the Watkins family.", "answer": "Yul Gary Morales", "sentence": "Another man convicted in the attack, Anthony Anderson, took the stand and testified he did not remember Mr. Hincapie\u2019s being on the platform when another teenager, Yul Gary Morales , stabbed Mr. Watkins in the chest.", "paragraph_sentence": "But Mr. Hincapie now maintains he gave a false confession after a detective beat him. He testified in February he was walking down an escalator to the platform when the murder occurred. He was looking for a friend and had tarried at the turnstiles to flirt with some girls, he said. His story was buttressed by the testimony of Luis Montero, who testified he recalled Mr. Hincapie\u2019s being with him at the turnstiles just before the commotion erupted on the platform below. The police arrested Mr. Montero on suspicion of taking part in the mugging as well, but later dropped charges against him. He never confessed. Another man convicted in the attack, Anthony Anderson, took the stand and testified he did not remember Mr. Hincapie\u2019s being on the platform when another teenager, Yul Gary Morales , stabbed Mr. Watkins in the chest. Ms. Santana, a 45-year-old hospital worker, also corroborated Mr. Hincapie\u2019s claim. Having read about the hearing, she voluntarily came forward this year and swore on the stand she had seen the murder but had not seen Mr. Hincapie among the men attacking the Watkins family.", "paragraph_answer": "But Mr. Hincapie now maintains he gave a false confession after a detective beat him. He testified in February he was walking down an escalator to the platform when the murder occurred. He was looking for a friend and had tarried at the turnstiles to flirt with some girls, he said. His story was buttressed by the testimony of Luis Montero, who testified he recalled Mr. Hincapie\u2019s being with him at the turnstiles just before the commotion erupted on the platform below. The police arrested Mr. Montero on suspicion of taking part in the mugging as well, but later dropped charges against him. He never confessed. Another man convicted in the attack, Anthony Anderson, took the stand and testified he did not remember Mr. Hincapie\u2019s being on the platform when another teenager, Yul Gary Morales , stabbed Mr. Watkins in the chest. Ms. Santana, a 45-year-old hospital worker, also corroborated Mr. Hincapie\u2019s claim. Having read about the hearing, she voluntarily came forward this year and swore on the stand she had seen the murder but had not seen Mr. Hincapie among the men attacking the Watkins family.", "sentence_answer": "Another man convicted in the attack, Anthony Anderson, took the stand and testified he did not remember Mr. Hincapie\u2019s being on the platform when another teenager, Yul Gary Morales , stabbed Mr. Watkins in the chest.", "paragraph_id": "5d70253cc8e4820a9b66d1af"} +{"question": "How much does it cost to see the Brazilian Jazz group?", "paragraph": "SOUTH ORANGE Papillon 25 Bossa Brasil, Brazilian Jazz group. July 9, 8 to 11 p.m. Free. Papillon 25, 25 Valley Street. 973-761-5299; papillon25.com. SOUTH ORANGE South Orange Performing Arts Center \u201cSOxSO: Creative Collisions,\u201d 12 interactive sessions, 15 musical performances and community art projects. Through June 28. $20 to $45. South Orange Performing Arts Center, 1 Sopac Way. 973-313-2787; sopacnow.org. STANHOPE The Stanhope House Milo Z, funk, featuring the Defending Champions. July 11 at 8:30 p.m. $20. The Stanhope House, 45 Main Street. 973-347-7777; stanhopehousenj.com.", "answer": "Free", "sentence": "Free .", "paragraph_sentence": "SOUTH ORANGE Papillon 25 Bossa Brasil, Brazilian Jazz group. July 9, 8 to 11 p.m. Free . Papillon 25, 25 Valley Street. 973-761-5299; papillon25.com. SOUTH ORANGE South Orange Performing Arts Center \u201cSOxSO: Creative Collisions,\u201d 12 interactive sessions, 15 musical performances and community art projects. Through June 28. $20 to $45. South Orange Performing Arts Center, 1 Sopac Way. 973-313-2787; sopacnow.org. STANHOPE The Stanhope House Milo Z, funk, featuring the Defending Champions. July 11 at 8:30 p.m. $20. The Stanhope House, 45 Main Street. 973-347-7777; stanhopehousenj.com.", "paragraph_answer": "SOUTH ORANGE Papillon 25 Bossa Brasil, Brazilian Jazz group. July 9, 8 to 11 p.m. Free . Papillon 25, 25 Valley Street. 973-761-5299; papillon25.com. SOUTH ORANGE South Orange Performing Arts Center \u201cSOxSO: Creative Collisions,\u201d 12 interactive sessions, 15 musical performances and community art projects. Through June 28. $20 to $45. South Orange Performing Arts Center, 1 Sopac Way. 973-313-2787; sopacnow.org. STANHOPE The Stanhope House Milo Z, funk, featuring the Defending Champions. July 11 at 8:30 p.m. $20. The Stanhope House, 45 Main Street. 973-347-7777; stanhopehousenj.com.", "sentence_answer": " Free .", "paragraph_id": "5d700c5ac8e4820a9b66b759"} +{"question": "What was Shleiff's job prior to being chief executive of Crown Media Holdings?", "paragraph": "Then Henry S. Schleiff arrived in 2009 as group president of Investigation Discovery and a roster of other networks, bearing the ideal credentials for proceeding with a crime network. Mr. Schleiff had been chief executive of Crown Media Holdings, owner of the Hallmark Channel, known for its sentimental love stories. Earlier, he was chief executive of Court TV Network, the home of live court coverage that gained attention during the O. J. Simpson trial. During his first meeting with Mr. Zaslav, Mr.Schleiff endorsed going all-in with Investigation Discovery, broadcasting nothing but true stories about crime, mystery and romance. The executives made their bet based on the popularity of crime novels and police procedurals, like \u201cNCIS,\u201d \u201cCSI\u201d and \u201cLaw and Order,\u201d which for years had topped the ratings charts.", "answer": "chief executive of Court TV Network,", "sentence": "Earlier, he was chief executive of Court TV Network, the home of live court coverage that gained attention during the O. J. Simpson trial.", "paragraph_sentence": "Then Henry S. Schleiff arrived in 2009 as group president of Investigation Discovery and a roster of other networks, bearing the ideal credentials for proceeding with a crime network. Mr. Schleiff had been chief executive of Crown Media Holdings, owner of the Hallmark Channel, known for its sentimental love stories. Earlier, he was chief executive of Court TV Network, the home of live court coverage that gained attention during the O. J. Simpson trial. During his first meeting with Mr. Zaslav, Mr.Schleiff endorsed going all-in with Investigation Discovery, broadcasting nothing but true stories about crime, mystery and romance. The executives made their bet based on the popularity of crime novels and police procedurals, like \u201cNCIS,\u201d \u201cCSI\u201d and \u201cLaw and Order,\u201d which for years had topped the ratings charts.", "paragraph_answer": "Then Henry S. Schleiff arrived in 2009 as group president of Investigation Discovery and a roster of other networks, bearing the ideal credentials for proceeding with a crime network. Mr. Schleiff had been chief executive of Crown Media Holdings, owner of the Hallmark Channel, known for its sentimental love stories. Earlier, he was chief executive of Court TV Network, the home of live court coverage that gained attention during the O. J. Simpson trial. During his first meeting with Mr. Zaslav, Mr.Schleiff endorsed going all-in with Investigation Discovery, broadcasting nothing but true stories about crime, mystery and romance. The executives made their bet based on the popularity of crime novels and police procedurals, like \u201cNCIS,\u201d \u201cCSI\u201d and \u201cLaw and Order,\u201d which for years had topped the ratings charts.", "sentence_answer": "Earlier, he was chief executive of Court TV Network, the home of live court coverage that gained attention during the O. J. Simpson trial.", "paragraph_id": "5d6fe237c8e4820a9b66a7da"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d70089dc8e4820a9b66b059"} +{"question": "What kind of instruments will be played at the Welles symposium?", "paragraph": "Ms. Dow said she was struck by Welles\u2019s account of a wine-soaked session with Ernest Hemingway, who had just won the Nobel Prize for literature. \u201cIt should have gone to Isak Dinesen,\u201d Hemingway said, according to Ms. Dow\u2019s description of Welles\u2019s remembrance. Ms. Dow said it would take perhaps five months to arrange the papers for public use. In early June, Ms. Kodar is expected to attend a university-sponsored Welles symposium that will honor donors to the film archive. It promises to be an unusual affair, one that Welles may have appreciated. One presentation, Mr. Hallman said, will feature music composed for an ensemble that plays toy instruments. Ms. Kodar, he added, may have something else up her sleeve. \u201cShe has asked us to tell people she\u2019s planning to do magic tricks with the audience,\u201d Mr. Hallman said.", "answer": "toy instruments", "sentence": "One presentation, Mr. Hallman said, will feature music composed for an ensemble that plays toy instruments .", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Dow said she was struck by Welles\u2019s account of a wine-soaked session with Ernest Hemingway, who had just won the Nobel Prize for literature. \u201cIt should have gone to Isak Dinesen,\u201d Hemingway said, according to Ms. Dow\u2019s description of Welles\u2019s remembrance. Ms. Dow said it would take perhaps five months to arrange the papers for public use. In early June, Ms. Kodar is expected to attend a university-sponsored Welles symposium that will honor donors to the film archive. It promises to be an unusual affair, one that Welles may have appreciated. One presentation, Mr. Hallman said, will feature music composed for an ensemble that plays toy instruments . Ms. Kodar, he added, may have something else up her sleeve. \u201cShe has asked us to tell people she\u2019s planning to do magic tricks with the audience,\u201d Mr. Hallman said.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Dow said she was struck by Welles\u2019s account of a wine-soaked session with Ernest Hemingway, who had just won the Nobel Prize for literature. \u201cIt should have gone to Isak Dinesen,\u201d Hemingway said, according to Ms. Dow\u2019s description of Welles\u2019s remembrance. Ms. Dow said it would take perhaps five months to arrange the papers for public use. In early June, Ms. Kodar is expected to attend a university-sponsored Welles symposium that will honor donors to the film archive. It promises to be an unusual affair, one that Welles may have appreciated. One presentation, Mr. Hallman said, will feature music composed for an ensemble that plays toy instruments . Ms. Kodar, he added, may have something else up her sleeve. \u201cShe has asked us to tell people she\u2019s planning to do magic tricks with the audience,\u201d Mr. Hallman said.", "sentence_answer": "One presentation, Mr. Hallman said, will feature music composed for an ensemble that plays toy instruments .", "paragraph_id": "5d70865ac8e4820a9b66f441"} +{"question": "Who has to agree to extend sanctions?", "paragraph": "Greek officials have told journalists that Mr. Tsipras will not seek financial aid from Russia. But he has also said that European sanctions against Russia for its aggression in Ukraine are a \u201cdead-end policy.\u201d That stance is seriously harmful because the sanctions are having a real impact on Russia and should be maintained. But they have to be renewed periodically and all members of the European Union \u2014 including Greece \u2014 have to agree to extend them. Mr. Putin has shown a keen interest in exploiting divisions within the European Union for his own gain. For example, he has recently courted the government of Cyprus by providing it a loan and reaching an agreement that allows Russian warships to dock at a commercial port in that country. Mr. Putin has also cultivated Prime Minister Viktor Orban of Hungary as an ally. And, last year, a Russian bank lent money to the far-right National Front party in France, which is gaining popularity in that country and says it would want France to leave the eurozone if it came to power. It would be a public relations triumph for Mr. Putin if Mr. Tsipras publicly criticized the sanctions while he was in Moscow.", "answer": "all members of the European Union", "sentence": "But they have to be renewed periodically and all members of the European Union \u2014 including Greece \u2014 have to agree to extend them.", "paragraph_sentence": "Greek officials have told journalists that Mr. Tsipras will not seek financial aid from Russia. But he has also said that European sanctions against Russia for its aggression in Ukraine are a \u201cdead-end policy.\u201d That stance is seriously harmful because the sanctions are having a real impact on Russia and should be maintained. But they have to be renewed periodically and all members of the European Union \u2014 including Greece \u2014 have to agree to extend them. Mr. Putin has shown a keen interest in exploiting divisions within the European Union for his own gain. For example, he has recently courted the government of Cyprus by providing it a loan and reaching an agreement that allows Russian warships to dock at a commercial port in that country. Mr. Putin has also cultivated Prime Minister Viktor Orban of Hungary as an ally. And, last year, a Russian bank lent money to the far-right National Front party in France, which is gaining popularity in that country and says it would want France to leave the eurozone if it came to power. It would be a public relations triumph for Mr. Putin if Mr. Tsipras publicly criticized the sanctions while he was in Moscow.", "paragraph_answer": "Greek officials have told journalists that Mr. Tsipras will not seek financial aid from Russia. But he has also said that European sanctions against Russia for its aggression in Ukraine are a \u201cdead-end policy.\u201d That stance is seriously harmful because the sanctions are having a real impact on Russia and should be maintained. But they have to be renewed periodically and all members of the European Union \u2014 including Greece \u2014 have to agree to extend them. Mr. Putin has shown a keen interest in exploiting divisions within the European Union for his own gain. For example, he has recently courted the government of Cyprus by providing it a loan and reaching an agreement that allows Russian warships to dock at a commercial port in that country. Mr. Putin has also cultivated Prime Minister Viktor Orban of Hungary as an ally. And, last year, a Russian bank lent money to the far-right National Front party in France, which is gaining popularity in that country and says it would want France to leave the eurozone if it came to power. It would be a public relations triumph for Mr. Putin if Mr. Tsipras publicly criticized the sanctions while he was in Moscow.", "sentence_answer": "But they have to be renewed periodically and all members of the European Union \u2014 including Greece \u2014 have to agree to extend them.", "paragraph_id": "5d7006a8c8e4820a9b66abef"} +{"question": "What was the temperature at 7:29 am?", "paragraph": "For some New Yorkers, the subzero wind chill was the occupational hazard of making a living outdoors. Maher Bawady, 43, of Queens, woke at 2:30 a.m. on Monday to set up his food cart outside 500 Park Avenue in Manhattan. By 6:30 a.m., he had had two cups of coffee and was nursing a hot tea on what looked like his worst day on the street in more than 14 years as a vendor. He had to hold each latex glove by a heater so it would stretch over his hand. At 7:29 a.m., the temperature sank to a low of 3 degrees in Central Park, the lowest since the record of 1 degree was set in January 2004, said Tim Morrin, the observation program leader for the National Weather Service. As Mr. Morrin explained the meteorological reasons for the cold spell, he evoked a vast snow-covered landscape swept by arctic winds and a jet stream that had shifted south of the metropolitan region in January, opening the door to the coldest blasts in a decade. More snow is expected after midnight, he said, enough to affect the commute on Tuesday morning.", "answer": "3 degrees", "sentence": "At 7:29 a.m., the temperature sank to a low of 3 degrees in Central Park, the lowest since the record of 1 degree was set in January 2004, said Tim Morrin, the observation program leader for the National Weather Service.", "paragraph_sentence": "For some New Yorkers, the subzero wind chill was the occupational hazard of making a living outdoors. Maher Bawady, 43, of Queens, woke at 2:30 a.m. on Monday to set up his food cart outside 500 Park Avenue in Manhattan. By 6:30 a.m., he had had two cups of coffee and was nursing a hot tea on what looked like his worst day on the street in more than 14 years as a vendor. He had to hold each latex glove by a heater so it would stretch over his hand. At 7:29 a.m., the temperature sank to a low of 3 degrees in Central Park, the lowest since the record of 1 degree was set in January 2004, said Tim Morrin, the observation program leader for the National Weather Service. As Mr. Morrin explained the meteorological reasons for the cold spell, he evoked a vast snow-covered landscape swept by arctic winds and a jet stream that had shifted south of the metropolitan region in January, opening the door to the coldest blasts in a decade. More snow is expected after midnight, he said, enough to affect the commute on Tuesday morning.", "paragraph_answer": "For some New Yorkers, the subzero wind chill was the occupational hazard of making a living outdoors. Maher Bawady, 43, of Queens, woke at 2:30 a.m. on Monday to set up his food cart outside 500 Park Avenue in Manhattan. By 6:30 a.m., he had had two cups of coffee and was nursing a hot tea on what looked like his worst day on the street in more than 14 years as a vendor. He had to hold each latex glove by a heater so it would stretch over his hand. At 7:29 a.m., the temperature sank to a low of 3 degrees in Central Park, the lowest since the record of 1 degree was set in January 2004, said Tim Morrin, the observation program leader for the National Weather Service. As Mr. Morrin explained the meteorological reasons for the cold spell, he evoked a vast snow-covered landscape swept by arctic winds and a jet stream that had shifted south of the metropolitan region in January, opening the door to the coldest blasts in a decade. More snow is expected after midnight, he said, enough to affect the commute on Tuesday morning.", "sentence_answer": "At 7:29 a.m., the temperature sank to a low of 3 degrees in Central Park, the lowest since the record of 1 degree was set in January 2004, said Tim Morrin, the observation program leader for the National Weather Service.", "paragraph_id": "5d708b4bc8e4820a9b66f50d"} +{"question": "What was leased?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt was a book this thick, but we were free,\u201d joked Mr. Harschel, waving an imaginary building code volume. Mr. Olthuis noted that the house had been built following code for land houses, which, in keeping with a mandate to build greener houses in the Netherlands, stipulated triple-glazed windows, heavy insulation and even a heat exchanger to retain heat from effluent \u2014 something that most houseboats, which tend to be light houses on a heavy foundation, avoid. Mr. Harschel estimates that the couple spent 350,000 euros, or $380,000, to build the house (the lease for the lot is \u20ac600 a month), and guesses that the value of the property has probably more than doubled in the years since it was built.", "answer": "the lot", "sentence": "Mr. Harschel estimates that the couple spent 350,000 euros, or $380,000, to build the house (the lease for the lot is \u20ac600 a month), and guesses that the value of the property has probably more than doubled in the years since it was built.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt was a book this thick, but we were free,\u201d joked Mr. Harschel, waving an imaginary building code volume. Mr. Olthuis noted that the house had been built following code for land houses, which, in keeping with a mandate to build greener houses in the Netherlands, stipulated triple-glazed windows, heavy insulation and even a heat exchanger to retain heat from effluent \u2014 something that most houseboats, which tend to be light houses on a heavy foundation, avoid. Mr. Harschel estimates that the couple spent 350,000 euros, or $380,000, to build the house (the lease for the lot is \u20ac600 a month), and guesses that the value of the property has probably more than doubled in the years since it was built. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt was a book this thick, but we were free,\u201d joked Mr. Harschel, waving an imaginary building code volume. Mr. Olthuis noted that the house had been built following code for land houses, which, in keeping with a mandate to build greener houses in the Netherlands, stipulated triple-glazed windows, heavy insulation and even a heat exchanger to retain heat from effluent \u2014 something that most houseboats, which tend to be light houses on a heavy foundation, avoid. Mr. Harschel estimates that the couple spent 350,000 euros, or $380,000, to build the house (the lease for the lot is \u20ac600 a month), and guesses that the value of the property has probably more than doubled in the years since it was built.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Harschel estimates that the couple spent 350,000 euros, or $380,000, to build the house (the lease for the lot is \u20ac600 a month), and guesses that the value of the property has probably more than doubled in the years since it was built.", "paragraph_id": "5d700c8ac8e4820a9b66b7de"} +{"question": "How did the members of the Vermont House and Senate elect the governor?", "paragraph": "But on Thursday, members of the Vermont House and Senate elected the state\u2019s governor \u2014 by secret ballot. They chose Peter Shumlin, a Democrat, giving him his third two-year term. That\u2019s right: 179 state legislators had the final say, not the 193,603 voters who cast ballots for governor in the Nov. 4 election. \u201cThank you all for making it possible for me to be able to give this speech today,\u201d Mr. Shumlin told legislators a few hours later as he delivered his inaugural address in the House chamber. \u201cThank you from the bottom of my heart.\u201d He had reason to be grateful. In November, Mr. Shumlin won only 46.4 percent of the vote, not the 50 percent required by the Vermont Constitution to claim victory outright. He was nearly toppled by Scott Milne, a little-known Republican businessman, who won 45.1 percent.", "answer": "by secret ballot", "sentence": "But on Thursday, members of the Vermont House and Senate elected the state\u2019s governor \u2014 by secret ballot .", "paragraph_sentence": " But on Thursday, members of the Vermont House and Senate elected the state\u2019s governor \u2014 by secret ballot . They chose Peter Shumlin, a Democrat, giving him his third two-year term. That\u2019s right: 179 state legislators had the final say, not the 193,603 voters who cast ballots for governor in the Nov. 4 election. \u201cThank you all for making it possible for me to be able to give this speech today,\u201d Mr. Shumlin told legislators a few hours later as he delivered his inaugural address in the House chamber. \u201cThank you from the bottom of my heart.\u201d He had reason to be grateful. In November, Mr. Shumlin won only 46.4 percent of the vote, not the 50 percent required by the Vermont Constitution to claim victory outright. He was nearly toppled by Scott Milne, a little-known Republican businessman, who won 45.1 percent.", "paragraph_answer": "But on Thursday, members of the Vermont House and Senate elected the state\u2019s governor \u2014 by secret ballot . They chose Peter Shumlin, a Democrat, giving him his third two-year term. That\u2019s right: 179 state legislators had the final say, not the 193,603 voters who cast ballots for governor in the Nov. 4 election. \u201cThank you all for making it possible for me to be able to give this speech today,\u201d Mr. Shumlin told legislators a few hours later as he delivered his inaugural address in the House chamber. \u201cThank you from the bottom of my heart.\u201d He had reason to be grateful. In November, Mr. Shumlin won only 46.4 percent of the vote, not the 50 percent required by the Vermont Constitution to claim victory outright. He was nearly toppled by Scott Milne, a little-known Republican businessman, who won 45.1 percent.", "sentence_answer": "But on Thursday, members of the Vermont House and Senate elected the state\u2019s governor \u2014 by secret ballot .", "paragraph_id": "5d70386dc8e4820a9b66e130"} +{"question": "How many carries did Ferguson get?", "paragraph": "KE\u2019SHAWN VAUGHN AND JOSH FERGUSON Illinois entered its game at Purdue ranked last in the Big Ten in rushing, averaging 114.6 yards a game and only 67.2 yards during its first four conference games. But the Illini solved that problem for at least one week, getting 16 carries for 180 rushing yards and two touchdowns from Vaughn, a freshman; 12 carries for 133 yards from Ferguson, a senior in his first game back from injury; and a total of 382 yards on the ground in a dominating 48-14 victory over the Boilermakers.", "answer": "12", "sentence": "But the Illini solved that problem for at least one week, getting 16 carries for 180 rushing yards and two touchdowns from Vaughn, a freshman; 12 carries for 133 yards from Ferguson, a senior in his first game back from injury; and a total of 382 yards on the ground in a dominating 48-14 victory over the Boilermakers.", "paragraph_sentence": "KE\u2019SHAWN VAUGHN AND JOSH FERGUSON Illinois entered its game at Purdue ranked last in the Big Ten in rushing, averaging 114.6 yards a game and only 67.2 yards during its first four conference games. But the Illini solved that problem for at least one week, getting 16 carries for 180 rushing yards and two touchdowns from Vaughn, a freshman; 12 carries for 133 yards from Ferguson, a senior in his first game back from injury; and a total of 382 yards on the ground in a dominating 48-14 victory over the Boilermakers. ", "paragraph_answer": "KE\u2019SHAWN VAUGHN AND JOSH FERGUSON Illinois entered its game at Purdue ranked last in the Big Ten in rushing, averaging 114.6 yards a game and only 67.2 yards during its first four conference games. But the Illini solved that problem for at least one week, getting 16 carries for 180 rushing yards and two touchdowns from Vaughn, a freshman; 12 carries for 133 yards from Ferguson, a senior in his first game back from injury; and a total of 382 yards on the ground in a dominating 48-14 victory over the Boilermakers.", "sentence_answer": "But the Illini solved that problem for at least one week, getting 16 carries for 180 rushing yards and two touchdowns from Vaughn, a freshman; 12 carries for 133 yards from Ferguson, a senior in his first game back from injury; and a total of 382 yards on the ground in a dominating 48-14 victory over the Boilermakers.", "paragraph_id": "5d702a6ec8e4820a9b66d80d"} +{"question": "Where did Geoffrey C. Galloway citrus grove located?", "paragraph": "\u201cI\u2019m going to fallow two acres of my land immediately,\u201d said Geoffrey C. Galloway, who has a citrus grove on his ranch near Porterville, in the Central Valley. \u201cDepending on how the season goes, we may let another four go.\u201d", "answer": "Porterville", "sentence": "\u201cI\u2019m going to fallow two acres of my land immediately,\u201d said Geoffrey C. Galloway, who has a citrus grove on his ranch near Porterville , in the Central Valley.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cI\u2019m going to fallow two acres of my land immediately,\u201d said Geoffrey C. Galloway, who has a citrus grove on his ranch near Porterville , in the Central Valley. \u201cDepending on how the season goes, we may let another four go.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI\u2019m going to fallow two acres of my land immediately,\u201d said Geoffrey C. Galloway, who has a citrus grove on his ranch near Porterville , in the Central Valley. \u201cDepending on how the season goes, we may let another four go.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI\u2019m going to fallow two acres of my land immediately,\u201d said Geoffrey C. Galloway, who has a citrus grove on his ranch near Porterville , in the Central Valley.", "paragraph_id": "5d700d8fc8e4820a9b66b939"} +{"question": "Who see's the issues differently when it comes to diversity?", "paragraph": "Mr. Farley is firm about what it takes for a ballet dancer to succeed. \u201cIt\u2019s about the particular person and about their particular gifts,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd the dancer\u2019s race and their socio-economic background and their parents\u2019 education \u2014 all of that is secondary or tertiary.\u201d But there\u2019s more to changing the racial makeup of ballet companies than the determination of individual dancers. And different generations see the issue differently. Theresa Ruth Howard, a teacher and former member of Dance Theater of Harlem who wrote a much-talked-about piece for the website My Body My Image focusing on the many black ballerinas that preceded Ms. Copeland, can\u2019t help but view diversity initiatives with some skepticism.", "answer": "different generations", "sentence": "And different generations see the issue differently.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Farley is firm about what it takes for a ballet dancer to succeed. \u201cIt\u2019s about the particular person and about their particular gifts,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd the dancer\u2019s race and their socio-economic background and their parents\u2019 education \u2014 all of that is secondary or tertiary.\u201d But there\u2019s more to changing the racial makeup of ballet companies than the determination of individual dancers. And different generations see the issue differently. Theresa Ruth Howard, a teacher and former member of Dance Theater of Harlem who wrote a much-talked-about piece for the website My Body My Image focusing on the many black ballerinas that preceded Ms. Copeland, can\u2019t help but view diversity initiatives with some skepticism.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Farley is firm about what it takes for a ballet dancer to succeed. \u201cIt\u2019s about the particular person and about their particular gifts,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd the dancer\u2019s race and their socio-economic background and their parents\u2019 education \u2014 all of that is secondary or tertiary.\u201d But there\u2019s more to changing the racial makeup of ballet companies than the determination of individual dancers. And different generations see the issue differently. Theresa Ruth Howard, a teacher and former member of Dance Theater of Harlem who wrote a much-talked-about piece for the website My Body My Image focusing on the many black ballerinas that preceded Ms. Copeland, can\u2019t help but view diversity initiatives with some skepticism.", "sentence_answer": "And different generations see the issue differently.", "paragraph_id": "5d70a868c8e4820a9b66f6b9"} +{"question": "How many virgins did St. Ursula go on a pilgrimage with?", "paragraph": "Watching the nation come to a screeching halt over Pope Francis\u2019 visit, I had a flashback to my childhood in Cincinnati. One day I saw a picture of then-Pope Pius XII on the front page of the evening paper and I was shocked \u2014 Shocked! I had no idea that anybody in Ohio outside my immediate neighborhood knew who he was. In our Catholic school, the nuns stressed our isolation, and they kept prepping us to be ready to die for our faith at any moment. Like St. Ursula, who was on a pilgrimage with 11,000 virgins, all of whom instantly chose martyrdom rather than surrender their purity to infidel Huns. (At the time, I just knew virgins were women who hadn\u2019t married, and I had a vision of throngs of young ladies being pursued by barbarians waving engagement rings.)", "answer": "11,000", "sentence": "Like St. Ursula, who was on a pilgrimage with 11,000 virgins, all of whom instantly chose martyrdom rather than surrender their purity to infidel Huns.", "paragraph_sentence": "Watching the nation come to a screeching halt over Pope Francis\u2019 visit, I had a flashback to my childhood in Cincinnati. One day I saw a picture of then-Pope Pius XII on the front page of the evening paper and I was shocked \u2014 Shocked! I had no idea that anybody in Ohio outside my immediate neighborhood knew who he was. In our Catholic school, the nuns stressed our isolation, and they kept prepping us to be ready to die for our faith at any moment. Like St. Ursula, who was on a pilgrimage with 11,000 virgins, all of whom instantly chose martyrdom rather than surrender their purity to infidel Huns. (At the time, I just knew virgins were women who hadn\u2019t married, and I had a vision of throngs of young ladies being pursued by barbarians waving engagement rings.)", "paragraph_answer": "Watching the nation come to a screeching halt over Pope Francis\u2019 visit, I had a flashback to my childhood in Cincinnati. One day I saw a picture of then-Pope Pius XII on the front page of the evening paper and I was shocked \u2014 Shocked! I had no idea that anybody in Ohio outside my immediate neighborhood knew who he was. In our Catholic school, the nuns stressed our isolation, and they kept prepping us to be ready to die for our faith at any moment. Like St. Ursula, who was on a pilgrimage with 11,000 virgins, all of whom instantly chose martyrdom rather than surrender their purity to infidel Huns. (At the time, I just knew virgins were women who hadn\u2019t married, and I had a vision of throngs of young ladies being pursued by barbarians waving engagement rings.)", "sentence_answer": "Like St. Ursula, who was on a pilgrimage with 11,000 virgins, all of whom instantly chose martyrdom rather than surrender their purity to infidel Huns.", "paragraph_id": "5d70c3eac8e4820a9b66f713"} +{"question": "How large was the endowment at Brooklyn Law School?", "paragraph": "\u201cKnowing you have a little extra security is very comforting and helpful,\u201d said Ms. Friedman, who is from Fair Lawn, N.J. The introduction of the program, called Bridge to Success, comes as law school graduates across the country face increasing competition in a depressed job market that is only slowly recovering from the economic downturn. \u201cThis builds on the overall approach that we\u2019ve taken to be very student-centric, to listen to what students need,\u201d said Nicholas W. Allard, dean of Brooklyn Law School. He said it was the school\u2019s strong financial standing, including an endowment of $133 million as of May, that made the program possible.", "answer": "$133 million", "sentence": "He said it was the school\u2019s strong financial standing, including an endowment of $133 million as of May, that made the program possible.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cKnowing you have a little extra security is very comforting and helpful,\u201d said Ms. Friedman, who is from Fair Lawn, N.J. The introduction of the program, called Bridge to Success, comes as law school graduates across the country face increasing competition in a depressed job market that is only slowly recovering from the economic downturn. \u201cThis builds on the overall approach that we\u2019ve taken to be very student-centric, to listen to what students need,\u201d said Nicholas W. Allard, dean of Brooklyn Law School. He said it was the school\u2019s strong financial standing, including an endowment of $133 million as of May, that made the program possible. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cKnowing you have a little extra security is very comforting and helpful,\u201d said Ms. Friedman, who is from Fair Lawn, N.J. The introduction of the program, called Bridge to Success, comes as law school graduates across the country face increasing competition in a depressed job market that is only slowly recovering from the economic downturn. \u201cThis builds on the overall approach that we\u2019ve taken to be very student-centric, to listen to what students need,\u201d said Nicholas W. Allard, dean of Brooklyn Law School. He said it was the school\u2019s strong financial standing, including an endowment of $133 million as of May, that made the program possible.", "sentence_answer": "He said it was the school\u2019s strong financial standing, including an endowment of $133 million as of May, that made the program possible.", "paragraph_id": "5d70410dc8e4820a9b66e54f"} +{"question": "What is the name of the new gaming winning tactic that Hector Bellerin created?", "paragraph": "During that score, the referee never saw that the ball deflected from Giroud\u2019s head onto his forearm, which possibly could have ruled out the goal. The assistant referee beside the post did play a role in the second score. After a shot by Mesut Ozil, Neuer tried to scoop the ball away from his goal, but the official correctly spotted that it had, in fact, crossed the goal line. So justice was served. Arsenal, using its rapid speed via Walcott, Alexis S\u00e1nchez and the adventurous young right back H\u00e9ctor Beller\u00edn, has found and honed a new winning tactic. It is called counterattacking, and it has been alien to Wenger\u2019s philosophy over much of his two decades in London. You possibly could thank Wenger\u2019s assistant, the former Arsenal defender Steve Bould, for the change.", "answer": "counterattacking", "sentence": "It is called counterattacking , and it has been alien to Wenger\u2019s philosophy over much of his two decades in London.", "paragraph_sentence": "During that score, the referee never saw that the ball deflected from Giroud\u2019s head onto his forearm, which possibly could have ruled out the goal. The assistant referee beside the post did play a role in the second score. After a shot by Mesut Ozil, Neuer tried to scoop the ball away from his goal, but the official correctly spotted that it had, in fact, crossed the goal line. So justice was served. Arsenal, using its rapid speed via Walcott, Alexis S\u00e1nchez and the adventurous young right back H\u00e9ctor Beller\u00edn, has found and honed a new winning tactic. It is called counterattacking , and it has been alien to Wenger\u2019s philosophy over much of his two decades in London. You possibly could thank Wenger\u2019s assistant, the former Arsenal defender Steve Bould, for the change.", "paragraph_answer": "During that score, the referee never saw that the ball deflected from Giroud\u2019s head onto his forearm, which possibly could have ruled out the goal. The assistant referee beside the post did play a role in the second score. After a shot by Mesut Ozil, Neuer tried to scoop the ball away from his goal, but the official correctly spotted that it had, in fact, crossed the goal line. So justice was served. Arsenal, using its rapid speed via Walcott, Alexis S\u00e1nchez and the adventurous young right back H\u00e9ctor Beller\u00edn, has found and honed a new winning tactic. It is called counterattacking , and it has been alien to Wenger\u2019s philosophy over much of his two decades in London. You possibly could thank Wenger\u2019s assistant, the former Arsenal defender Steve Bould, for the change.", "sentence_answer": "It is called counterattacking , and it has been alien to Wenger\u2019s philosophy over much of his two decades in London.", "paragraph_id": "5d702983c8e4820a9b66d712"} +{"question": "How many people were killed in the November Paris attacks?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front. Ms. Le Pen and her party have thrived on an anti-immigration message that has verged on anti-Muslim, as well as a call for re-establishing European borders. These notions had already found traction as France faced an influx of Muslim immigrants from war-afflicted areas of the world. But she gained even more momentum after the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, in which 130 people were killed. However, several analysts said it was important not to overplay the recent attacks in explaining her success. Rather, they see a long-term trend in which the National Front has gained ground in election after election. It has done so even more rapidly since Ms. Le Pen took leadership of the party from her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in 2011.", "answer": "130", "sentence": "But she gained even more momentum after the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, in which 130 people were killed.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front. Ms. Le Pen and her party have thrived on an anti-immigration message that has verged on anti-Muslim, as well as a call for re-establishing European borders. These notions had already found traction as France faced an influx of Muslim immigrants from war-afflicted areas of the world. But she gained even more momentum after the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, in which 130 people were killed. However, several analysts said it was important not to overplay the recent attacks in explaining her success. Rather, they see a long-term trend in which the National Front has gained ground in election after election. It has done so even more rapidly since Ms. Le Pen took leadership of the party from her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in 2011.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front. Ms. Le Pen and her party have thrived on an anti-immigration message that has verged on anti-Muslim, as well as a call for re-establishing European borders. These notions had already found traction as France faced an influx of Muslim immigrants from war-afflicted areas of the world. But she gained even more momentum after the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, in which 130 people were killed. However, several analysts said it was important not to overplay the recent attacks in explaining her success. Rather, they see a long-term trend in which the National Front has gained ground in election after election. It has done so even more rapidly since Ms. Le Pen took leadership of the party from her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in 2011.", "sentence_answer": "But she gained even more momentum after the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, in which 130 people were killed.", "paragraph_id": "5d701089c8e4820a9b66bcf8"} +{"question": "What three cars were confiscated from former President Fernando Collor?", "paragraph": "\u201cFor Petrobras to say, \u2018We\u2019re the victims,\u2019 when their executives were perpetrating this scheme suggests that they haven\u2019t learned their lesson,\u201d said Jeremy A. Lieberman of the Pomerantz law firm, which has been appointed lead counsel in the case. \u201cThis is not just an incident of a few rotten apples on an otherwise pristine tree.\u201d For all of its malign effects, Lava Jato has underscored that Brazil has a robust and independent group of federal police officers, judges and prosecutors, a rarity in nations plagued by corruption. Last month, for instance, the police searched the home of Fernando Collor, a former president and current senator, leaving with a Ferrari, a Lamborghini and a Porsche. (Mr. Collor has not been charged and denies involvement in Lava Jato.) Mr. Dallagnol and another prosecutor flew to Washington a few months ago to visit officials in the Justice Department, hoping to interest the United States in lending a hand. He says that he and his team could, if unhindered, investigate Lava Jato for years.", "answer": "a Ferrari, a Lamborghini and a Porsche", "sentence": "Last month, for instance, the police searched the home of Fernando Collor, a former president and current senator, leaving with a Ferrari, a Lamborghini and a Porsche .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cFor Petrobras to say, \u2018We\u2019re the victims,\u2019 when their executives were perpetrating this scheme suggests that they haven\u2019t learned their lesson,\u201d said Jeremy A. Lieberman of the Pomerantz law firm, which has been appointed lead counsel in the case. \u201cThis is not just an incident of a few rotten apples on an otherwise pristine tree.\u201d For all of its malign effects, Lava Jato has underscored that Brazil has a robust and independent group of federal police officers, judges and prosecutors, a rarity in nations plagued by corruption. Last month, for instance, the police searched the home of Fernando Collor, a former president and current senator, leaving with a Ferrari, a Lamborghini and a Porsche . (Mr. Collor has not been charged and denies involvement in Lava Jato.) Mr. Dallagnol and another prosecutor flew to Washington a few months ago to visit officials in the Justice Department, hoping to interest the United States in lending a hand. He says that he and his team could, if unhindered, investigate Lava Jato for years.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cFor Petrobras to say, \u2018We\u2019re the victims,\u2019 when their executives were perpetrating this scheme suggests that they haven\u2019t learned their lesson,\u201d said Jeremy A. Lieberman of the Pomerantz law firm, which has been appointed lead counsel in the case. \u201cThis is not just an incident of a few rotten apples on an otherwise pristine tree.\u201d For all of its malign effects, Lava Jato has underscored that Brazil has a robust and independent group of federal police officers, judges and prosecutors, a rarity in nations plagued by corruption. Last month, for instance, the police searched the home of Fernando Collor, a former president and current senator, leaving with a Ferrari, a Lamborghini and a Porsche . (Mr. Collor has not been charged and denies involvement in Lava Jato.) Mr. Dallagnol and another prosecutor flew to Washington a few months ago to visit officials in the Justice Department, hoping to interest the United States in lending a hand. He says that he and his team could, if unhindered, investigate Lava Jato for years.", "sentence_answer": "Last month, for instance, the police searched the home of Fernando Collor, a former president and current senator, leaving with a Ferrari, a Lamborghini and a Porsche .", "paragraph_id": "5d701c88c8e4820a9b66c802"} +{"question": "How many of the shirts are used for advertising?", "paragraph": "The new photo book \u201cRap Tees: A Collection of Hip-Hop T-Shirts 1980-1999\u201d by DJ Ross One documents 500 shirts, from hip-hop\u2019s dawn \u2014 the first item is a Sugar Hill Gang shirt from 1980, a year after that group released \u201cRapper\u2019s Delight,\u201d widely considered the first commercial hip-hop single \u2014 to its turn-of-the-millennium ubiquity. All the shirts are advertisements, but they go about their job in vastly different ways: Some emphasize logos, others favor slogans or let photos do the talking; a rare few let artists have their way.", "answer": "All", "sentence": "All the shirts are advertisements, but they go about their job in vastly different ways:", "paragraph_sentence": "The new photo book \u201cRap Tees: A Collection of Hip-Hop T-Shirts 1980-1999\u201d by DJ Ross One documents 500 shirts, from hip-hop\u2019s dawn \u2014 the first item is a Sugar Hill Gang shirt from 1980, a year after that group released \u201cRapper\u2019s Delight,\u201d widely considered the first commercial hip-hop single \u2014 to its turn-of-the-millennium ubiquity. All the shirts are advertisements, but they go about their job in vastly different ways: Some emphasize logos, others favor slogans or let photos do the talking; a rare few let artists have their way.", "paragraph_answer": "The new photo book \u201cRap Tees: A Collection of Hip-Hop T-Shirts 1980-1999\u201d by DJ Ross One documents 500 shirts, from hip-hop\u2019s dawn \u2014 the first item is a Sugar Hill Gang shirt from 1980, a year after that group released \u201cRapper\u2019s Delight,\u201d widely considered the first commercial hip-hop single \u2014 to its turn-of-the-millennium ubiquity. All the shirts are advertisements, but they go about their job in vastly different ways: Some emphasize logos, others favor slogans or let photos do the talking; a rare few let artists have their way.", "sentence_answer": " All the shirts are advertisements, but they go about their job in vastly different ways:", "paragraph_id": "5d702392c8e4820a9b66cfad"} +{"question": "What do cities and states have an obligation to protect the public from due to Congress's inaction?", "paragraph": "It was the 70th time since 2008 that the Supreme Court has declined to consider a lawsuit challenging a federal, state or local gun regulation. This creates a big opportunity for Americans to put pressure on their state and local leaders, especially since Congress refuses to approve even uncontroversial measures like universal background checks for gun sales, which are supported by nearly nine in 10 Americans. Until that changes, states and cities have the constitutional authority and moral obligation to protect the public from the scourge of gun violence.", "answer": "gun violence", "sentence": "Until that changes, states and cities have the constitutional authority and moral obligation to protect the public from the scourge of gun violence .", "paragraph_sentence": "It was the 70th time since 2008 that the Supreme Court has declined to consider a lawsuit challenging a federal, state or local gun regulation. This creates a big opportunity for Americans to put pressure on their state and local leaders, especially since Congress refuses to approve even uncontroversial measures like universal background checks for gun sales, which are supported by nearly nine in 10 Americans. Until that changes, states and cities have the constitutional authority and moral obligation to protect the public from the scourge of gun violence . ", "paragraph_answer": "It was the 70th time since 2008 that the Supreme Court has declined to consider a lawsuit challenging a federal, state or local gun regulation. This creates a big opportunity for Americans to put pressure on their state and local leaders, especially since Congress refuses to approve even uncontroversial measures like universal background checks for gun sales, which are supported by nearly nine in 10 Americans. Until that changes, states and cities have the constitutional authority and moral obligation to protect the public from the scourge of gun violence .", "sentence_answer": "Until that changes, states and cities have the constitutional authority and moral obligation to protect the public from the scourge of gun violence .", "paragraph_id": "5d703f90c8e4820a9b66e47d"} +{"question": "How many children did he have?", "paragraph": "He even gave a few hints of his closely guarded family life, talking proudly of his two adult daughters, who he said were living in Russia and \u201ctaking the first steps of their careers.\u201d Mr. Putin likes to throw in a few surprises on these occasions, as he did two years ago by announcing the release of an imprisoned oil tycoon, Mikhail B. Khodorkovsky. This year, he rose to the defense of Sepp Blatter, the embattled president of soccer\u2019s world governing body, FIFA, who is under criminal investigation for corruption, saying Mr. Blatter should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. And he even inserted himself into the Republican presidential primary contest in the United States, speaking highly of Mr. Trump in remarks after the news conference ended.", "answer": "two adult daughters", "sentence": "He even gave a few hints of his closely guarded family life, talking proudly of his two adult daughters , who he said were living in Russia and \u201ctaking the first steps of their careers.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " He even gave a few hints of his closely guarded family life, talking proudly of his two adult daughters , who he said were living in Russia and \u201ctaking the first steps of their careers.\u201d Mr. Putin likes to throw in a few surprises on these occasions, as he did two years ago by announcing the release of an imprisoned oil tycoon, Mikhail B. Khodorkovsky. This year, he rose to the defense of Sepp Blatter, the embattled president of soccer\u2019s world governing body, FIFA, who is under criminal investigation for corruption, saying Mr. Blatter should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. And he even inserted himself into the Republican presidential primary contest in the United States, speaking highly of Mr. Trump in remarks after the news conference ended.", "paragraph_answer": "He even gave a few hints of his closely guarded family life, talking proudly of his two adult daughters , who he said were living in Russia and \u201ctaking the first steps of their careers.\u201d Mr. Putin likes to throw in a few surprises on these occasions, as he did two years ago by announcing the release of an imprisoned oil tycoon, Mikhail B. Khodorkovsky. This year, he rose to the defense of Sepp Blatter, the embattled president of soccer\u2019s world governing body, FIFA, who is under criminal investigation for corruption, saying Mr. Blatter should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. And he even inserted himself into the Republican presidential primary contest in the United States, speaking highly of Mr. Trump in remarks after the news conference ended.", "sentence_answer": "He even gave a few hints of his closely guarded family life, talking proudly of his two adult daughters , who he said were living in Russia and \u201ctaking the first steps of their careers.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d7012e8c8e4820a9b66bf3b"} +{"question": "What kind of company is Greentech Automotive?", "paragraph": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "answer": "an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe", "sentence": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe , an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia.", "paragraph_sentence": " When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe , an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "paragraph_answer": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe , an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "sentence_answer": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe , an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia.", "paragraph_id": "5d71266cc8e4820a9b66f76f"} +{"question": "How many housing vouchers did Torey Moore obtain?", "paragraph": "(The Supreme Court just handed the Inclusive Communities Project an important victory in a lawsuit seeking to make more housing available. Landlords of properties built with low-income housing tax credits are required to accept vouchers. Inclusive Communities argues that Texas is allocating a disproportionate share of those credits to developers in minority neighborhoods. The Supreme Court ruling in June allows that lawsuit to move forward.) Four years ago, when Torey Moore first obtained one of the about 29,000 housing vouchers available to Dallas area residents, she stayed in the same South Dallas neighborhood. She had two young children, and she relied on her family to look after the children while she worked. Last year, however, she decided it was time to move. Her children were struggling at school, and when they were not at school, she worried about their safety.", "answer": "29,000", "sentence": "Four years ago, when Torey Moore first obtained one of the about 29,000 housing vouchers available to Dallas area residents, she stayed in the same South Dallas neighborhood.", "paragraph_sentence": "(The Supreme Court just handed the Inclusive Communities Project an important victory in a lawsuit seeking to make more housing available. Landlords of properties built with low-income housing tax credits are required to accept vouchers. Inclusive Communities argues that Texas is allocating a disproportionate share of those credits to developers in minority neighborhoods. The Supreme Court ruling in June allows that lawsuit to move forward.) Four years ago, when Torey Moore first obtained one of the about 29,000 housing vouchers available to Dallas area residents, she stayed in the same South Dallas neighborhood. She had two young children, and she relied on her family to look after the children while she worked. Last year, however, she decided it was time to move. Her children were struggling at school, and when they were not at school, she worried about their safety.", "paragraph_answer": "(The Supreme Court just handed the Inclusive Communities Project an important victory in a lawsuit seeking to make more housing available. Landlords of properties built with low-income housing tax credits are required to accept vouchers. Inclusive Communities argues that Texas is allocating a disproportionate share of those credits to developers in minority neighborhoods. The Supreme Court ruling in June allows that lawsuit to move forward.) Four years ago, when Torey Moore first obtained one of the about 29,000 housing vouchers available to Dallas area residents, she stayed in the same South Dallas neighborhood. She had two young children, and she relied on her family to look after the children while she worked. Last year, however, she decided it was time to move. Her children were struggling at school, and when they were not at school, she worried about their safety.", "sentence_answer": "Four years ago, when Torey Moore first obtained one of the about 29,000 housing vouchers available to Dallas area residents, she stayed in the same South Dallas neighborhood.", "paragraph_id": "5d7048b9c8e4820a9b66e8f3"} +{"question": "Which team did Bulls play in their Game 1 of playoff?", "paragraph": "\u201cI was just tired,\u201d Rose said. That scene was all too reminiscent of the night that everything changed for the Bulls and their star point guard, then 23. They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat. Late in Game 1 of their playoff opener against Philadelphia, as Rose drove, his knee gave out. The 76ers then dispatched the Bulls. What followed has been well chronicled, with Rose\u2019s career taking on the arc of a tragic novel. The A.C.L. injury cost him all of the next year; his teammates, many battling injuries themselves, fought valiantly in the playoffs, beating the Nets in seven games before succumbing to the Heat.", "answer": "Philadelphia", "sentence": "Late in Game 1 of their playoff opener against Philadelphia , as Rose drove, his knee gave out.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI was just tired,\u201d Rose said. That scene was all too reminiscent of the night that everything changed for the Bulls and their star point guard, then 23. They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat. Late in Game 1 of their playoff opener against Philadelphia , as Rose drove, his knee gave out. The 76ers then dispatched the Bulls. What followed has been well chronicled, with Rose\u2019s career taking on the arc of a tragic novel. The A.C.L. injury cost him all of the next year; his teammates, many battling injuries themselves, fought valiantly in the playoffs, beating the Nets in seven games before succumbing to the Heat.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI was just tired,\u201d Rose said. That scene was all too reminiscent of the night that everything changed for the Bulls and their star point guard, then 23. They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat. Late in Game 1 of their playoff opener against Philadelphia , as Rose drove, his knee gave out. The 76ers then dispatched the Bulls. What followed has been well chronicled, with Rose\u2019s career taking on the arc of a tragic novel. The A.C.L. injury cost him all of the next year; his teammates, many battling injuries themselves, fought valiantly in the playoffs, beating the Nets in seven games before succumbing to the Heat.", "sentence_answer": "Late in Game 1 of their playoff opener against Philadelphia , as Rose drove, his knee gave out.", "paragraph_id": "5d70d273c8e4820a9b66f732"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700827c8e4820a9b66af6d"} +{"question": "What is the title of the James Bond movie?", "paragraph": "\u2018Spectre\u2019 (PG-13, 2:28) Bond, James Bond, etc. (Dargis) \u2605 \u2018Spotlight\u2019 (R, 2:07) A team of Boston Globe investigative reporters \u2014 played by Michael Keaton, Brian d\u2019Arcy James, Rachel McAdams and Mark Ruffalo \u2014 takes on the local archdiocese in this powerful fact-based newspaper procedural, directed by Tom McCarthy. The movie, with a superb cast and a tightly constructed script, is an unflinching investigation of systemic moral rot and a rousing defense of the values of professional journalism. (Scott)", "answer": "Spectre", "sentence": "\u2018 Spectre \u2019 (PG-13, 2:28) Bond, James Bond, etc.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u2018 Spectre \u2019 (PG-13, 2:28) Bond, James Bond, etc. (Dargis) \u2605 \u2018Spotlight\u2019 (R, 2:07) A team of Boston Globe investigative reporters \u2014 played by Michael Keaton, Brian d\u2019Arcy James, Rachel McAdams and Mark Ruffalo \u2014 takes on the local archdiocese in this powerful fact-based newspaper procedural, directed by Tom McCarthy. The movie, with a superb cast and a tightly constructed script, is an unflinching investigation of systemic moral rot and a rousing defense of the values of professional journalism. (Scott)", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018 Spectre \u2019 (PG-13, 2:28) Bond, James Bond, etc. (Dargis) \u2605 \u2018Spotlight\u2019 (R, 2:07) A team of Boston Globe investigative reporters \u2014 played by Michael Keaton, Brian d\u2019Arcy James, Rachel McAdams and Mark Ruffalo \u2014 takes on the local archdiocese in this powerful fact-based newspaper procedural, directed by Tom McCarthy. The movie, with a superb cast and a tightly constructed script, is an unflinching investigation of systemic moral rot and a rousing defense of the values of professional journalism. (Scott)", "sentence_answer": "\u2018 Spectre \u2019 (PG-13, 2:28) Bond, James Bond, etc.", "paragraph_id": "5d702140c8e4820a9b66cd2b"} +{"question": "How did Alberto Youseff's marriage end?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to predict,\u201d he said. \u201cStatistically, when you have cases against the rich and powerful, things tend to end with pizza. We have no illusions. No aspirations to be superheroes. We are only a group of guys determined to do our best.\u201d One person who will be celebrating before too long is Alberto Youssef. Stress and jail have turned his hair gray, slimmed him down by 40 pounds and landed him last year in the hospital with a heart attack. His wife divorced him and he is said to be destitute. His days as a nexus of cash and gifts are over. But Judge Moro determined that his assistance had been so helpful that he was given the minimum sentence allowed in his plea agreement. With the time he has already served, he will be free by the beginning of 2017.", "answer": "His wife divorced him", "sentence": "His wife divorced him and he is said to be destitute.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to predict,\u201d he said. \u201cStatistically, when you have cases against the rich and powerful, things tend to end with pizza. We have no illusions. No aspirations to be superheroes. We are only a group of guys determined to do our best.\u201d One person who will be celebrating before too long is Alberto Youssef. Stress and jail have turned his hair gray, slimmed him down by 40 pounds and landed him last year in the hospital with a heart attack. His wife divorced him and he is said to be destitute. His days as a nexus of cash and gifts are over. But Judge Moro determined that his assistance had been so helpful that he was given the minimum sentence allowed in his plea agreement. With the time he has already served, he will be free by the beginning of 2017.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to predict,\u201d he said. \u201cStatistically, when you have cases against the rich and powerful, things tend to end with pizza. We have no illusions. No aspirations to be superheroes. We are only a group of guys determined to do our best.\u201d One person who will be celebrating before too long is Alberto Youssef. Stress and jail have turned his hair gray, slimmed him down by 40 pounds and landed him last year in the hospital with a heart attack. His wife divorced him and he is said to be destitute. His days as a nexus of cash and gifts are over. But Judge Moro determined that his assistance had been so helpful that he was given the minimum sentence allowed in his plea agreement. With the time he has already served, he will be free by the beginning of 2017.", "sentence_answer": " His wife divorced him and he is said to be destitute.", "paragraph_id": "5d701ddec8e4820a9b66c94b"} +{"question": "What inning of the game was Mitchell relieved?", "paragraph": "Asked if he had thought the ball was out, Gregorius said, \u201cUntil I got robbed, yeah.\u201d Then in the fifth, Mitchell just missed getting his glove on Adam Eaton\u2019s single up the middle. After a wild pitch, Tyler Saladino followed with another grounder up the middle, which gave the White Sox a 3-1 lead and spelled the end for Mitchell, who gave up seven hits and struck out five. Moreno came in for his first appearance since throwing five and a third innings of no-hit relief Tuesday against Texas, a stint that kept him from being returned to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre for a fresher arm. But it quickly became apparent that Moreno would not repeat that performance. He nicked Jose Abreu on the elbow and then surrendered Cabrera\u2019s home run.", "answer": "fifth", "sentence": "Then in the fifth , Mitchell just missed getting his glove on Adam Eaton\u2019s single up the middle.", "paragraph_sentence": "Asked if he had thought the ball was out, Gregorius said, \u201cUntil I got robbed, yeah.\u201d Then in the fifth , Mitchell just missed getting his glove on Adam Eaton\u2019s single up the middle. After a wild pitch, Tyler Saladino followed with another grounder up the middle, which gave the White Sox a 3-1 lead and spelled the end for Mitchell, who gave up seven hits and struck out five. Moreno came in for his first appearance since throwing five and a third innings of no-hit relief Tuesday against Texas, a stint that kept him from being returned to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre for a fresher arm. But it quickly became apparent that Moreno would not repeat that performance. He nicked Jose Abreu on the elbow and then surrendered Cabrera\u2019s home run.", "paragraph_answer": "Asked if he had thought the ball was out, Gregorius said, \u201cUntil I got robbed, yeah.\u201d Then in the fifth , Mitchell just missed getting his glove on Adam Eaton\u2019s single up the middle. After a wild pitch, Tyler Saladino followed with another grounder up the middle, which gave the White Sox a 3-1 lead and spelled the end for Mitchell, who gave up seven hits and struck out five. Moreno came in for his first appearance since throwing five and a third innings of no-hit relief Tuesday against Texas, a stint that kept him from being returned to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre for a fresher arm. But it quickly became apparent that Moreno would not repeat that performance. He nicked Jose Abreu on the elbow and then surrendered Cabrera\u2019s home run.", "sentence_answer": "Then in the fifth , Mitchell just missed getting his glove on Adam Eaton\u2019s single up the middle.", "paragraph_id": "5d701520c8e4820a9b66c116"} +{"question": "What decreased according to the survey?", "paragraph": "Suzanne Ciechalski, a freshman at St. John\u2019s University in Queens, said technology that might appear social in nature could in fact lead to stress and feelings of depression. \u201cI feel like people spend a lot of time on social networks trying to create this picture of who they want to be,\u201d Ms. Ciechalski said. \u201cMaintaining that takes a lot of effort. I feel like being a teenager or young adult, the pressure to try and make people see you\u2019re the best is really high.\u201d Contrary to some reports of high rates of drinking among high school students, the survey found a continued decline in college freshmen reporting those behaviors. About one-third said they had drunk beer, wine or hard alcohol at least occasionally in the past year, compared with almost half just 10 years ago. Fewer than one in 50 students reported smoking cigarettes.", "answer": "high rates of drinking among high school students", "sentence": "Contrary to some reports of high rates of drinking among high school students , the survey found a continued decline in college freshmen reporting those behaviors.", "paragraph_sentence": "Suzanne Ciechalski, a freshman at St. John\u2019s University in Queens, said technology that might appear social in nature could in fact lead to stress and feelings of depression. \u201cI feel like people spend a lot of time on social networks trying to create this picture of who they want to be,\u201d Ms. Ciechalski said. \u201cMaintaining that takes a lot of effort. I feel like being a teenager or young adult, the pressure to try and make people see you\u2019re the best is really high.\u201d Contrary to some reports of high rates of drinking among high school students , the survey found a continued decline in college freshmen reporting those behaviors. About one-third said they had drunk beer, wine or hard alcohol at least occasionally in the past year, compared with almost half just 10 years ago. Fewer than one in 50 students reported smoking cigarettes.", "paragraph_answer": "Suzanne Ciechalski, a freshman at St. John\u2019s University in Queens, said technology that might appear social in nature could in fact lead to stress and feelings of depression. \u201cI feel like people spend a lot of time on social networks trying to create this picture of who they want to be,\u201d Ms. Ciechalski said. \u201cMaintaining that takes a lot of effort. I feel like being a teenager or young adult, the pressure to try and make people see you\u2019re the best is really high.\u201d Contrary to some reports of high rates of drinking among high school students , the survey found a continued decline in college freshmen reporting those behaviors. About one-third said they had drunk beer, wine or hard alcohol at least occasionally in the past year, compared with almost half just 10 years ago. Fewer than one in 50 students reported smoking cigarettes.", "sentence_answer": "Contrary to some reports of high rates of drinking among high school students , the survey found a continued decline in college freshmen reporting those behaviors.", "paragraph_id": "5d700715c8e4820a9b66acd4"} +{"question": "Which 3 department studies does David J. Leonard act as professor and chairman?", "paragraph": "David J. Leonard, an associate professor and chairman of the department of critical culture, gender and race studies at Washington State University, said that despite highly publicized cases like the deaths of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., and Freddie Gray in Baltimore, many questionable deaths of minorities still received little attention. \u201cThere are countless other cases involving African-Americans in the past year that have not received coverage anywhere near the level of Zachary Hammond,\u201d Professor Leonard said. Yet he said much of the attention the Hammond case received on Twitter was spurred by Black Lives Matter activists.", "answer": "critical culture, gender and race", "sentence": "David J. Leonard, an associate professor and chairman of the department of critical culture, gender and race studies at Washington State University, said that despite highly publicized cases like the deaths of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., and Freddie Gray in Baltimore, many questionable deaths of minorities still received little attention.", "paragraph_sentence": " David J. Leonard, an associate professor and chairman of the department of critical culture, gender and race studies at Washington State University, said that despite highly publicized cases like the deaths of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., and Freddie Gray in Baltimore, many questionable deaths of minorities still received little attention. \u201cThere are countless other cases involving African-Americans in the past year that have not received coverage anywhere near the level of Zachary Hammond,\u201d Professor Leonard said. Yet he said much of the attention the Hammond case received on Twitter was spurred by Black Lives Matter activists.", "paragraph_answer": "David J. Leonard, an associate professor and chairman of the department of critical culture, gender and race studies at Washington State University, said that despite highly publicized cases like the deaths of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., and Freddie Gray in Baltimore, many questionable deaths of minorities still received little attention. \u201cThere are countless other cases involving African-Americans in the past year that have not received coverage anywhere near the level of Zachary Hammond,\u201d Professor Leonard said. Yet he said much of the attention the Hammond case received on Twitter was spurred by Black Lives Matter activists.", "sentence_answer": "David J. Leonard, an associate professor and chairman of the department of critical culture, gender and race studies at Washington State University, said that despite highly publicized cases like the deaths of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., and Freddie Gray in Baltimore, many questionable deaths of minorities still received little attention.", "paragraph_id": "5d701ff0c8e4820a9b66cb9b"} +{"question": "Who swept in behind Manuel Neuer to bundle the ball into the net?", "paragraph": "Fine keepers and thin margins can win games. Yet in the last 13 minutes, Neuer was beaten twice. The first was his own fault. By popular acclaim the best goalkeeper on earth, Neuer misread a high, swinging free kick from Santi Cazorla, pawing at thin air. Olivier Giroud swept in behind him to bundle the ball into the net.", "answer": "Olivier Giroud", "sentence": "Olivier Giroud swept in behind him to bundle the ball into the net.", "paragraph_sentence": "Fine keepers and thin margins can win games. Yet in the last 13 minutes, Neuer was beaten twice. The first was his own fault. By popular acclaim the best goalkeeper on earth, Neuer misread a high, swinging free kick from Santi Cazorla, pawing at thin air. Olivier Giroud swept in behind him to bundle the ball into the net. ", "paragraph_answer": "Fine keepers and thin margins can win games. Yet in the last 13 minutes, Neuer was beaten twice. The first was his own fault. By popular acclaim the best goalkeeper on earth, Neuer misread a high, swinging free kick from Santi Cazorla, pawing at thin air. Olivier Giroud swept in behind him to bundle the ball into the net.", "sentence_answer": " Olivier Giroud swept in behind him to bundle the ball into the net.", "paragraph_id": "5d7028e2c8e4820a9b66d6a2"} +{"question": "A 2014 census found that how many children were being exploited?", "paragraph": "Tens of thousands of children in Senegal are being exploited by Quranic teachers who force them to beg in the streets, Human Rights Watch said Monday, blaming the government for failing to carry out a 2005 law aimed at stopping the trafficking of children and their exploitation in Quranic schools. A 2014 government census of the Islamic schools found that more than 30,000 children were being forced to beg in the capital, Dakar, alone. Nine of the students, called talibes, testified to regular beatings with rubber whips, wood and rope by their teacher and his assistants, the watchdog group said.", "answer": "more than 30,000", "sentence": "A 2014 government census of the Islamic schools found that more than 30,000 children were being forced to beg in the capital, Dakar, alone.", "paragraph_sentence": "Tens of thousands of children in Senegal are being exploited by Quranic teachers who force them to beg in the streets, Human Rights Watch said Monday, blaming the government for failing to carry out a 2005 law aimed at stopping the trafficking of children and their exploitation in Quranic schools. A 2014 government census of the Islamic schools found that more than 30,000 children were being forced to beg in the capital, Dakar, alone. Nine of the students, called talibes, testified to regular beatings with rubber whips, wood and rope by their teacher and his assistants, the watchdog group said.", "paragraph_answer": "Tens of thousands of children in Senegal are being exploited by Quranic teachers who force them to beg in the streets, Human Rights Watch said Monday, blaming the government for failing to carry out a 2005 law aimed at stopping the trafficking of children and their exploitation in Quranic schools. A 2014 government census of the Islamic schools found that more than 30,000 children were being forced to beg in the capital, Dakar, alone. Nine of the students, called talibes, testified to regular beatings with rubber whips, wood and rope by their teacher and his assistants, the watchdog group said.", "sentence_answer": "A 2014 government census of the Islamic schools found that more than 30,000 children were being forced to beg in the capital, Dakar, alone.", "paragraph_id": "5d700b0ec8e4820a9b66b558"} +{"question": "Diane Rainey works as a spokesperson for which company?", "paragraph": "The devices are uniquely difficult to disinfect, and there is no expert consensus on the best way to do so now that standard methods have been called into question. Even when health care providers \u201cappear to be doing everything right, there has been transmission of CRE,\u201d said Dr. Arjun Srinivasan, the associate director for health care associated infection prevention programs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Makers of the special scopes defended their disinfection recommendations. John Haberstock, a spokesman for Pentax Medical, said its cleaning protocols achieved a \u201chigh level disinfection of duodenoscopes.\u201d Diane Rainey, a spokeswoman for Fujifilm, said the company\u2019s instructions to providers \u201care appropriate to maintain patient safety.\u201d", "answer": "Fujifilm", "sentence": "Diane Rainey, a spokeswoman for Fujifilm , said the company\u2019s instructions to providers \u201care appropriate to maintain patient safety.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "The devices are uniquely difficult to disinfect, and there is no expert consensus on the best way to do so now that standard methods have been called into question. Even when health care providers \u201cappear to be doing everything right, there has been transmission of CRE,\u201d said Dr. Arjun Srinivasan, the associate director for health care associated infection prevention programs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Makers of the special scopes defended their disinfection recommendations. John Haberstock, a spokesman for Pentax Medical, said its cleaning protocols achieved a \u201chigh level disinfection of duodenoscopes.\u201d Diane Rainey, a spokeswoman for Fujifilm , said the company\u2019s instructions to providers \u201care appropriate to maintain patient safety.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "The devices are uniquely difficult to disinfect, and there is no expert consensus on the best way to do so now that standard methods have been called into question. Even when health care providers \u201cappear to be doing everything right, there has been transmission of CRE,\u201d said Dr. Arjun Srinivasan, the associate director for health care associated infection prevention programs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Makers of the special scopes defended their disinfection recommendations. John Haberstock, a spokesman for Pentax Medical, said its cleaning protocols achieved a \u201chigh level disinfection of duodenoscopes.\u201d Diane Rainey, a spokeswoman for Fujifilm , said the company\u2019s instructions to providers \u201care appropriate to maintain patient safety.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Diane Rainey, a spokeswoman for Fujifilm , said the company\u2019s instructions to providers \u201care appropriate to maintain patient safety.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d7043efc8e4820a9b66e72a"} +{"question": "What percentage of the equipment was manufactured in the past decade?", "paragraph": "For a moment, he twirled the rope in his hands like a lasso, then threw the hook over the wire, and tugged hard, testing for explosives. When nothing happened he signaled two comrades, who ran up and started snipping the wire with cutters. Although this was a typical training exercise for raw recruits in an elemental soldierly skill, there was nothing typical about the scene. Far from enlistees, these soldiers were regulars in the Ukrainian National Guard, presumably battle-hardened after months on the front lines in eastern Ukraine. And the trainer was an American military instructor, drilling troops for battle with the United States\u2019 former Cold War foe, Russia, and Russian-backed separatists. \u201cIt\u2019s been a long time since I heard a target called an Ivan,\u201d First Sgt. David Dzwik, one of the trainers, said in an interview out in the sunny forest, while observing the Ukrainians run through drills. \u201cNow, I\u2019m hearing it again.\u201d The course on cutting wire is one of 63 classes of remedial military instruction being provided by 300 United States Army trainers in three consecutive two-month courses. Here in western Ukraine, they are far from the fighting, and their job is to instill some basic military know-how in Ukrainian soldiers, who the trainers have discovered are woefully unprepared. The largely unschooled troops are learning such basic skills as how to use an encrypted walkie-talkie; how to break open a door with a sledgehammer and a crowbar; and how to drag a wounded colleague across a field while holding a rifle at the ready. When the war began a year ago, the Ukrainian Army was all but worthless \u2014 rife with corruption and Russian spies, and made up largely of \u201cskeleton\u201d battalions of officers with just a few men. About 1 percent of the equipment was manufactured in the past decade.", "answer": "1 percent", "sentence": "About 1 percent of the equipment was manufactured in the past decade.", "paragraph_sentence": "For a moment, he twirled the rope in his hands like a lasso, then threw the hook over the wire, and tugged hard, testing for explosives. When nothing happened he signaled two comrades, who ran up and started snipping the wire with cutters. Although this was a typical training exercise for raw recruits in an elemental soldierly skill, there was nothing typical about the scene. Far from enlistees, these soldiers were regulars in the Ukrainian National Guard, presumably battle-hardened after months on the front lines in eastern Ukraine. And the trainer was an American military instructor, drilling troops for battle with the United States\u2019 former Cold War foe, Russia, and Russian-backed separatists. \u201cIt\u2019s been a long time since I heard a target called an Ivan,\u201d First Sgt. David Dzwik, one of the trainers, said in an interview out in the sunny forest, while observing the Ukrainians run through drills. \u201cNow, I\u2019m hearing it again.\u201d The course on cutting wire is one of 63 classes of remedial military instruction being provided by 300 United States Army trainers in three consecutive two-month courses. Here in western Ukraine, they are far from the fighting, and their job is to instill some basic military know-how in Ukrainian soldiers, who the trainers have discovered are woefully unprepared. The largely unschooled troops are learning such basic skills as how to use an encrypted walkie-talkie; how to break open a door with a sledgehammer and a crowbar; and how to drag a wounded colleague across a field while holding a rifle at the ready. When the war began a year ago, the Ukrainian Army was all but worthless \u2014 rife with corruption and Russian spies, and made up largely of \u201cskeleton\u201d battalions of officers with just a few men. About 1 percent of the equipment was manufactured in the past decade. ", "paragraph_answer": "For a moment, he twirled the rope in his hands like a lasso, then threw the hook over the wire, and tugged hard, testing for explosives. When nothing happened he signaled two comrades, who ran up and started snipping the wire with cutters. Although this was a typical training exercise for raw recruits in an elemental soldierly skill, there was nothing typical about the scene. Far from enlistees, these soldiers were regulars in the Ukrainian National Guard, presumably battle-hardened after months on the front lines in eastern Ukraine. And the trainer was an American military instructor, drilling troops for battle with the United States\u2019 former Cold War foe, Russia, and Russian-backed separatists. \u201cIt\u2019s been a long time since I heard a target called an Ivan,\u201d First Sgt. David Dzwik, one of the trainers, said in an interview out in the sunny forest, while observing the Ukrainians run through drills. \u201cNow, I\u2019m hearing it again.\u201d The course on cutting wire is one of 63 classes of remedial military instruction being provided by 300 United States Army trainers in three consecutive two-month courses. Here in western Ukraine, they are far from the fighting, and their job is to instill some basic military know-how in Ukrainian soldiers, who the trainers have discovered are woefully unprepared. The largely unschooled troops are learning such basic skills as how to use an encrypted walkie-talkie; how to break open a door with a sledgehammer and a crowbar; and how to drag a wounded colleague across a field while holding a rifle at the ready. When the war began a year ago, the Ukrainian Army was all but worthless \u2014 rife with corruption and Russian spies, and made up largely of \u201cskeleton\u201d battalions of officers with just a few men. About 1 percent of the equipment was manufactured in the past decade.", "sentence_answer": "About 1 percent of the equipment was manufactured in the past decade.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026dac8e4820a9b66d35b"} +{"question": "When was Millerton Lake built?", "paragraph": "As the state considers its options, many farmers want to revive the approach that worked for them in the last century: building dams. Not far from this tiny hamlet northeast of Fresno, for instance, the government is thinking of building a new artificial lake just above an existing one. \u201cWe\u2019re in a critical condition right now,\u201d said Mario Santoyo, a board member and technical adviser for the California Latino Water Coalition, as he stood on the deck of a motorboat in the middle of Millerton Lake, built in 1942. He pointed to a spot called Temperance Flat, where the new dam \u2014 it would be the latest of many on the San Joaquin River \u2014 would be built.", "answer": "1942", "sentence": "\u201cWe\u2019re in a critical condition right now,\u201d said Mario Santoyo, a board member and technical adviser for the California Latino Water Coalition, as he stood on the deck of a motorboat in the middle of Millerton Lake, built in 1942 .", "paragraph_sentence": "As the state considers its options, many farmers want to revive the approach that worked for them in the last century: building dams. Not far from this tiny hamlet northeast of Fresno, for instance, the government is thinking of building a new artificial lake just above an existing one. \u201cWe\u2019re in a critical condition right now,\u201d said Mario Santoyo, a board member and technical adviser for the California Latino Water Coalition, as he stood on the deck of a motorboat in the middle of Millerton Lake, built in 1942 . He pointed to a spot called Temperance Flat, where the new dam \u2014 it would be the latest of many on the San Joaquin River \u2014 would be built.", "paragraph_answer": "As the state considers its options, many farmers want to revive the approach that worked for them in the last century: building dams. Not far from this tiny hamlet northeast of Fresno, for instance, the government is thinking of building a new artificial lake just above an existing one. \u201cWe\u2019re in a critical condition right now,\u201d said Mario Santoyo, a board member and technical adviser for the California Latino Water Coalition, as he stood on the deck of a motorboat in the middle of Millerton Lake, built in 1942 . He pointed to a spot called Temperance Flat, where the new dam \u2014 it would be the latest of many on the San Joaquin River \u2014 would be built.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe\u2019re in a critical condition right now,\u201d said Mario Santoyo, a board member and technical adviser for the California Latino Water Coalition, as he stood on the deck of a motorboat in the middle of Millerton Lake, built in 1942 .", "paragraph_id": "5d7009dcc8e4820a9b66b2fa"} +{"question": "What is name of the judge that Reagan nominated in 1987?", "paragraph": "Two weeks after President Ronald Reagan nominated Judge Bork to the Supreme Court in 1987, according to Ethan Bronner\u2019s book \u201cBattle for Justice: How the Bork Nomination Shook America\u201d (1989), Mr. Cohen and Mr. Pertschuk, at the Advocacy Institute, issued a game plan to appeal to pivotal Senate centrists on how to cast Judge Bork as a \u201cjudicial extremist\u201d and an \u201cideological activist\u201d whom genuine conservatives who cared about personal rights and feared government intrusion could comfortably oppose. Judge Bork was rejected by a Senate vote of 58-42. \u201cI\u2019m proud that I helped make some constructive changes happen and helped block harmful ones from happening,\u201d Mr. Cohen said in the Pacific Standard interview. \u201cObviously, you compromise all the time, but I don\u2019t think I\u2019ve ever had to do anything I was ashamed of. And I\u2019ve enjoyed it all \u2014 immensely. It\u2019s what John Adams called \u2018the public happiness.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "Judge Bork", "sentence": "Two weeks after President Ronald Reagan nominated Judge Bork to the Supreme Court in 1987, according to Ethan Bronner\u2019s book \u201cBattle for Justice: How the Bork Nomination Shook America\u201d (1989), Mr. Cohen and Mr. Pertschuk, at the Advocacy Institute, issued a game plan to appeal to pivotal Senate centrists on how to cast Judge Bork as a \u201cjudicial extremist\u201d and an \u201cideological activist\u201d whom genuine conservatives who cared about personal rights and feared government intrusion could comfortably oppose.", "paragraph_sentence": " Two weeks after President Ronald Reagan nominated Judge Bork to the Supreme Court in 1987, according to Ethan Bronner\u2019s book \u201cBattle for Justice: How the Bork Nomination Shook America\u201d (1989), Mr. Cohen and Mr. Pertschuk, at the Advocacy Institute, issued a game plan to appeal to pivotal Senate centrists on how to cast Judge Bork as a \u201cjudicial extremist\u201d and an \u201cideological activist\u201d whom genuine conservatives who cared about personal rights and feared government intrusion could comfortably oppose. Judge Bork was rejected by a Senate vote of 58-42. \u201cI\u2019m proud that I helped make some constructive changes happen and helped block harmful ones from happening,\u201d Mr. Cohen said in the Pacific Standard interview. \u201cObviously, you compromise all the time, but I don\u2019t think I\u2019ve ever had to do anything I was ashamed of. And I\u2019ve enjoyed it all \u2014 immensely. It\u2019s what John Adams called \u2018the public happiness.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Two weeks after President Ronald Reagan nominated Judge Bork to the Supreme Court in 1987, according to Ethan Bronner\u2019s book \u201cBattle for Justice: How the Bork Nomination Shook America\u201d (1989), Mr. Cohen and Mr. Pertschuk, at the Advocacy Institute, issued a game plan to appeal to pivotal Senate centrists on how to cast Judge Bork as a \u201cjudicial extremist\u201d and an \u201cideological activist\u201d whom genuine conservatives who cared about personal rights and feared government intrusion could comfortably oppose. Judge Bork was rejected by a Senate vote of 58-42. \u201cI\u2019m proud that I helped make some constructive changes happen and helped block harmful ones from happening,\u201d Mr. Cohen said in the Pacific Standard interview. \u201cObviously, you compromise all the time, but I don\u2019t think I\u2019ve ever had to do anything I was ashamed of. And I\u2019ve enjoyed it all \u2014 immensely. It\u2019s what John Adams called \u2018the public happiness.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "Two weeks after President Ronald Reagan nominated Judge Bork to the Supreme Court in 1987, according to Ethan Bronner\u2019s book \u201cBattle for Justice: How the Bork Nomination Shook America\u201d (1989), Mr. Cohen and Mr. Pertschuk, at the Advocacy Institute, issued a game plan to appeal to pivotal Senate centrists on how to cast Judge Bork as a \u201cjudicial extremist\u201d and an \u201cideological activist\u201d whom genuine conservatives who cared about personal rights and feared government intrusion could comfortably oppose.", "paragraph_id": "5d7017d5c8e4820a9b66c3d3"} +{"question": "How many Tony awards was the musical nominated for", "paragraph": "Oh cruel fate. You make a musical about two struggling playwrights who are always outshined by Shakespeare; the musical is nominated for 10 Tony Awards, and the only one it wins is for the guy who plays Shakespeare. The cheeky creators of \u201cSomething Rotten!\u201d had been hoping for a different outcome. But licking their wounds was not going to help them bounce back, so, instead, they have embraced an unorthodox post-Tonys marketing strategy: calling attention to their plight. On Facebook, Twitter and in a full-page ad in The New York Times on Sunday, the show is trumpeting its status as \u201cLoser!\u201d in the best-musical race. The campaign notes that the show is not alone: a string of successful shows, from \u201cWest Side Story\u201d to \u201cWicked,\u201d had in previous years been passed over for best musical. \u201cYou\u2019re always hoping that you\u2019re going to win, but if you don\u2019t, you have to think about how to position your show,\u201d said Kevin McCollum, the lead producer of \u201cRotten!\u201d \u201cVery few shows have the confidence to go with the headline \u2018Loser!,\u2019 but it illustrates that we\u2019re confident enough to acknowledge our loss and celebrate those that came before us.\u201d", "answer": "10", "sentence": "You make a musical about two struggling playwrights who are always outshined by Shakespeare; the musical is nominated for 10 Tony Awards, and the only one it wins is for the guy who plays Shakespeare.", "paragraph_sentence": "Oh cruel fate. You make a musical about two struggling playwrights who are always outshined by Shakespeare; the musical is nominated for 10 Tony Awards, and the only one it wins is for the guy who plays Shakespeare. The cheeky creators of \u201cSomething Rotten!\u201d had been hoping for a different outcome. But licking their wounds was not going to help them bounce back, so, instead, they have embraced an unorthodox post-Tonys marketing strategy: calling attention to their plight. On Facebook, Twitter and in a full-page ad in The New York Times on Sunday, the show is trumpeting its status as \u201cLoser!\u201d in the best-musical race. The campaign notes that the show is not alone: a string of successful shows, from \u201cWest Side Story\u201d to \u201cWicked,\u201d had in previous years been passed over for best musical. \u201cYou\u2019re always hoping that you\u2019re going to win, but if you don\u2019t, you have to think about how to position your show,\u201d said Kevin McCollum, the lead producer of \u201cRotten!\u201d \u201cVery few shows have the confidence to go with the headline \u2018Loser!,\u2019 but it illustrates that we\u2019re confident enough to acknowledge our loss and celebrate those that came before us.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Oh cruel fate. You make a musical about two struggling playwrights who are always outshined by Shakespeare; the musical is nominated for 10 Tony Awards, and the only one it wins is for the guy who plays Shakespeare. The cheeky creators of \u201cSomething Rotten!\u201d had been hoping for a different outcome. But licking their wounds was not going to help them bounce back, so, instead, they have embraced an unorthodox post-Tonys marketing strategy: calling attention to their plight. On Facebook, Twitter and in a full-page ad in The New York Times on Sunday, the show is trumpeting its status as \u201cLoser!\u201d in the best-musical race. The campaign notes that the show is not alone: a string of successful shows, from \u201cWest Side Story\u201d to \u201cWicked,\u201d had in previous years been passed over for best musical. \u201cYou\u2019re always hoping that you\u2019re going to win, but if you don\u2019t, you have to think about how to position your show,\u201d said Kevin McCollum, the lead producer of \u201cRotten!\u201d \u201cVery few shows have the confidence to go with the headline \u2018Loser!,\u2019 but it illustrates that we\u2019re confident enough to acknowledge our loss and celebrate those that came before us.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "You make a musical about two struggling playwrights who are always outshined by Shakespeare; the musical is nominated for 10 Tony Awards, and the only one it wins is for the guy who plays Shakespeare.", "paragraph_id": "5d7007c4c8e4820a9b66ae8c"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d7008fcc8e4820a9b66b137"} +{"question": "What was the name of the weekly drag party hosted by Ms. Simpson?", "paragraph": "Born in Gaylord, Minn., to a minister father and housewife mother, Ms. Simpson studied advertising and communications in New York, when she wasn\u2019t partying at places like Danceteria, Area and other clubs of the moment. Inspired by the East Village scene, she started dolling up in 1987, aiming for a \u201cflirty career girl\u201d look, and soon became one of the scene\u2019s reigning drag personalities. She started a feisty drag zine called My Comrade, which covered go-go boys, celebs and queer politics, and hosted a weekly drag party called Channel 69 at the Pyramid Club on Avenue A. Her stature grew when she performed at the outdoor drag festival Wigstock. \u201cI didn\u2019t think of Linda as being a separate person from myself,\u201d said Ms. Simpson, who makes a living from event hosting and performing. \u201cI already had a love of sarcasm, so it was transferred to the stage,\u201d she added. \u201cAfter being shamed for being feminine most of my life, it was liberating to wear a dress and be applauded for that.\u201d For a pop cultural moment in the mid-1990s, drag flourished. RuPaul had a hit record, and the drag road movie \u201cThe Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert\u201d was a box office hit.", "answer": "Channel 69", "sentence": "She started a feisty drag zine called My Comrade, which covered go-go boys, celebs and queer politics, and hosted a weekly drag party called Channel 69 at the Pyramid Club on Avenue A. Her stature grew when she performed at the outdoor drag festival Wigstock.", "paragraph_sentence": "Born in Gaylord, Minn., to a minister father and housewife mother, Ms. Simpson studied advertising and communications in New York, when she wasn\u2019t partying at places like Danceteria, Area and other clubs of the moment. Inspired by the East Village scene, she started dolling up in 1987, aiming for a \u201cflirty career girl\u201d look, and soon became one of the scene\u2019s reigning drag personalities. She started a feisty drag zine called My Comrade, which covered go-go boys, celebs and queer politics, and hosted a weekly drag party called Channel 69 at the Pyramid Club on Avenue A. Her stature grew when she performed at the outdoor drag festival Wigstock. \u201cI didn\u2019t think of Linda as being a separate person from myself,\u201d said Ms. Simpson, who makes a living from event hosting and performing. \u201cI already had a love of sarcasm, so it was transferred to the stage,\u201d she added. \u201cAfter being shamed for being feminine most of my life, it was liberating to wear a dress and be applauded for that.\u201d For a pop cultural moment in the mid-1990s, drag flourished. RuPaul had a hit record, and the drag road movie \u201cThe Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert\u201d was a box office hit.", "paragraph_answer": "Born in Gaylord, Minn., to a minister father and housewife mother, Ms. Simpson studied advertising and communications in New York, when she wasn\u2019t partying at places like Danceteria, Area and other clubs of the moment. Inspired by the East Village scene, she started dolling up in 1987, aiming for a \u201cflirty career girl\u201d look, and soon became one of the scene\u2019s reigning drag personalities. She started a feisty drag zine called My Comrade, which covered go-go boys, celebs and queer politics, and hosted a weekly drag party called Channel 69 at the Pyramid Club on Avenue A. Her stature grew when she performed at the outdoor drag festival Wigstock. \u201cI didn\u2019t think of Linda as being a separate person from myself,\u201d said Ms. Simpson, who makes a living from event hosting and performing. \u201cI already had a love of sarcasm, so it was transferred to the stage,\u201d she added. \u201cAfter being shamed for being feminine most of my life, it was liberating to wear a dress and be applauded for that.\u201d For a pop cultural moment in the mid-1990s, drag flourished. RuPaul had a hit record, and the drag road movie \u201cThe Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert\u201d was a box office hit.", "sentence_answer": "She started a feisty drag zine called My Comrade, which covered go-go boys, celebs and queer politics, and hosted a weekly drag party called Channel 69 at the Pyramid Club on Avenue A. Her stature grew when she performed at the outdoor drag festival Wigstock.", "paragraph_id": "5d702e35c8e4820a9b66db7c"} +{"question": "Which stocks jumped in the market?", "paragraph": "Markets started the day higher, propelled by a jump in energy stocks, but then quickly gave up the gains. A comment by the chairwoman of the Federal Reserve, Janet L. Yellen, suggesting that stocks were generally overvalued added to the selling pressure. Uncertainty over how quickly interest rates will climb also weighed on markets as yields on bonds continued to rise. Some market experts say they think the Fed will have to increase its short-term rate relatively soon to fight inflation. The yield on the 10-year United States Treasury note rose to 2.25 percent, its highest level in two months.", "answer": "energy stocks", "sentence": "Markets started the day higher, propelled by a jump in energy stocks , but then quickly gave up the gains.", "paragraph_sentence": " Markets started the day higher, propelled by a jump in energy stocks , but then quickly gave up the gains. A comment by the chairwoman of the Federal Reserve, Janet L. Yellen, suggesting that stocks were generally overvalued added to the selling pressure. Uncertainty over how quickly interest rates will climb also weighed on markets as yields on bonds continued to rise. Some market experts say they think the Fed will have to increase its short-term rate relatively soon to fight inflation. The yield on the 10-year United States Treasury note rose to 2.25 percent, its highest level in two months.", "paragraph_answer": "Markets started the day higher, propelled by a jump in energy stocks , but then quickly gave up the gains. A comment by the chairwoman of the Federal Reserve, Janet L. Yellen, suggesting that stocks were generally overvalued added to the selling pressure. Uncertainty over how quickly interest rates will climb also weighed on markets as yields on bonds continued to rise. Some market experts say they think the Fed will have to increase its short-term rate relatively soon to fight inflation. The yield on the 10-year United States Treasury note rose to 2.25 percent, its highest level in two months.", "sentence_answer": "Markets started the day higher, propelled by a jump in energy stocks , but then quickly gave up the gains.", "paragraph_id": "5d703a24c8e4820a9b66e200"} +{"question": "Under which director did the organization's staff decline in number?", "paragraph": "As of mid-May, the fund had raised just $18 million in the 2015 fiscal year, compared with an average of $29 million a year over the last decade. The Education Department said on Tuesday that by June 30, the end of the fiscal year, the fund had raised $21.75 million, but it said it could not provide a list of new grants that were secured in May and June. Under Ms. Chen, the organization\u2019s staff shrank to 10, from 21. Most recently, the chief financial officer left only a few months after she was hired. According to one of the people familiar with confidential discussions about the circumstances of Ms. Chen\u2019s departure, members of the board had been unsettled by a recent audit committee meeting in which Ms. Chen was unable to answer questions about the fund\u2019s finances. Ms. Chen, whose resignation was first reported by Politico New York, did not respond to an email. The Education Department\u2019s press office offered a statement on her behalf, saying she \u201cgreatly appreciated the opportunity to work with the chancellor and the city\u2019s extraordinary philanthropic community.\u201d The department said that Sarah Geisenheimer, a former associate director at the Rockefeller Foundation and a senior adviser to Ms. Fari\u00f1a, had been made acting executive director of the fund, effective immediately, and that it would conduct a formal search for a permanent executive director.", "answer": "Ms. Chen", "sentence": "Under Ms. Chen , the organization\u2019s staff shrank to 10, from 21.", "paragraph_sentence": "As of mid-May, the fund had raised just $18 million in the 2015 fiscal year, compared with an average of $29 million a year over the last decade. The Education Department said on Tuesday that by June 30, the end of the fiscal year, the fund had raised $21.75 million, but it said it could not provide a list of new grants that were secured in May and June. Under Ms. Chen , the organization\u2019s staff shrank to 10, from 21. Most recently, the chief financial officer left only a few months after she was hired. According to one of the people familiar with confidential discussions about the circumstances of Ms. Chen\u2019s departure, members of the board had been unsettled by a recent audit committee meeting in which Ms. Chen was unable to answer questions about the fund\u2019s finances. Ms. Chen, whose resignation was first reported by Politico New York, did not respond to an email. The Education Department\u2019s press office offered a statement on her behalf, saying she \u201cgreatly appreciated the opportunity to work with the chancellor and the city\u2019s extraordinary philanthropic community.\u201d The department said that Sarah Geisenheimer, a former associate director at the Rockefeller Foundation and a senior adviser to Ms. Fari\u00f1a, had been made acting executive director of the fund, effective immediately, and that it would conduct a formal search for a permanent executive director.", "paragraph_answer": "As of mid-May, the fund had raised just $18 million in the 2015 fiscal year, compared with an average of $29 million a year over the last decade. The Education Department said on Tuesday that by June 30, the end of the fiscal year, the fund had raised $21.75 million, but it said it could not provide a list of new grants that were secured in May and June. Under Ms. Chen , the organization\u2019s staff shrank to 10, from 21. Most recently, the chief financial officer left only a few months after she was hired. According to one of the people familiar with confidential discussions about the circumstances of Ms. Chen\u2019s departure, members of the board had been unsettled by a recent audit committee meeting in which Ms. Chen was unable to answer questions about the fund\u2019s finances. Ms. Chen, whose resignation was first reported by Politico New York, did not respond to an email. The Education Department\u2019s press office offered a statement on her behalf, saying she \u201cgreatly appreciated the opportunity to work with the chancellor and the city\u2019s extraordinary philanthropic community.\u201d The department said that Sarah Geisenheimer, a former associate director at the Rockefeller Foundation and a senior adviser to Ms. Fari\u00f1a, had been made acting executive director of the fund, effective immediately, and that it would conduct a formal search for a permanent executive director.", "sentence_answer": "Under Ms. Chen , the organization\u2019s staff shrank to 10, from 21.", "paragraph_id": "5d7089e0c8e4820a9b66f4be"} +{"question": "Who is The San Jose Mercury News speculating to sing at the event?", "paragraph": "Super Bowl 50 will be played in five months. The game is so far in the future that The San Jose Mercury News has nothing better to do than speculate about whether Taylor Swift might sing at the halftime show. A long list of events needs to unfold at Levi\u2019s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., before it hosts the big game on Feb. 7: like an entire N.F.L. season, for instance. But with the season opener approaching tonight between the Steelers and the Patriots, Paul Bessire\u2019s N.F.L. \u201cPrediction Machine\u201d doesn\u2019t need to wait five months. It knows a lot about Super Bowl 50 already. Including which teams will participate (the Green Bay Packers and the Indianapolis Colts). And the final score (31-28, Packers). So, everyone can stay home \u2014 no need to play the games.", "answer": "Taylor Swift", "sentence": "The game is so far in the future that The San Jose Mercury News has nothing better to do than speculate about whether Taylor Swift might sing at the halftime show.", "paragraph_sentence": "Super Bowl 50 will be played in five months. The game is so far in the future that The San Jose Mercury News has nothing better to do than speculate about whether Taylor Swift might sing at the halftime show. A long list of events needs to unfold at Levi\u2019s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., before it hosts the big game on Feb. 7: like an entire N.F.L. season, for instance. But with the season opener approaching tonight between the Steelers and the Patriots, Paul Bessire\u2019s N.F.L. \u201cPrediction Machine\u201d doesn\u2019t need to wait five months. It knows a lot about Super Bowl 50 already. Including which teams will participate (the Green Bay Packers and the Indianapolis Colts). And the final score (31-28, Packers). So, everyone can stay home \u2014 no need to play the games.", "paragraph_answer": "Super Bowl 50 will be played in five months. The game is so far in the future that The San Jose Mercury News has nothing better to do than speculate about whether Taylor Swift might sing at the halftime show. A long list of events needs to unfold at Levi\u2019s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., before it hosts the big game on Feb. 7: like an entire N.F.L. season, for instance. But with the season opener approaching tonight between the Steelers and the Patriots, Paul Bessire\u2019s N.F.L. \u201cPrediction Machine\u201d doesn\u2019t need to wait five months. It knows a lot about Super Bowl 50 already. Including which teams will participate (the Green Bay Packers and the Indianapolis Colts). And the final score (31-28, Packers). So, everyone can stay home \u2014 no need to play the games.", "sentence_answer": "The game is so far in the future that The San Jose Mercury News has nothing better to do than speculate about whether Taylor Swift might sing at the halftime show.", "paragraph_id": "5d7019c7c8e4820a9b66c5ce"} +{"question": "Where was the image of a movie poster having a face of a woman in ecstasy?", "paragraph": "Among the authority\u2019s list of banned items: violent images that could scare children, material that could \u201cincite or provoke violence,\u201d and ads for escort services and tobacco products. Then there is the provision about depicting sexual activities in an offensive manner, which leaves room for interpretation. An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children. \u201cI glanced at it from the side of my eye, but I didn\u2019t really care to read it,\u201d said the passenger, Tara Griffiths, 21, a student at St. John\u2019s University in Queens. \u201cIt reminds me of \u2018Fifty Shades of Grey.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "on the F train", "sentence": "An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Among the authority\u2019s list of banned items: violent images that could scare children, material that could \u201cincite or provoke violence,\u201d and ads for escort services and tobacco products. Then there is the provision about depicting sexual activities in an offensive manner, which leaves room for interpretation. An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children. \u201cI glanced at it from the side of my eye, but I didn\u2019t really care to read it,\u201d said the passenger, Tara Griffiths, 21, a student at St. John\u2019s University in Queens. \u201cIt reminds me of \u2018Fifty Shades of Grey.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Among the authority\u2019s list of banned items: violent images that could scare children, material that could \u201cincite or provoke violence,\u201d and ads for escort services and tobacco products. Then there is the provision about depicting sexual activities in an offensive manner, which leaves room for interpretation. An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children. \u201cI glanced at it from the side of my eye, but I didn\u2019t really care to read it,\u201d said the passenger, Tara Griffiths, 21, a student at St. John\u2019s University in Queens. \u201cIt reminds me of \u2018Fifty Shades of Grey.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d7019a6c8e4820a9b66c5b0"} +{"question": "What would Pierre-Paul become if the Giants would withdraw their offer?", "paragraph": "The Giants could still withdraw their franchise tag offer, which would make Pierre-Paul an unrestricted free agent, but Mara said that was not in the team\u2019s immediate plans.", "answer": "an unrestricted free agent", "sentence": "The Giants could still withdraw their franchise tag offer, which would make Pierre-Paul an unrestricted free agent , but Mara said that was not in the team\u2019s immediate plans.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Giants could still withdraw their franchise tag offer, which would make Pierre-Paul an unrestricted free agent , but Mara said that was not in the team\u2019s immediate plans. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Giants could still withdraw their franchise tag offer, which would make Pierre-Paul an unrestricted free agent , but Mara said that was not in the team\u2019s immediate plans.", "sentence_answer": "The Giants could still withdraw their franchise tag offer, which would make Pierre-Paul an unrestricted free agent , but Mara said that was not in the team\u2019s immediate plans.", "paragraph_id": "5d702476c8e4820a9b66d0a9"} +{"question": "What was founded by the bartender of Glad Hand?", "paragraph": "Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name. \u201cHe was a very good-looking guy,\u201d Mr. Seymour, 77, said of Mr. Connell. \u201cWe called him Smiling Jack. He always wore a leather flight jacket, had a little mustache, looked like the Smilin\u2019 Jack character in the comics\u201d \u2014 a macho aviator in a strip that ran from 1933 to 1973. \u201cHe was a Gary Cooper type all the way,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. \u201cVery spare in what he had to say. I\u2019m not quite sure where he lived. He may have been living in San Francisco and spending time in Sausalito. He wasn\u2019t boisterous, wasn\u2019t a big drinker. Just be in there, sit down, nursing whatever he was drinking.\u201d", "answer": "the No Name", "sentence": "Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name .", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name . \u201cHe was a very good-looking guy,\u201d Mr. Seymour, 77, said of Mr. Connell. \u201cWe called him Smiling Jack. He always wore a leather flight jacket, had a little mustache, looked like the Smilin\u2019 Jack character in the comics\u201d \u2014 a macho aviator in a strip that ran from 1933 to 1973. \u201cHe was a Gary Cooper type all the way,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. \u201cVery spare in what he had to say. I\u2019m not quite sure where he lived. He may have been living in San Francisco and spending time in Sausalito. He wasn\u2019t boisterous, wasn\u2019t a big drinker. Just be in there, sit down, nursing whatever he was drinking.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name . \u201cHe was a very good-looking guy,\u201d Mr. Seymour, 77, said of Mr. Connell. \u201cWe called him Smiling Jack. He always wore a leather flight jacket, had a little mustache, looked like the Smilin\u2019 Jack character in the comics\u201d \u2014 a macho aviator in a strip that ran from 1933 to 1973. \u201cHe was a Gary Cooper type all the way,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. \u201cVery spare in what he had to say. I\u2019m not quite sure where he lived. He may have been living in San Francisco and spending time in Sausalito. He wasn\u2019t boisterous, wasn\u2019t a big drinker. Just be in there, sit down, nursing whatever he was drinking.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name .", "paragraph_id": "5d7017f8c8e4820a9b66c3e6"} +{"question": "What was the name of Stuart Scott's memoir?", "paragraph": "When the longtime ESPN anchor Stuart Scott quietly agreed to write a memoir last year, appendiceal cancer and chemotherapy were weakening him. His appearances on the network were dwindling. His life was slipping away. There was no assurance that he would survive until late May, when Blue Rider Press expected to publish his book, \u201cEvery Day I Fight.\u201d So last fall, when Scott was in the midst of a hospitalization that lasted 75 days, a decision was made to advance the publication to early March. Perhaps Scott would live until then.", "answer": "\u201cEvery Day I Fight.\u201d", "sentence": "There was no assurance that he would survive until late May, when Blue Rider Press expected to publish his book, \u201cEvery Day I Fight.\u201d So last fall, when Scott was in the midst of a hospitalization that lasted 75 days, a decision was made to advance the publication to early March.", "paragraph_sentence": "When the longtime ESPN anchor Stuart Scott quietly agreed to write a memoir last year, appendiceal cancer and chemotherapy were weakening him. His appearances on the network were dwindling. His life was slipping away. There was no assurance that he would survive until late May, when Blue Rider Press expected to publish his book, \u201cEvery Day I Fight.\u201d So last fall, when Scott was in the midst of a hospitalization that lasted 75 days, a decision was made to advance the publication to early March. Perhaps Scott would live until then.", "paragraph_answer": "When the longtime ESPN anchor Stuart Scott quietly agreed to write a memoir last year, appendiceal cancer and chemotherapy were weakening him. His appearances on the network were dwindling. His life was slipping away. There was no assurance that he would survive until late May, when Blue Rider Press expected to publish his book, \u201cEvery Day I Fight.\u201d So last fall, when Scott was in the midst of a hospitalization that lasted 75 days, a decision was made to advance the publication to early March. Perhaps Scott would live until then.", "sentence_answer": "There was no assurance that he would survive until late May, when Blue Rider Press expected to publish his book, \u201cEvery Day I Fight.\u201d So last fall, when Scott was in the midst of a hospitalization that lasted 75 days, a decision was made to advance the publication to early March.", "paragraph_id": "5d7047c1c8e4820a9b66e8a3"} +{"question": "What country didn't he want outside power from?", "paragraph": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "answer": "Syria", "sentence": "He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "sentence_answer": "He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "paragraph_id": "5d7012ecc8e4820a9b66bf61"} +{"question": "What does the article consider \"a low point for Jermy Corbyn?\"", "paragraph": "The run-up to the vote also amounted to a low point for Jeremy Corbyn, the new leader of the opposition Labour Party. While Mr. Corbyn opposes British military action over Syria, some of Labour\u2019s senior figures, including the party\u2019s spokesman on foreign affairs, Hilary Benn, supported it, and Mr. Corbyn was forced to allow his lawmakers to vote freely on the issue in an effort to avoid a intraparty clash amid threatened resignations. In an impassioned speech that won a rousing reception Wednesday night, Mr. Benn argued that \u201cevery state has the right to defend itself\u201d and asked \u201cwhy would we not uphold the settled will of the United Nations?\u201d", "answer": "The run-up to the vote", "sentence": "The run-up to the vote also amounted to a low point for Jeremy Corbyn, the new leader of the opposition Labour Party.", "paragraph_sentence": " The run-up to the vote also amounted to a low point for Jeremy Corbyn, the new leader of the opposition Labour Party. While Mr. Corbyn opposes British military action over Syria, some of Labour\u2019s senior figures, including the party\u2019s spokesman on foreign affairs, Hilary Benn, supported it, and Mr. Corbyn was forced to allow his lawmakers to vote freely on the issue in an effort to avoid a intraparty clash amid threatened resignations. In an impassioned speech that won a rousing reception Wednesday night, Mr. Benn argued that \u201cevery state has the right to defend itself\u201d and asked \u201cwhy would we not uphold the settled will of the United Nations?\u201d", "paragraph_answer": " The run-up to the vote also amounted to a low point for Jeremy Corbyn, the new leader of the opposition Labour Party. While Mr. Corbyn opposes British military action over Syria, some of Labour\u2019s senior figures, including the party\u2019s spokesman on foreign affairs, Hilary Benn, supported it, and Mr. Corbyn was forced to allow his lawmakers to vote freely on the issue in an effort to avoid a intraparty clash amid threatened resignations. In an impassioned speech that won a rousing reception Wednesday night, Mr. Benn argued that \u201cevery state has the right to defend itself\u201d and asked \u201cwhy would we not uphold the settled will of the United Nations?\u201d", "sentence_answer": " The run-up to the vote also amounted to a low point for Jeremy Corbyn, the new leader of the opposition Labour Party.", "paragraph_id": "5d704242c8e4820a9b66e61f"} +{"question": "Which party is Mr. Renzi the leader for?", "paragraph": "Mr. Renzi, the leader of the center-left Democrats, has been relying on an uneasy pact with Mr. Berlusconi, the much-diminished leader of the center-right Forza Italia, since gaining power last year. The two are not in a formal coalition. But Mr. Berlusconi has been supporting Mr. Renzi on many key issues. The Italian prime minister has needed his rival\u2019s support partly because he does not have enough votes in the Senate, the country\u2019s upper house, to push through an essential constitutional change \u2014 the removal of the Senate\u2019s power to bring down governments. That is important because the current system makes it hard to govern the country without elaborate deals.", "answer": "the center-left Democrats", "sentence": "Mr. Renzi, the leader of the center-left Democrats , has been relying on an uneasy pact with Mr. Berlusconi, the much-diminished leader of the center-right Forza Italia, since gaining power last year.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Renzi, the leader of the center-left Democrats , has been relying on an uneasy pact with Mr. Berlusconi, the much-diminished leader of the center-right Forza Italia, since gaining power last year. The two are not in a formal coalition. But Mr. Berlusconi has been supporting Mr. Renzi on many key issues. The Italian prime minister has needed his rival\u2019s support partly because he does not have enough votes in the Senate, the country\u2019s upper house, to push through an essential constitutional change \u2014 the removal of the Senate\u2019s power to bring down governments. That is important because the current system makes it hard to govern the country without elaborate deals.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Renzi, the leader of the center-left Democrats , has been relying on an uneasy pact with Mr. Berlusconi, the much-diminished leader of the center-right Forza Italia, since gaining power last year. The two are not in a formal coalition. But Mr. Berlusconi has been supporting Mr. Renzi on many key issues. The Italian prime minister has needed his rival\u2019s support partly because he does not have enough votes in the Senate, the country\u2019s upper house, to push through an essential constitutional change \u2014 the removal of the Senate\u2019s power to bring down governments. That is important because the current system makes it hard to govern the country without elaborate deals.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Renzi, the leader of the center-left Democrats , has been relying on an uneasy pact with Mr. Berlusconi, the much-diminished leader of the center-right Forza Italia, since gaining power last year.", "paragraph_id": "5d702dd6c8e4820a9b66db35"} +{"question": "How many children does Andrew have?", "paragraph": "\u201cSometimes when you have a wholesale shift in the weather pattern it can persist for quite a while,\u201d he said. \u201cAs we get to the end of this week, we\u2019re going to see temperatures as cold or even colder.\u201d Meteorologists and their families are not immune to the consequences. Mr. Morrin\u2019s son-in-law, Andrew Albany, 28, was home with three children on Monday morning in south central New Jersey, putting in a load of laundry, when he realized the pipe to the washer was frozen. Putting the 1-year-old in the playpen, and the 3-year-old and 6-year-old in front of a Disney movie, he deployed a space heater to try to try to thaw the pipe, before heading to his 3 p.m. to midnight shift as a nurse. The children\u2019s movie? Yes, he conceded, laughing, \u201cIt was \u2018Frozen.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "three children", "sentence": "Mr. Morrin\u2019s son-in-law, Andrew Albany, 28, was home with three children on Monday morning in south central New Jersey, putting in a load of laundry, when he realized the pipe to the washer was frozen.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cSometimes when you have a wholesale shift in the weather pattern it can persist for quite a while,\u201d he said. \u201cAs we get to the end of this week, we\u2019re going to see temperatures as cold or even colder.\u201d Meteorologists and their families are not immune to the consequences. Mr. Morrin\u2019s son-in-law, Andrew Albany, 28, was home with three children on Monday morning in south central New Jersey, putting in a load of laundry, when he realized the pipe to the washer was frozen. Putting the 1-year-old in the playpen, and the 3-year-old and 6-year-old in front of a Disney movie, he deployed a space heater to try to try to thaw the pipe, before heading to his 3 p.m. to midnight shift as a nurse. The children\u2019s movie? Yes, he conceded, laughing, \u201cIt was \u2018Frozen.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cSometimes when you have a wholesale shift in the weather pattern it can persist for quite a while,\u201d he said. \u201cAs we get to the end of this week, we\u2019re going to see temperatures as cold or even colder.\u201d Meteorologists and their families are not immune to the consequences. Mr. Morrin\u2019s son-in-law, Andrew Albany, 28, was home with three children on Monday morning in south central New Jersey, putting in a load of laundry, when he realized the pipe to the washer was frozen. Putting the 1-year-old in the playpen, and the 3-year-old and 6-year-old in front of a Disney movie, he deployed a space heater to try to try to thaw the pipe, before heading to his 3 p.m. to midnight shift as a nurse. The children\u2019s movie? Yes, he conceded, laughing, \u201cIt was \u2018Frozen.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Morrin\u2019s son-in-law, Andrew Albany, 28, was home with three children on Monday morning in south central New Jersey, putting in a load of laundry, when he realized the pipe to the washer was frozen.", "paragraph_id": "5d708bd5c8e4820a9b66f516"} +{"question": "What is the name of the hospital that is receiving a land from Fortis?", "paragraph": "SUNDAY STYLES An article on Sept. 20 about the affection felt for Pope Francis by a self-described \u201conce-erstwhile Presbyterian\u201d misspelled part of the birth name of Pope Francis. He was born Jorge Mario Bergoglio, not Borgoglia. REAL ESTATE A cover article last Sunday about new developments in New York City that have drawn criticism from neighbors described incorrectly plans by the developer Fortis Property Group to address concerns about the loss of Long Island College Hospital in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn. Fortis will donate land where NYU Langone Medical Center will build a new medical facility; Fortis itself will not build a larger hospital on the site. (The new facility will be larger than the temporary facility that NYU Langone is currently operating, but will not be a full-fledged hospital.)", "answer": "NYU Langone Medical Center", "sentence": "Fortis will donate land where NYU Langone Medical Center will build a new medical facility; Fortis itself will not build a larger hospital on the site.", "paragraph_sentence": "SUNDAY STYLES An article on Sept. 20 about the affection felt for Pope Francis by a self-described \u201conce-erstwhile Presbyterian\u201d misspelled part of the birth name of Pope Francis. He was born Jorge Mario Bergoglio, not Borgoglia. REAL ESTATE A cover article last Sunday about new developments in New York City that have drawn criticism from neighbors described incorrectly plans by the developer Fortis Property Group to address concerns about the loss of Long Island College Hospital in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn. Fortis will donate land where NYU Langone Medical Center will build a new medical facility; Fortis itself will not build a larger hospital on the site. (The new facility will be larger than the temporary facility that NYU Langone is currently operating, but will not be a full-fledged hospital.)", "paragraph_answer": "SUNDAY STYLES An article on Sept. 20 about the affection felt for Pope Francis by a self-described \u201conce-erstwhile Presbyterian\u201d misspelled part of the birth name of Pope Francis. He was born Jorge Mario Bergoglio, not Borgoglia. REAL ESTATE A cover article last Sunday about new developments in New York City that have drawn criticism from neighbors described incorrectly plans by the developer Fortis Property Group to address concerns about the loss of Long Island College Hospital in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn. Fortis will donate land where NYU Langone Medical Center will build a new medical facility; Fortis itself will not build a larger hospital on the site. (The new facility will be larger than the temporary facility that NYU Langone is currently operating, but will not be a full-fledged hospital.)", "sentence_answer": "Fortis will donate land where NYU Langone Medical Center will build a new medical facility; Fortis itself will not build a larger hospital on the site.", "paragraph_id": "5d707632c8e4820a9b66f27a"} +{"question": "What can be blamed for Wi-Fi headaches?", "paragraph": "Router manufacturers have more recently improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind, said Mr. Fraser. New routers often include smarter antennas that do a better job of assembling signals and beaming energy toward devices that are moving around. Some features inside newer routers also help reduce signal interference. Newer routers typically can transmit data over two radio frequencies \u2014 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz \u2014 and give you the option to split them up into two separate Wi-Fi networks. In general, the 2.4 GHz band transmits data farther and is more crowded because many types of devices, like cordless phones and microwaves, use that frequency. The 5 GHz band is less congested but typically travels a shorter distance. Consumer behavior is also to blame for Wi-Fi headaches. People may wait years before buying a new router, so their devices might be more up-to-date than their infrastructure. An outdated router becomes a bottleneck that hinders the speeds of web downloads and file transfers between connected devices.", "answer": "Consumer behavior", "sentence": "Consumer behavior is also to blame for Wi-Fi headaches.", "paragraph_sentence": "Router manufacturers have more recently improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind, said Mr. Fraser. New routers often include smarter antennas that do a better job of assembling signals and beaming energy toward devices that are moving around. Some features inside newer routers also help reduce signal interference. Newer routers typically can transmit data over two radio frequencies \u2014 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz \u2014 and give you the option to split them up into two separate Wi-Fi networks. In general, the 2.4 GHz band transmits data farther and is more crowded because many types of devices, like cordless phones and microwaves, use that frequency. The 5 GHz band is less congested but typically travels a shorter distance. Consumer behavior is also to blame for Wi-Fi headaches. People may wait years before buying a new router, so their devices might be more up-to-date than their infrastructure. An outdated router becomes a bottleneck that hinders the speeds of web downloads and file transfers between connected devices.", "paragraph_answer": "Router manufacturers have more recently improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind, said Mr. Fraser. New routers often include smarter antennas that do a better job of assembling signals and beaming energy toward devices that are moving around. Some features inside newer routers also help reduce signal interference. Newer routers typically can transmit data over two radio frequencies \u2014 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz \u2014 and give you the option to split them up into two separate Wi-Fi networks. In general, the 2.4 GHz band transmits data farther and is more crowded because many types of devices, like cordless phones and microwaves, use that frequency. The 5 GHz band is less congested but typically travels a shorter distance. Consumer behavior is also to blame for Wi-Fi headaches. People may wait years before buying a new router, so their devices might be more up-to-date than their infrastructure. An outdated router becomes a bottleneck that hinders the speeds of web downloads and file transfers between connected devices.", "sentence_answer": " Consumer behavior is also to blame for Wi-Fi headaches.", "paragraph_id": "5d705376c8e4820a9b66ec26"} +{"question": "Who lived in India at some point?", "paragraph": "RBG: Between 20 and 25 percent of the law students in Sweden were women. And there were women on the bench. I went to one proceeding in Stockholm where the presiding judge was eight months pregnant. There was also a journalist who wrote a column in the Swedish daily paper: \u201cWhy should women have two jobs, and men only one?\u201d Inflation was high, and two incomes were often needed. But it was the woman who was expected to buy the kids new shoes and have dinner on the table at 7. I remember listening to those conversations. It was that same summer I read \u201cThe Second Sex.\u201d GS: For me, an important point came when I was living in India, because of the Gandhian movement and the role of women in it. But I was slow to see how it applied here. I couldn\u2019t quite bridge that gap until the late \u201960s.", "answer": "GS", "sentence": "It was that same summer I read \u201cThe Second Sex.\u201d GS : For me, an important point came when I was living in India, because of the Gandhian movement and the role of women in it.", "paragraph_sentence": "RBG: Between 20 and 25 percent of the law students in Sweden were women. And there were women on the bench. I went to one proceeding in Stockholm where the presiding judge was eight months pregnant. There was also a journalist who wrote a column in the Swedish daily paper: \u201cWhy should women have two jobs, and men only one?\u201d Inflation was high, and two incomes were often needed. But it was the woman who was expected to buy the kids new shoes and have dinner on the table at 7. I remember listening to those conversations. It was that same summer I read \u201cThe Second Sex.\u201d GS : For me, an important point came when I was living in India, because of the Gandhian movement and the role of women in it. But I was slow to see how it applied here. I couldn\u2019t quite bridge that gap until the late \u201960s.", "paragraph_answer": "RBG: Between 20 and 25 percent of the law students in Sweden were women. And there were women on the bench. I went to one proceeding in Stockholm where the presiding judge was eight months pregnant. There was also a journalist who wrote a column in the Swedish daily paper: \u201cWhy should women have two jobs, and men only one?\u201d Inflation was high, and two incomes were often needed. But it was the woman who was expected to buy the kids new shoes and have dinner on the table at 7. I remember listening to those conversations. It was that same summer I read \u201cThe Second Sex.\u201d GS : For me, an important point came when I was living in India, because of the Gandhian movement and the role of women in it. But I was slow to see how it applied here. I couldn\u2019t quite bridge that gap until the late \u201960s.", "sentence_answer": "It was that same summer I read \u201cThe Second Sex.\u201d GS : For me, an important point came when I was living in India, because of the Gandhian movement and the role of women in it.", "paragraph_id": "5d705e50c8e4820a9b66efc0"} +{"question": "What does Francis link self-interest in his speeches?", "paragraph": "He is relentlessly negative, on the other hand, when describing institutions in which people compete for political power or economic gain. At one point he links self-interest with violence. He comes out against technological advances that will improve productivity by replacing human work. He specifically condemns market-based mechanisms to solve environmental problems, even though these cap-and-trade programs are up and running in places like California. Moral realists, including Catholic ones, should be able to worship and emulate a God of perfect love and still appreciate systems, like democracy and capitalism, that harness self-interest. But Francis doesn\u2019t seem to have practical strategies for a fallen world. He neglects the obvious truth that the qualities that do harm can often, when carefully directed, do enormous good. Within marriage, lust can lead to childbearing. Within a regulated market, greed can lead to entrepreneurship and economic innovation. Within a constitution, the desire for fame can lead to political greatness. You would never know from the encyclical that we are living through the greatest reduction in poverty in human history. A raw and rugged capitalism in Asia has led, ironically, to a great expansion of the middle class and great gains in human dignity.", "answer": "violence", "sentence": "At one point he links self-interest with violence .", "paragraph_sentence": "He is relentlessly negative, on the other hand, when describing institutions in which people compete for political power or economic gain. At one point he links self-interest with violence . He comes out against technological advances that will improve productivity by replacing human work. He specifically condemns market-based mechanisms to solve environmental problems, even though these cap-and-trade programs are up and running in places like California. Moral realists, including Catholic ones, should be able to worship and emulate a God of perfect love and still appreciate systems, like democracy and capitalism, that harness self-interest. But Francis doesn\u2019t seem to have practical strategies for a fallen world. He neglects the obvious truth that the qualities that do harm can often, when carefully directed, do enormous good. Within marriage, lust can lead to childbearing. Within a regulated market, greed can lead to entrepreneurship and economic innovation. Within a constitution, the desire for fame can lead to political greatness. You would never know from the encyclical that we are living through the greatest reduction in poverty in human history. A raw and rugged capitalism in Asia has led, ironically, to a great expansion of the middle class and great gains in human dignity.", "paragraph_answer": "He is relentlessly negative, on the other hand, when describing institutions in which people compete for political power or economic gain. At one point he links self-interest with violence . He comes out against technological advances that will improve productivity by replacing human work. He specifically condemns market-based mechanisms to solve environmental problems, even though these cap-and-trade programs are up and running in places like California. Moral realists, including Catholic ones, should be able to worship and emulate a God of perfect love and still appreciate systems, like democracy and capitalism, that harness self-interest. But Francis doesn\u2019t seem to have practical strategies for a fallen world. He neglects the obvious truth that the qualities that do harm can often, when carefully directed, do enormous good. Within marriage, lust can lead to childbearing. Within a regulated market, greed can lead to entrepreneurship and economic innovation. Within a constitution, the desire for fame can lead to political greatness. You would never know from the encyclical that we are living through the greatest reduction in poverty in human history. A raw and rugged capitalism in Asia has led, ironically, to a great expansion of the middle class and great gains in human dignity.", "sentence_answer": "At one point he links self-interest with violence .", "paragraph_id": "5d700f6cc8e4820a9b66bb8d"} +{"question": "Who is the CEO of LexisNexis Government?", "paragraph": "\u25a0 How can I reduce my risk of tax-refund fraud? If you filed your federal taxes last year from Florida, Georgia or the District of Columbia, which are considered high-risk areas for tax-related identity theft, you can apply for the federal PIN under an I.R.S. pilot program even if you haven\u2019t been a victim. Otherwise, Haywood Talcove, chief executive of LexisNexis Government, advises filing your tax return as soon as possible to reduce the chance that a thief will file a fake return in your name first; changing the username and password you use for your online tax filing program is a good idea too, he added. Also, be aware that the I.R.S. doesn\u2019t initiate contact by email; so any such message is likely fraudulent, and recipients shouldn\u2019t divulge any information in response, said Doug Shadel, an expert with AARP Fraud Watch Network. \u25a0 How can I protect sensitive information like my Social Security number?", "answer": "Haywood Talcove", "sentence": "Otherwise, Haywood Talcove , chief executive of LexisNexis Government, advises filing your tax return as soon as possible to reduce the chance that a thief will file a fake return in your name first; changing the username and password you use for your online tax filing program is a good idea too, he added.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u25a0 How can I reduce my risk of tax-refund fraud? If you filed your federal taxes last year from Florida, Georgia or the District of Columbia, which are considered high-risk areas for tax-related identity theft, you can apply for the federal PIN under an I.R.S. pilot program even if you haven\u2019t been a victim. Otherwise, Haywood Talcove , chief executive of LexisNexis Government, advises filing your tax return as soon as possible to reduce the chance that a thief will file a fake return in your name first; changing the username and password you use for your online tax filing program is a good idea too, he added. Also, be aware that the I.R.S. doesn\u2019t initiate contact by email; so any such message is likely fraudulent, and recipients shouldn\u2019t divulge any information in response, said Doug Shadel, an expert with AARP Fraud Watch Network. \u25a0 How can I protect sensitive information like my Social Security number?", "paragraph_answer": "\u25a0 How can I reduce my risk of tax-refund fraud? If you filed your federal taxes last year from Florida, Georgia or the District of Columbia, which are considered high-risk areas for tax-related identity theft, you can apply for the federal PIN under an I.R.S. pilot program even if you haven\u2019t been a victim. Otherwise, Haywood Talcove , chief executive of LexisNexis Government, advises filing your tax return as soon as possible to reduce the chance that a thief will file a fake return in your name first; changing the username and password you use for your online tax filing program is a good idea too, he added. Also, be aware that the I.R.S. doesn\u2019t initiate contact by email; so any such message is likely fraudulent, and recipients shouldn\u2019t divulge any information in response, said Doug Shadel, an expert with AARP Fraud Watch Network. \u25a0 How can I protect sensitive information like my Social Security number?", "sentence_answer": "Otherwise, Haywood Talcove , chief executive of LexisNexis Government, advises filing your tax return as soon as possible to reduce the chance that a thief will file a fake return in your name first; changing the username and password you use for your online tax filing program is a good idea too, he added.", "paragraph_id": "5d704110c8e4820a9b66e558"} +{"question": "Where is the Manhattan Quilter's Guild exhibition being shown?", "paragraph": "YONKERS Blue Door Gallery Group exhibition by the Manhattan Quilters Guild. Through April 18. Thursdays through Saturdays, noon to 5 p.m. Blue Door Gallery, 13 Riverdale Avenue. 914-375-5100; bluedoorartcenter.org. YONKERS Hudson River Museum \u201cFrohawk Two Feathers: Kill Your Best Ideas, the Battle for New York and Its Lifeline, the Hudson River.\u201d \u201cPromoting the President: In Celebration of Washington\u2019s Birthday.\u201d Through May 17. $3 to $6; members, free. Wednesdays through Sundays, noon to 5 p.m. Hudson River Museum, 511 Warburton Avenue. 914-963-4550; hrm.org.", "answer": "Blue Door Gallery", "sentence": "YONKERS Blue Door Gallery Group exhibition by the Manhattan Quilters Guild.", "paragraph_sentence": " YONKERS Blue Door Gallery Group exhibition by the Manhattan Quilters Guild. Through April 18. Thursdays through Saturdays, noon to 5 p.m. Blue Door Gallery, 13 Riverdale Avenue. 914-375-5100; bluedoorartcenter.org. YONKERS Hudson River Museum \u201cFrohawk Two Feathers: Kill Your Best Ideas, the Battle for New York and Its Lifeline, the Hudson River.\u201d \u201cPromoting the President: In Celebration of Washington\u2019s Birthday.\u201d Through May 17. $3 to $6; members, free. Wednesdays through Sundays, noon to 5 p.m. Hudson River Museum, 511 Warburton Avenue. 914-963-4550; hrm.org.", "paragraph_answer": "YONKERS Blue Door Gallery Group exhibition by the Manhattan Quilters Guild. Through April 18. Thursdays through Saturdays, noon to 5 p.m. Blue Door Gallery, 13 Riverdale Avenue. 914-375-5100; bluedoorartcenter.org. YONKERS Hudson River Museum \u201cFrohawk Two Feathers: Kill Your Best Ideas, the Battle for New York and Its Lifeline, the Hudson River.\u201d \u201cPromoting the President: In Celebration of Washington\u2019s Birthday.\u201d Through May 17. $3 to $6; members, free. Wednesdays through Sundays, noon to 5 p.m. Hudson River Museum, 511 Warburton Avenue. 914-963-4550; hrm.org.", "sentence_answer": "YONKERS Blue Door Gallery Group exhibition by the Manhattan Quilters Guild.", "paragraph_id": "5d7069c1c8e4820a9b66f125"} +{"question": "Who are known to be great leaders on and off the courts?", "paragraph": "In the end, James and Brown are separated by age and their sports but connected by Cleveland and by a real understanding of the role leadership plays in championship moments. Scoring touchdowns was not the only source of Brown\u2019s greatness, nor are points the sole source for James\u2019s. What Brown did, and what James is now trying to do, is inspire those around them to reach higher than they thought possible. \u201cThe way he expresses himself, the way that he plays, and the understanding that he has of what his role is, is very refreshing,\u201d Brown said of James. \u201cIt\u2019s rare for a man that young to have that kind of wisdom.\u201d", "answer": "James and Brown", "sentence": "In the end, James and Brown are separated by age and their sports but connected by Cleveland and by a real understanding of the role leadership plays in championship moments.", "paragraph_sentence": " In the end, James and Brown are separated by age and their sports but connected by Cleveland and by a real understanding of the role leadership plays in championship moments. Scoring touchdowns was not the only source of Brown\u2019s greatness, nor are points the sole source for James\u2019s. What Brown did, and what James is now trying to do, is inspire those around them to reach higher than they thought possible. \u201cThe way he expresses himself, the way that he plays, and the understanding that he has of what his role is, is very refreshing,\u201d Brown said of James. \u201cIt\u2019s rare for a man that young to have that kind of wisdom.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "In the end, James and Brown are separated by age and their sports but connected by Cleveland and by a real understanding of the role leadership plays in championship moments. Scoring touchdowns was not the only source of Brown\u2019s greatness, nor are points the sole source for James\u2019s. What Brown did, and what James is now trying to do, is inspire those around them to reach higher than they thought possible. \u201cThe way he expresses himself, the way that he plays, and the understanding that he has of what his role is, is very refreshing,\u201d Brown said of James. \u201cIt\u2019s rare for a man that young to have that kind of wisdom.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In the end, James and Brown are separated by age and their sports but connected by Cleveland and by a real understanding of the role leadership plays in championship moments.", "paragraph_id": "5d70281ac8e4820a9b66d5d1"} +{"question": "Who was against including the deputy prime minister of Oman in these talks?", "paragraph": "WASHINGTON \u2014 After more than two years of perceived slights and supposed snubs, the new contours of a revitalized but evolving partnership between the United States and Saudi Arabia are beginning to take shape. This month\u2019s visit to Washington by King Salman solidified the defense and security aspects of this new version of an old relationship. The Saudis are also strongly pushing an economic agenda as the centerpiece of what King Salman identified as a \u201cnew strategic alliance for the 21st century.\u201d Last May, when President Obama hosted leaders of the Gulf Cooperation Council for a summit meeting at Camp David, the Saudi monarch was conspicuously absent. The talk then of a \u201csnub\u201d missed two crucial points. First, the Saudis were trying to ensure that the Camp David meeting was the beginning, not the end, of a new conversation. Second, King Salman did not want to share center stage in his first major trip abroad as king with figures like the deputy prime minister of Oman.", "answer": "King Salman", "sentence": "This month\u2019s visit to Washington by King Salman solidified the defense and security aspects of this new version of an old relationship.", "paragraph_sentence": "WASHINGTON \u2014 After more than two years of perceived slights and supposed snubs, the new contours of a revitalized but evolving partnership between the United States and Saudi Arabia are beginning to take shape. This month\u2019s visit to Washington by King Salman solidified the defense and security aspects of this new version of an old relationship. The Saudis are also strongly pushing an economic agenda as the centerpiece of what King Salman identified as a \u201cnew strategic alliance for the 21st century.\u201d Last May, when President Obama hosted leaders of the Gulf Cooperation Council for a summit meeting at Camp David, the Saudi monarch was conspicuously absent. The talk then of a \u201csnub\u201d missed two crucial points. First, the Saudis were trying to ensure that the Camp David meeting was the beginning, not the end, of a new conversation. Second, King Salman did not want to share center stage in his first major trip abroad as king with figures like the deputy prime minister of Oman.", "paragraph_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 After more than two years of perceived slights and supposed snubs, the new contours of a revitalized but evolving partnership between the United States and Saudi Arabia are beginning to take shape. This month\u2019s visit to Washington by King Salman solidified the defense and security aspects of this new version of an old relationship. The Saudis are also strongly pushing an economic agenda as the centerpiece of what King Salman identified as a \u201cnew strategic alliance for the 21st century.\u201d Last May, when President Obama hosted leaders of the Gulf Cooperation Council for a summit meeting at Camp David, the Saudi monarch was conspicuously absent. The talk then of a \u201csnub\u201d missed two crucial points. First, the Saudis were trying to ensure that the Camp David meeting was the beginning, not the end, of a new conversation. Second, King Salman did not want to share center stage in his first major trip abroad as king with figures like the deputy prime minister of Oman.", "sentence_answer": "This month\u2019s visit to Washington by King Salman solidified the defense and security aspects of this new version of an old relationship.", "paragraph_id": "5d7007a1c8e4820a9b66ae53"} +{"question": "How long would it take for them to swim the channel?", "paragraph": "Stewart stayed in water waist deep as Jirkovsky emerged from the sea at Cissy Cove, greeted by three sailors, all armed. Channel swimmers must begin \u201ctoes dry,\u201d and Jirkovsky took several steps beyond the tide line to make sure the swim would qualify. Then he placed his goggles over his eyes, jogged back toward the sea and began to swim. The sailors honked horns and flashed blue and red lights in salute. The captain of the Bottom Scratcher sounded her horn, too, and the Deep Enders and their support team cheered. If all went according to plan, within 36 hours, they would make open-water swimming history.", "answer": "36 hours", "sentence": "If all went according to plan, within 36 hours , they would make open-water swimming history.", "paragraph_sentence": "Stewart stayed in water waist deep as Jirkovsky emerged from the sea at Cissy Cove, greeted by three sailors, all armed. Channel swimmers must begin \u201ctoes dry,\u201d and Jirkovsky took several steps beyond the tide line to make sure the swim would qualify. Then he placed his goggles over his eyes, jogged back toward the sea and began to swim. The sailors honked horns and flashed blue and red lights in salute. The captain of the Bottom Scratcher sounded her horn, too, and the Deep Enders and their support team cheered. If all went according to plan, within 36 hours , they would make open-water swimming history. ", "paragraph_answer": "Stewart stayed in water waist deep as Jirkovsky emerged from the sea at Cissy Cove, greeted by three sailors, all armed. Channel swimmers must begin \u201ctoes dry,\u201d and Jirkovsky took several steps beyond the tide line to make sure the swim would qualify. Then he placed his goggles over his eyes, jogged back toward the sea and began to swim. The sailors honked horns and flashed blue and red lights in salute. The captain of the Bottom Scratcher sounded her horn, too, and the Deep Enders and their support team cheered. If all went according to plan, within 36 hours , they would make open-water swimming history.", "sentence_answer": "If all went according to plan, within 36 hours , they would make open-water swimming history.", "paragraph_id": "5d700f41c8e4820a9b66bb40"} +{"question": "Who was Australia's first female prime minister?", "paragraph": "Mr. Rudd was ousted in an internal party coup in 2010 and replaced by Julia Gillard, Australia\u2019s first female prime minister. As Ms. Gillard\u2019s poll numbers fell, the party reinstalled Mr. Rudd months before the election of 2013, which Mr. Abbott\u2019s conservative coalition won. Already a polarizing figure when he took office, Mr. Abbott saw his popularity decline amid a slowing economy as he made a series of political missteps and alienated many voters with his strongly conservative stances and often abrasive style. His combative manner contributed to his government\u2019s inability to get major budget measures through the lower and upper houses of Parliament.", "answer": "Julia Gillard", "sentence": "Mr. Rudd was ousted in an internal party coup in 2010 and replaced by Julia Gillard , Australia\u2019s first female prime minister.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Rudd was ousted in an internal party coup in 2010 and replaced by Julia Gillard , Australia\u2019s first female prime minister. As Ms. Gillard\u2019s poll numbers fell, the party reinstalled Mr. Rudd months before the election of 2013, which Mr. Abbott\u2019s conservative coalition won. Already a polarizing figure when he took office, Mr. Abbott saw his popularity decline amid a slowing economy as he made a series of political missteps and alienated many voters with his strongly conservative stances and often abrasive style. His combative manner contributed to his government\u2019s inability to get major budget measures through the lower and upper houses of Parliament.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Rudd was ousted in an internal party coup in 2010 and replaced by Julia Gillard , Australia\u2019s first female prime minister. As Ms. Gillard\u2019s poll numbers fell, the party reinstalled Mr. Rudd months before the election of 2013, which Mr. Abbott\u2019s conservative coalition won. Already a polarizing figure when he took office, Mr. Abbott saw his popularity decline amid a slowing economy as he made a series of political missteps and alienated many voters with his strongly conservative stances and often abrasive style. His combative manner contributed to his government\u2019s inability to get major budget measures through the lower and upper houses of Parliament.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Rudd was ousted in an internal party coup in 2010 and replaced by Julia Gillard , Australia\u2019s first female prime minister.", "paragraph_id": "5d700e1dc8e4820a9b66b9ed"} +{"question": "How much are Alaskan's given in dividends every year?", "paragraph": "We\u2019ve been mentioning all the fall TV series premieres this month, but our television reporter now looks back at five years of shows that never made it out of the fall. On \u201cThe Late Show,\u201d which has no worries of being dropped, Secretary of State John Kerry is a guest (11:35 p.m. Eastern, CBS). \u2022 It\u2019s good to be Alaskan. Each person who has lived in the state for at least one year gets a $2,072 dividend from the Alaska Permanent Fund today. Alaska began distributing the money, which comes from oil royalties, in 1982. The checks have totaled about $38,000 since then. \u2022 China\u2019s National Day. Today begins a weeklong holiday in China for the 66th anniversary of the founding of the People\u2019s Republic of China. About four million Chinese will celebrate with trips abroad. \u2022 Go meatless? Today is World Vegetarian Day, and we have 4,778 ways you can celebrate. BACK STORY The world\u2019s coffee producers would like you to celebrate the first International Coffee Day today.", "answer": "$2,072", "sentence": "Each person who has lived in the state for at least one year gets a $2,072 dividend from the Alaska Permanent Fund today.", "paragraph_sentence": "We\u2019ve been mentioning all the fall TV series premieres this month, but our television reporter now looks back at five years of shows that never made it out of the fall. On \u201cThe Late Show,\u201d which has no worries of being dropped, Secretary of State John Kerry is a guest (11:35 p.m. Eastern, CBS). \u2022 It\u2019s good to be Alaskan. Each person who has lived in the state for at least one year gets a $2,072 dividend from the Alaska Permanent Fund today. Alaska began distributing the money, which comes from oil royalties, in 1982. The checks have totaled about $38,000 since then. \u2022 China\u2019s National Day. Today begins a weeklong holiday in China for the 66th anniversary of the founding of the People\u2019s Republic of China. About four million Chinese will celebrate with trips abroad. \u2022 Go meatless? Today is World Vegetarian Day, and we have 4,778 ways you can celebrate. BACK STORY The world\u2019s coffee producers would like you to celebrate the first International Coffee Day today.", "paragraph_answer": "We\u2019ve been mentioning all the fall TV series premieres this month, but our television reporter now looks back at five years of shows that never made it out of the fall. On \u201cThe Late Show,\u201d which has no worries of being dropped, Secretary of State John Kerry is a guest (11:35 p.m. Eastern, CBS). \u2022 It\u2019s good to be Alaskan. Each person who has lived in the state for at least one year gets a $2,072 dividend from the Alaska Permanent Fund today. Alaska began distributing the money, which comes from oil royalties, in 1982. The checks have totaled about $38,000 since then. \u2022 China\u2019s National Day. Today begins a weeklong holiday in China for the 66th anniversary of the founding of the People\u2019s Republic of China. About four million Chinese will celebrate with trips abroad. \u2022 Go meatless? Today is World Vegetarian Day, and we have 4,778 ways you can celebrate. BACK STORY The world\u2019s coffee producers would like you to celebrate the first International Coffee Day today.", "sentence_answer": "Each person who has lived in the state for at least one year gets a $2,072 dividend from the Alaska Permanent Fund today.", "paragraph_id": "5d702deac8e4820a9b66db5d"} +{"question": "When is \"A Midsummer Night's Dream\" playing?", "paragraph": "MASHANTUCKET Comix at Foxwoods Greer Barnes. June 25 through 27. $15 to $40. Comix at Foxwoods, 350 Trolley Line Boulevard. comixatfoxwoods.com; 866-646-0609. Film HARTFORD Cinestudio A screening of Julie Taymor\u2019s production of \u201cA Midsummer Night\u2019s Dream.\u201d June 21 and 27 at 2:30 p.m. $12 and $20. \u201cThe Last Waltz\u201d (1976), directed by Martin Scorsese. June 26 through July 2. $7 and $9. \u201cNational Theater Live: \u2018The Audience,\u2019 \u201d screening of the play starring Helen Mirren. June 28 at 2:30 p.m. $12 and $20. Cinestudio, 300 Summit Street. 860-297-2463; cinestudio.org.", "answer": "June 21 and 27", "sentence": "Film HARTFORD Cinestudio A screening of Julie Taymor\u2019s production of \u201cA Midsummer Night\u2019s Dream.\u201d June 21 and 27 at 2:30 p.m. $12 and $20.", "paragraph_sentence": "MASHANTUCKET Comix at Foxwoods Greer Barnes. June 25 through 27. $15 to $40. Comix at Foxwoods, 350 Trolley Line Boulevard. comixatfoxwoods.com; 866-646-0609. Film HARTFORD Cinestudio A screening of Julie Taymor\u2019s production of \u201cA Midsummer Night\u2019s Dream.\u201d June 21 and 27 at 2:30 p.m. $12 and $20. \u201cThe Last Waltz\u201d (1976), directed by Martin Scorsese. June 26 through July 2. $7 and $9. \u201cNational Theater Live: \u2018The Audience,\u2019 \u201d screening of the play starring Helen Mirren. June 28 at 2:30 p.m. $12 and $20. Cinestudio, 300 Summit Street. 860-297-2463; cinestudio.org.", "paragraph_answer": "MASHANTUCKET Comix at Foxwoods Greer Barnes. June 25 through 27. $15 to $40. Comix at Foxwoods, 350 Trolley Line Boulevard. comixatfoxwoods.com; 866-646-0609. Film HARTFORD Cinestudio A screening of Julie Taymor\u2019s production of \u201cA Midsummer Night\u2019s Dream.\u201d June 21 and 27 at 2:30 p.m. $12 and $20. \u201cThe Last Waltz\u201d (1976), directed by Martin Scorsese. June 26 through July 2. $7 and $9. \u201cNational Theater Live: \u2018The Audience,\u2019 \u201d screening of the play starring Helen Mirren. June 28 at 2:30 p.m. $12 and $20. Cinestudio, 300 Summit Street. 860-297-2463; cinestudio.org.", "sentence_answer": "Film HARTFORD Cinestudio A screening of Julie Taymor\u2019s production of \u201cA Midsummer Night\u2019s Dream.\u201d June 21 and 27 at 2:30 p.m. $12 and $20.", "paragraph_id": "5d700c88c8e4820a9b66b7d3"} +{"question": "Who are the hosts, referred to as \"Mr.\"?", "paragraph": "Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas, with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis, have not abandoned podcasting. This season they introduced \u201cThe Drop,\u201d a weekly, podcast-only show that is downloaded 70 percent more frequently on average than the podcast of the daily \u201cThe Starters\u201d television show, according to the network. Last week\u2019s episode featured references to Katy Perry\u2019s Super Bowl halftime show and a discussion of some of the more handsome N.B.A. stars. \u201cThe Starters\u201d TV show has tried to incorporate the lighter elements of \u201cThe Basketball Jones\u201d podcast in a way that recreates the spontaneity of its hosts\u2019 old material. On their show last Thursday, in a segment called \u201cMeme Team,\u201d the hosts counted down some of the goofiest moments from the N.B.A. that week. Number one on the countdown was Westbrook\u2019s reaction to being stiffed on a high five by a teammate. In the video, he turned around sharply and glared at the offending player. \u201cThat screams cat to me,\u201d Mr. Elder said. \u201cCase closed, right? He\u2019s more like a cat.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas", "sentence": "Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas , with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis, have not abandoned podcasting.", "paragraph_sentence": " Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas , with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis, have not abandoned podcasting. This season they introduced \u201cThe Drop,\u201d a weekly, podcast-only show that is downloaded 70 percent more frequently on average than the podcast of the daily \u201cThe Starters\u201d television show, according to the network. Last week\u2019s episode featured references to Katy Perry\u2019s Super Bowl halftime show and a discussion of some of the more handsome N.B.A. stars. \u201cThe Starters\u201d TV show has tried to incorporate the lighter elements of \u201cThe Basketball Jones\u201d podcast in a way that recreates the spontaneity of its hosts\u2019 old material. On their show last Thursday, in a segment called \u201cMeme Team,\u201d the hosts counted down some of the goofiest moments from the N.B.A. that week. Number one on the countdown was Westbrook\u2019s reaction to being stiffed on a high five by a teammate. In the video, he turned around sharply and glared at the offending player. \u201cThat screams cat to me,\u201d Mr. Elder said. \u201cCase closed, right? He\u2019s more like a cat.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas , with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis, have not abandoned podcasting. This season they introduced \u201cThe Drop,\u201d a weekly, podcast-only show that is downloaded 70 percent more frequently on average than the podcast of the daily \u201cThe Starters\u201d television show, according to the network. Last week\u2019s episode featured references to Katy Perry\u2019s Super Bowl halftime show and a discussion of some of the more handsome N.B.A. stars. \u201cThe Starters\u201d TV show has tried to incorporate the lighter elements of \u201cThe Basketball Jones\u201d podcast in a way that recreates the spontaneity of its hosts\u2019 old material. On their show last Thursday, in a segment called \u201cMeme Team,\u201d the hosts counted down some of the goofiest moments from the N.B.A. that week. Number one on the countdown was Westbrook\u2019s reaction to being stiffed on a high five by a teammate. In the video, he turned around sharply and glared at the offending player. \u201cThat screams cat to me,\u201d Mr. Elder said. \u201cCase closed, right? He\u2019s more like a cat.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas , with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis, have not abandoned podcasting.", "paragraph_id": "5d7057ccc8e4820a9b66ed83"} +{"question": "What is Xavier Gabriel's business?", "paragraph": "Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 20 about Xavier Gabriel, a Spaniard whose lottery business has become a national emblem of luck and a formidable merchandising brand, misstated, in some editions, the timing of the crash of the Virgin Galactic space plane, on which Mr. Gabriel has booked a $200,000 seat. The crash was last year, not in July. The Times welcomes comments and suggestions, or complaints about errors that warrant correction. Messages on news coverage can be e-mailed to nytnews@nytimes.com or left toll-free at 1-844-NYT-NEWS (1-844-698-6397). Comments on editorials may be e-mailed to letters@nytimes.com or faxed to (212) 556-3622. Readers dissatisfied with a response or concerned about the paper\u2019s journalistic integrity may reach the public editor at public@nytimes.com or (212) 556-7652.", "answer": "lottery", "sentence": "Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 20 about Xavier Gabriel, a Spaniard whose lottery business has become a national emblem of luck and a formidable merchandising brand, misstated, in some editions, the timing of the crash of the Virgin Galactic space plane, on which Mr. Gabriel has booked a $200,000 seat.", "paragraph_sentence": " Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 20 about Xavier Gabriel, a Spaniard whose lottery business has become a national emblem of luck and a formidable merchandising brand, misstated, in some editions, the timing of the crash of the Virgin Galactic space plane, on which Mr. Gabriel has booked a $200,000 seat. The crash was last year, not in July. The Times welcomes comments and suggestions, or complaints about errors that warrant correction. Messages on news coverage can be e-mailed to nytnews@nytimes.com or left toll-free at 1-844-NYT-NEWS (1-844-698-6397). Comments on editorials may be e-mailed to letters@nytimes.com or faxed to (212) 556-3622. Readers dissatisfied with a response or concerned about the paper\u2019s journalistic integrity may reach the public editor at public@nytimes.com or (212) 556-7652.", "paragraph_answer": "Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 20 about Xavier Gabriel, a Spaniard whose lottery business has become a national emblem of luck and a formidable merchandising brand, misstated, in some editions, the timing of the crash of the Virgin Galactic space plane, on which Mr. Gabriel has booked a $200,000 seat. The crash was last year, not in July. The Times welcomes comments and suggestions, or complaints about errors that warrant correction. Messages on news coverage can be e-mailed to nytnews@nytimes.com or left toll-free at 1-844-NYT-NEWS (1-844-698-6397). Comments on editorials may be e-mailed to letters@nytimes.com or faxed to (212) 556-3622. Readers dissatisfied with a response or concerned about the paper\u2019s journalistic integrity may reach the public editor at public@nytimes.com or (212) 556-7652.", "sentence_answer": "Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 20 about Xavier Gabriel, a Spaniard whose lottery business has become a national emblem of luck and a formidable merchandising brand, misstated, in some editions, the timing of the crash of the Virgin Galactic space plane, on which Mr. Gabriel has booked a $200,000 seat.", "paragraph_id": "5d70757bc8e4820a9b66f272"} +{"question": "What did Mr. Maduro tell supporters the moves are meant to do?", "paragraph": "In an apparent response to the Obama administration\u2019s recent decision to ban certain Venezuelan officials suspected of human rights violations from traveling to the United States, Mr. Maduro unveiled a no-fly list of his own, declaring former President George W. Bush; former Vice President Dick Cheney; and George Tenet, a former director of the C.I.A., personae non gratae. For good measure, Mr. Maduro warned that the American diplomats who remained in Venezuela must clear any meetings, presumably with anyone, with his government. The moves are meant to combat \u201cimperialist aggression,\u201d he told a throng of supporters on Saturday during a rambling, effusive speech.", "answer": "The moves are meant to combat \u201cimperialist aggression,\u201d he told a throng of supporters", "sentence": "The moves are meant to combat \u201cimperialist aggression,\u201d he told a throng of supporters on Saturday during a rambling, effusive speech.", "paragraph_sentence": "In an apparent response to the Obama administration\u2019s recent decision to ban certain Venezuelan officials suspected of human rights violations from traveling to the United States, Mr. Maduro unveiled a no-fly list of his own, declaring former President George W. Bush; former Vice President Dick Cheney; and George Tenet, a former director of the C.I.A., personae non gratae. For good measure, Mr. Maduro warned that the American diplomats who remained in Venezuela must clear any meetings, presumably with anyone, with his government. The moves are meant to combat \u201cimperialist aggression,\u201d he told a throng of supporters on Saturday during a rambling, effusive speech. ", "paragraph_answer": "In an apparent response to the Obama administration\u2019s recent decision to ban certain Venezuelan officials suspected of human rights violations from traveling to the United States, Mr. Maduro unveiled a no-fly list of his own, declaring former President George W. Bush; former Vice President Dick Cheney; and George Tenet, a former director of the C.I.A., personae non gratae. For good measure, Mr. Maduro warned that the American diplomats who remained in Venezuela must clear any meetings, presumably with anyone, with his government. The moves are meant to combat \u201cimperialist aggression,\u201d he told a throng of supporters on Saturday during a rambling, effusive speech.", "sentence_answer": " The moves are meant to combat \u201cimperialist aggression,\u201d he told a throng of supporters on Saturday during a rambling, effusive speech.", "paragraph_id": "5d700ec7c8e4820a9b66bac0"} +{"question": "Where is the location of where the measure is imposed?", "paragraph": "Reuters reported that a relative said the family was refusing to receive the body because Israeli authorities had limited the number of people allowed at the burial. The measure is often imposed by Israel at the funerals of Palestinian militants in Jerusalem and when security officials fear that a funeral will turn rowdy or violent.", "answer": "Jerusalem", "sentence": "The measure is often imposed by Israel at the funerals of Palestinian militants in Jerusalem and when security officials fear that a funeral will turn rowdy or violent.", "paragraph_sentence": "Reuters reported that a relative said the family was refusing to receive the body because Israeli authorities had limited the number of people allowed at the burial. The measure is often imposed by Israel at the funerals of Palestinian militants in Jerusalem and when security officials fear that a funeral will turn rowdy or violent. ", "paragraph_answer": "Reuters reported that a relative said the family was refusing to receive the body because Israeli authorities had limited the number of people allowed at the burial. The measure is often imposed by Israel at the funerals of Palestinian militants in Jerusalem and when security officials fear that a funeral will turn rowdy or violent.", "sentence_answer": "The measure is often imposed by Israel at the funerals of Palestinian militants in Jerusalem and when security officials fear that a funeral will turn rowdy or violent.", "paragraph_id": "5d7004e6c8e4820a9b66a81c"} +{"question": "How would Daryl and Sandy get to Sandy's treatments in Manhattan?", "paragraph": "Over the next months, Sandy and Daryl boarded a bus early in the morning every few weeks and rode down to Manhattan for the treatments. \u201cI still feel as though I\u2019m me,\u201d she told him on one ride. \u201cDo you agree?\u201d He did, sort of. In fact, he was surprised by how much herself Sandy could still be, even as she became less and less the formidable thinker he had always known. He was surprised too to discover that it didn\u2019t matter to him. \u201cI realized how little of the fact that she was an intellectual played into my feelings for her,\u201d he said. \u201cThey were feelings for her, not her intelligence. And they were still all there.\u201d", "answer": "bus", "sentence": "Over the next months, Sandy and Daryl boarded a bus early in the morning every few weeks and rode down to Manhattan for the treatments.", "paragraph_sentence": " Over the next months, Sandy and Daryl boarded a bus early in the morning every few weeks and rode down to Manhattan for the treatments. \u201cI still feel as though I\u2019m me,\u201d she told him on one ride. \u201cDo you agree?\u201d He did, sort of. In fact, he was surprised by how much herself Sandy could still be, even as she became less and less the formidable thinker he had always known. He was surprised too to discover that it didn\u2019t matter to him. \u201cI realized how little of the fact that she was an intellectual played into my feelings for her,\u201d he said. \u201cThey were feelings for her, not her intelligence. And they were still all there.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Over the next months, Sandy and Daryl boarded a bus early in the morning every few weeks and rode down to Manhattan for the treatments. \u201cI still feel as though I\u2019m me,\u201d she told him on one ride. \u201cDo you agree?\u201d He did, sort of. In fact, he was surprised by how much herself Sandy could still be, even as she became less and less the formidable thinker he had always known. He was surprised too to discover that it didn\u2019t matter to him. \u201cI realized how little of the fact that she was an intellectual played into my feelings for her,\u201d he said. \u201cThey were feelings for her, not her intelligence. And they were still all there.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Over the next months, Sandy and Daryl boarded a bus early in the morning every few weeks and rode down to Manhattan for the treatments.", "paragraph_id": "5d7041bec8e4820a9b66e5ce"} +{"question": "How much does this amount to per year?", "paragraph": "As it stands, marijuana accounts for more than a fifth of revenues generated by cartels, around $1.5 billion a year, according to a 2010 report by the RAND Corporation. The one thing that could significantly affect the cartels\u2019 marijuana business is legislation in the United States. As marijuana growing for commercial purposes in America expands, demand for Mexican marijuana could eventually dry up. Pro-marijuana activists have scored a remarkable string of election wins in recent years even though the drug remains illegal under federal law. Twenty-three states and the District of Columbia have passed laws permitting medical marijuana, and four states also allow recreational use by adults. \u201cIn the long run, as the U.S. legalizes marijuana, Mexico is going to have a tough time competing with lawful American suppliers,\u201d Mr. Walsh said. \u201cThat doesn\u2019t mean they won\u2019t have a business plan, it\u2019s just that marijuana will be removed from it.\u201d", "answer": "$1.5 billion a year", "sentence": "As it stands, marijuana accounts for more than a fifth of revenues generated by cartels, around $1.5 billion a year , according to a 2010 report by the RAND Corporation.", "paragraph_sentence": " As it stands, marijuana accounts for more than a fifth of revenues generated by cartels, around $1.5 billion a year , according to a 2010 report by the RAND Corporation. The one thing that could significantly affect the cartels\u2019 marijuana business is legislation in the United States. As marijuana growing for commercial purposes in America expands, demand for Mexican marijuana could eventually dry up. Pro-marijuana activists have scored a remarkable string of election wins in recent years even though the drug remains illegal under federal law. Twenty-three states and the District of Columbia have passed laws permitting medical marijuana, and four states also allow recreational use by adults. \u201cIn the long run, as the U.S. legalizes marijuana, Mexico is going to have a tough time competing with lawful American suppliers,\u201d Mr. Walsh said. \u201cThat doesn\u2019t mean they won\u2019t have a business plan, it\u2019s just that marijuana will be removed from it.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "As it stands, marijuana accounts for more than a fifth of revenues generated by cartels, around $1.5 billion a year , according to a 2010 report by the RAND Corporation. The one thing that could significantly affect the cartels\u2019 marijuana business is legislation in the United States. As marijuana growing for commercial purposes in America expands, demand for Mexican marijuana could eventually dry up. Pro-marijuana activists have scored a remarkable string of election wins in recent years even though the drug remains illegal under federal law. Twenty-three states and the District of Columbia have passed laws permitting medical marijuana, and four states also allow recreational use by adults. \u201cIn the long run, as the U.S. legalizes marijuana, Mexico is going to have a tough time competing with lawful American suppliers,\u201d Mr. Walsh said. \u201cThat doesn\u2019t mean they won\u2019t have a business plan, it\u2019s just that marijuana will be removed from it.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "As it stands, marijuana accounts for more than a fifth of revenues generated by cartels, around $1.5 billion a year , according to a 2010 report by the RAND Corporation.", "paragraph_id": "5d706c95c8e4820a9b66f17a"} +{"question": "Who sided with Anita?", "paragraph": "When Goldberger describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated. Gehry says he opposed the name change. \u201cI didn\u2019t want to do it. You have to understand, I was super lefty, I was involved with liberal causes,\u201d Goldberger quotes him saying. Gehry felt it was \u201ca cop-out.\u201d But Anita, the woman he had recently married, insisted. She was Jewish too, but her maiden name of \u201cSnyder\u201d had been less telling, and she had no use for \u201cGoldberg.\u201d Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected. Frank, declaring his wife \u201cone tough operator,\u201d tells Goldberger: \u201cIf you knew Anita, you knew that I had to do it. I had no way out. I was in a corner.\u201d He invented the spelling \u201cGehry\u201d to simulate Goldberg by starting with G, maintaining a high-profile letter in the middle, and ending with a tail.", "answer": "Frank\u2019s mother", "sentence": "She was Jewish too, but her maiden name of \u201cSnyder\u201d had been less telling, and she had no use for \u201cGoldberg.\u201d Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected.", "paragraph_sentence": "When Goldberger describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated. Gehry says he opposed the name change. \u201cI didn\u2019t want to do it. You have to understand, I was super lefty, I was involved with liberal causes,\u201d Goldberger quotes him saying. Gehry felt it was \u201ca cop-out.\u201d But Anita, the woman he had recently married, insisted. She was Jewish too, but her maiden name of \u201cSnyder\u201d had been less telling, and she had no use for \u201cGoldberg.\u201d Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected. Frank, declaring his wife \u201cone tough operator,\u201d tells Goldberger: \u201cIf you knew Anita, you knew that I had to do it. I had no way out. I was in a corner.\u201d He invented the spelling \u201cGehry\u201d to simulate Goldberg by starting with G, maintaining a high-profile letter in the middle, and ending with a tail.", "paragraph_answer": "When Goldberger describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated. Gehry says he opposed the name change. \u201cI didn\u2019t want to do it. You have to understand, I was super lefty, I was involved with liberal causes,\u201d Goldberger quotes him saying. Gehry felt it was \u201ca cop-out.\u201d But Anita, the woman he had recently married, insisted. She was Jewish too, but her maiden name of \u201cSnyder\u201d had been less telling, and she had no use for \u201cGoldberg.\u201d Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected. Frank, declaring his wife \u201cone tough operator,\u201d tells Goldberger: \u201cIf you knew Anita, you knew that I had to do it. I had no way out. I was in a corner.\u201d He invented the spelling \u201cGehry\u201d to simulate Goldberg by starting with G, maintaining a high-profile letter in the middle, and ending with a tail.", "sentence_answer": "She was Jewish too, but her maiden name of \u201cSnyder\u201d had been less telling, and she had no use for \u201cGoldberg.\u201d Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected.", "paragraph_id": "5d70101dc8e4820a9b66bc3a"} +{"question": "What has the Glad Hand building been since 1965?", "paragraph": "Mr. Connell\u2019s drinking buddies included the novelist Calvin Kentfield, who like Mr. Connell was an early editor of Contact, an old Bay Area literary magazine that had been restarted in 1958. Early issues of this new Contact, with offices on the Bridgeway, near the No Name Bar, featured young writers like Mr. Connell, Updike and Ray Bradbury, as well as established hands like William Saroyan and William Carlos Williams. It also featured early works by Gina Berriault, Donald Barthelme and Wallace Stegner. In the convivial, hard-drinking Sausalito writing crowd, Mr. Connell kept his distance. \u201cWhatever social life he had going, he was pretty private about,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. They knew one another mainly through the bars. After I left Mr. Seymour\u2019s house, I walked by the old Glad Hand, the defunct bar where the idea for the No Name was born. The building is still there, on a pier cantilevered over the bay. After the Glad Hand closed around 1959, the building became a coffee shop. Since 1965 it has been Scoma\u2019s, a popular seafood house.", "answer": "Scoma\u2019s, a popular seafood house", "sentence": "Since 1965 it has been Scoma\u2019s, a popular seafood house .", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Connell\u2019s drinking buddies included the novelist Calvin Kentfield, who like Mr. Connell was an early editor of Contact, an old Bay Area literary magazine that had been restarted in 1958. Early issues of this new Contact, with offices on the Bridgeway, near the No Name Bar, featured young writers like Mr. Connell, Updike and Ray Bradbury, as well as established hands like William Saroyan and William Carlos Williams. It also featured early works by Gina Berriault, Donald Barthelme and Wallace Stegner. In the convivial, hard-drinking Sausalito writing crowd, Mr. Connell kept his distance. \u201cWhatever social life he had going, he was pretty private about,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. They knew one another mainly through the bars. After I left Mr. Seymour\u2019s house, I walked by the old Glad Hand, the defunct bar where the idea for the No Name was born. The building is still there, on a pier cantilevered over the bay. After the Glad Hand closed around 1959, the building became a coffee shop. Since 1965 it has been Scoma\u2019s, a popular seafood house . ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Connell\u2019s drinking buddies included the novelist Calvin Kentfield, who like Mr. Connell was an early editor of Contact, an old Bay Area literary magazine that had been restarted in 1958. Early issues of this new Contact, with offices on the Bridgeway, near the No Name Bar, featured young writers like Mr. Connell, Updike and Ray Bradbury, as well as established hands like William Saroyan and William Carlos Williams. It also featured early works by Gina Berriault, Donald Barthelme and Wallace Stegner. In the convivial, hard-drinking Sausalito writing crowd, Mr. Connell kept his distance. \u201cWhatever social life he had going, he was pretty private about,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. They knew one another mainly through the bars. After I left Mr. Seymour\u2019s house, I walked by the old Glad Hand, the defunct bar where the idea for the No Name was born. The building is still there, on a pier cantilevered over the bay. After the Glad Hand closed around 1959, the building became a coffee shop. Since 1965 it has been Scoma\u2019s, a popular seafood house .", "sentence_answer": "Since 1965 it has been Scoma\u2019s, a popular seafood house .", "paragraph_id": "5d701901c8e4820a9b66c512"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700c65c8e4820a9b66b780"} +{"question": "Who was the reconciliation agreement signed with?", "paragraph": "But the effort to restore full electricity supplies seemed to indicate an Israeli desire to reduce tensions with the Palestinians, or at least not have them escalate further. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who is running for re-election on March 17, is already under pressure because of acute tensions with the Obama administration over his plans to address a joint meeting of Congress next week about the nuclear talks with Iran. Relations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority took a turn for the worse after President Mahmoud Abbas\u2019s Fatah party signed a reconciliation agreement last April with Hamas, the Islamic militant group that controls Gaza, contributing to the breakdown of troubled American-brokered Middle East peace talks.", "answer": "Hamas", "sentence": "Relations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority took a turn for the worse after President Mahmoud Abbas\u2019s Fatah party signed a reconciliation agreement last April with Hamas , the Islamic militant group that controls Gaza, contributing to the breakdown of troubled American-brokered Middle East peace talks.", "paragraph_sentence": "But the effort to restore full electricity supplies seemed to indicate an Israeli desire to reduce tensions with the Palestinians, or at least not have them escalate further. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who is running for re-election on March 17, is already under pressure because of acute tensions with the Obama administration over his plans to address a joint meeting of Congress next week about the nuclear talks with Iran. Relations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority took a turn for the worse after President Mahmoud Abbas\u2019s Fatah party signed a reconciliation agreement last April with Hamas , the Islamic militant group that controls Gaza, contributing to the breakdown of troubled American-brokered Middle East peace talks. ", "paragraph_answer": "But the effort to restore full electricity supplies seemed to indicate an Israeli desire to reduce tensions with the Palestinians, or at least not have them escalate further. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who is running for re-election on March 17, is already under pressure because of acute tensions with the Obama administration over his plans to address a joint meeting of Congress next week about the nuclear talks with Iran. Relations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority took a turn for the worse after President Mahmoud Abbas\u2019s Fatah party signed a reconciliation agreement last April with Hamas , the Islamic militant group that controls Gaza, contributing to the breakdown of troubled American-brokered Middle East peace talks.", "sentence_answer": "Relations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority took a turn for the worse after President Mahmoud Abbas\u2019s Fatah party signed a reconciliation agreement last April with Hamas , the Islamic militant group that controls Gaza, contributing to the breakdown of troubled American-brokered Middle East peace talks.", "paragraph_id": "5d7039ebc8e4820a9b66e1c7"} +{"question": "Who is the representative from Washington?", "paragraph": "\u201cThere\u2019s a number of members, male and female, who have young families now,\u201d said Representative Cathy McMorris Rodgers of Washington, who has had three children since she was elected to Congress in 2004, and who serves on the House Republican leadership team. \u201cMaybe it\u2019s because Congress is getting younger and finding how to balance things. A conversation around that is healthy for the effectiveness of this institution.\u201d", "answer": "Cathy McMorris Rodgers", "sentence": "\u201cThere\u2019s a number of members, male and female, who have young families now,\u201d said Representative Cathy McMorris Rodgers of Washington, who has had three children since she was elected to Congress in 2004, and who serves on the House Republican leadership team.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThere\u2019s a number of members, male and female, who have young families now,\u201d said Representative Cathy McMorris Rodgers of Washington, who has had three children since she was elected to Congress in 2004, and who serves on the House Republican leadership team. \u201cMaybe it\u2019s because Congress is getting younger and finding how to balance things. A conversation around that is healthy for the effectiveness of this institution.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThere\u2019s a number of members, male and female, who have young families now,\u201d said Representative Cathy McMorris Rodgers of Washington, who has had three children since she was elected to Congress in 2004, and who serves on the House Republican leadership team. \u201cMaybe it\u2019s because Congress is getting younger and finding how to balance things. A conversation around that is healthy for the effectiveness of this institution.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThere\u2019s a number of members, male and female, who have young families now,\u201d said Representative Cathy McMorris Rodgers of Washington, who has had three children since she was elected to Congress in 2004, and who serves on the House Republican leadership team.", "paragraph_id": "5d70070cc8e4820a9b66acc1"} +{"question": "What is the title Janet Yellen holds at the Fed?", "paragraph": "The Federal Reserve is supposed to achieve two goals simultaneously: full employment with stable prices. Yet there is one obvious factor that drives American living standards but risks being lost in this mix: wages. The economic status of most working-age households is determined by whether people are employed and for how many hours. It is also affected by how quickly prices are rising and whether their paychecks are at least keeping up with, if not outpacing, those prices. Over the last few years, employment has been growing and inflation has been low. But annual wage growth has been stuck at about 2 percent going on six years now. This combination has caused some economists and Fed watchers to argue that the Fed should target wages as a third metric. Janet Yellen, the Fed chairwoman, happens to agree with many of these wage-conscious analysts on a wide range of other economic issues, raising the possibility the Fed might indeed move in this direction. Ms. Yellen gave her answer in a recent speech in San Francisco: No.", "answer": "chairwoman", "sentence": "Janet Yellen, the Fed chairwoman , happens to agree with many of these wage-conscious analysts on a wide range of other economic issues, raising the possibility the Fed might indeed move in this direction.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Federal Reserve is supposed to achieve two goals simultaneously: full employment with stable prices. Yet there is one obvious factor that drives American living standards but risks being lost in this mix: wages. The economic status of most working-age households is determined by whether people are employed and for how many hours. It is also affected by how quickly prices are rising and whether their paychecks are at least keeping up with, if not outpacing, those prices. Over the last few years, employment has been growing and inflation has been low. But annual wage growth has been stuck at about 2 percent going on six years now. This combination has caused some economists and Fed watchers to argue that the Fed should target wages as a third metric. Janet Yellen, the Fed chairwoman , happens to agree with many of these wage-conscious analysts on a wide range of other economic issues, raising the possibility the Fed might indeed move in this direction. Ms. Yellen gave her answer in a recent speech in San Francisco: No.", "paragraph_answer": "The Federal Reserve is supposed to achieve two goals simultaneously: full employment with stable prices. Yet there is one obvious factor that drives American living standards but risks being lost in this mix: wages. The economic status of most working-age households is determined by whether people are employed and for how many hours. It is also affected by how quickly prices are rising and whether their paychecks are at least keeping up with, if not outpacing, those prices. Over the last few years, employment has been growing and inflation has been low. But annual wage growth has been stuck at about 2 percent going on six years now. This combination has caused some economists and Fed watchers to argue that the Fed should target wages as a third metric. Janet Yellen, the Fed chairwoman , happens to agree with many of these wage-conscious analysts on a wide range of other economic issues, raising the possibility the Fed might indeed move in this direction. Ms. Yellen gave her answer in a recent speech in San Francisco: No.", "sentence_answer": "Janet Yellen, the Fed chairwoman , happens to agree with many of these wage-conscious analysts on a wide range of other economic issues, raising the possibility the Fed might indeed move in this direction.", "paragraph_id": "5d704b09c8e4820a9b66e97a"} +{"question": "How many casinos are allowed outside the New York City area?", "paragraph": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "answer": "four", "sentence": "State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area.", "paragraph_sentence": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "paragraph_answer": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "sentence_answer": "State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area.", "paragraph_id": "5d7012f1c8e4820a9b66bf71"} +{"question": "What emotion was Dr. Garcia feeling?", "paragraph": "\u201cI am perfectly happy with what I have here, and every item has a meaning for me,\u201d said Dr. Garc\u00eda, who wrote an essay about editing his life in preparation for his move. Even the location on a busy cross street is an advantage. His twice-weekly trip to Columbia involves the crosstown bus and the subway. On the return trip, the bus delivers him to his doorstep. He runs either in Central Park \u2014 it\u2019s more distant than he had hoped \u2014 or along the East River. Though he is not keen on the subway construction a few doors down, he knows it is temporary.", "answer": "happy", "sentence": "\u201cI am perfectly happy with what I have here, and every item has a meaning for me,\u201d said Dr. Garc\u00eda, who wrote an essay about editing his life in preparation for his move.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cI am perfectly happy with what I have here, and every item has a meaning for me,\u201d said Dr. Garc\u00eda, who wrote an essay about editing his life in preparation for his move. Even the location on a busy cross street is an advantage. His twice-weekly trip to Columbia involves the crosstown bus and the subway. On the return trip, the bus delivers him to his doorstep. He runs either in Central Park \u2014 it\u2019s more distant than he had hoped \u2014 or along the East River. Though he is not keen on the subway construction a few doors down, he knows it is temporary.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI am perfectly happy with what I have here, and every item has a meaning for me,\u201d said Dr. Garc\u00eda, who wrote an essay about editing his life in preparation for his move. Even the location on a busy cross street is an advantage. His twice-weekly trip to Columbia involves the crosstown bus and the subway. On the return trip, the bus delivers him to his doorstep. He runs either in Central Park \u2014 it\u2019s more distant than he had hoped \u2014 or along the East River. Though he is not keen on the subway construction a few doors down, he knows it is temporary.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI am perfectly happy with what I have here, and every item has a meaning for me,\u201d said Dr. Garc\u00eda, who wrote an essay about editing his life in preparation for his move.", "paragraph_id": "5d7006efc8e4820a9b66ac45"} +{"question": "what dr. fah was wearing when she arrived at Lynchburg ?", "paragraph": "\u201cBut there was an acceptance and a respect between us,\u201d Dr. Fahs said. \u201cEvery woman there was respected and taught to have strong opinions. I spent my junior year in Paris, and came back to a campus that was up in arms about the invasion of Cambodia. The Princeton boys came down to lead us, but we were Sweet Briar women and we had learned to be leaders. We stayed in charge.\u201d The Sweet Briar finishing-school moniker hit her only once, when she was at graduate school back in Michigan, where she earned a doctorate in health management and policy. \u201cWhat were you doing at a place like Sweet Briar?\u201d her adviser asked. By the late 1960s, colleges and universities across the country were struggling to remake themselves, roiled by social revolution, the civil rights and antiwar movements and the nascent feminist advances. In the fall of 1967, Dr. Fah\u2019s classmate Michela English arrived in Lynchburg wearing the uniform of young women everywhere: Pappagallo shoes, a Villager dress and a circle pin.", "answer": "Pappagallo shoes, a Villager dress and a circle pin.", "sentence": "In the fall of 1967, Dr. Fah\u2019s classmate Michela English arrived in Lynchburg wearing the uniform of young women everywhere: Pappagallo shoes, a Villager dress and a circle pin.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cBut there was an acceptance and a respect between us,\u201d Dr. Fahs said. \u201cEvery woman there was respected and taught to have strong opinions. I spent my junior year in Paris, and came back to a campus that was up in arms about the invasion of Cambodia. The Princeton boys came down to lead us, but we were Sweet Briar women and we had learned to be leaders. We stayed in charge.\u201d The Sweet Briar finishing-school moniker hit her only once, when she was at graduate school back in Michigan, where she earned a doctorate in health management and policy. \u201cWhat were you doing at a place like Sweet Briar?\u201d her adviser asked. By the late 1960s, colleges and universities across the country were struggling to remake themselves, roiled by social revolution, the civil rights and antiwar movements and the nascent feminist advances. In the fall of 1967, Dr. Fah\u2019s classmate Michela English arrived in Lynchburg wearing the uniform of young women everywhere: Pappagallo shoes, a Villager dress and a circle pin. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cBut there was an acceptance and a respect between us,\u201d Dr. Fahs said. \u201cEvery woman there was respected and taught to have strong opinions. I spent my junior year in Paris, and came back to a campus that was up in arms about the invasion of Cambodia. The Princeton boys came down to lead us, but we were Sweet Briar women and we had learned to be leaders. We stayed in charge.\u201d The Sweet Briar finishing-school moniker hit her only once, when she was at graduate school back in Michigan, where she earned a doctorate in health management and policy. \u201cWhat were you doing at a place like Sweet Briar?\u201d her adviser asked. By the late 1960s, colleges and universities across the country were struggling to remake themselves, roiled by social revolution, the civil rights and antiwar movements and the nascent feminist advances. In the fall of 1967, Dr. Fah\u2019s classmate Michela English arrived in Lynchburg wearing the uniform of young women everywhere: Pappagallo shoes, a Villager dress and a circle pin. ", "sentence_answer": "In the fall of 1967, Dr. Fah\u2019s classmate Michela English arrived in Lynchburg wearing the uniform of young women everywhere: Pappagallo shoes, a Villager dress and a circle pin. ", "paragraph_id": "5d701becc8e4820a9b66c776"} +{"question": "What Christmas-themed movie stars Diane Keaton, John Goodman, and Marisa Tomei?", "paragraph": "\u2018Love the Coopers\u2019 (PG-13, 1:47) You can\u2019t manufacture a Christmas classic by cobbling together scenes and themes from previous Christmas classics, but this dud tries. It\u2019s the usual story of a dysfunctional family that gathers for a holiday meal, and it\u2019s full of recognizable names \u2014 Diane Keaton, John Goodman, Marisa Tomei, Olivia Wilde \u2014 but it almost never feels genuine. (Genzlinger) \u2018Macbeth\u2019 (R, 1:52) The best reason to see this slick version of the sanguineous tragedy is Michael Fassbender\u2019s exceptionally fine title performances, though the writing isn\u2019t bad, either. A mushy-mouthed Marion Cotillard co-stars; Justin Kurzel directed. (Dargis)", "answer": "\u2018Love the Coopers\u2019", "sentence": "\u2018Love the Coopers\u2019 (PG-13, 1:47)", "paragraph_sentence": " \u2018Love the Coopers\u2019 (PG-13, 1:47) You can\u2019t manufacture a Christmas classic by cobbling together scenes and themes from previous Christmas classics, but this dud tries. It\u2019s the usual story of a dysfunctional family that gathers for a holiday meal, and it\u2019s full of recognizable names \u2014 Diane Keaton, John Goodman, Marisa Tomei, Olivia Wilde \u2014 but it almost never feels genuine. (Genzlinger) \u2018Macbeth\u2019 (R, 1:52) The best reason to see this slick version of the sanguineous tragedy is Michael Fassbender\u2019s exceptionally fine title performances, though the writing isn\u2019t bad, either. A mushy-mouthed Marion Cotillard co-stars; Justin Kurzel directed. (Dargis)", "paragraph_answer": " \u2018Love the Coopers\u2019 (PG-13, 1:47) You can\u2019t manufacture a Christmas classic by cobbling together scenes and themes from previous Christmas classics, but this dud tries. It\u2019s the usual story of a dysfunctional family that gathers for a holiday meal, and it\u2019s full of recognizable names \u2014 Diane Keaton, John Goodman, Marisa Tomei, Olivia Wilde \u2014 but it almost never feels genuine. (Genzlinger) \u2018Macbeth\u2019 (R, 1:52) The best reason to see this slick version of the sanguineous tragedy is Michael Fassbender\u2019s exceptionally fine title performances, though the writing isn\u2019t bad, either. A mushy-mouthed Marion Cotillard co-stars; Justin Kurzel directed. (Dargis)", "sentence_answer": " \u2018Love the Coopers\u2019 (PG-13, 1:47)", "paragraph_id": "5d7028d5c8e4820a9b66d693"} +{"question": "How does the final suite of Wild Tales begin?", "paragraph": "\u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile, \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests. Ms. Rivas\u2019s brewing hysteria and Mr. Gentile\u2019s macho cluelessness are played for both laughs but also something larger and grimmer. They help make a violent Looney Toons bit feel like sick national cataclysm. (Read the review) The HBO All-Stars (Power-Rankings Edition)", "answer": "as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception", "sentence": "\u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile, \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile, \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests. Ms. Rivas\u2019s brewing hysteria and Mr. Gentile\u2019s macho cluelessness are played for both laughs but also something larger and grimmer. They help make a violent Looney Toons bit feel like sick national cataclysm. (Read the review) The HBO All-Stars (Power-Rankings Edition)", "paragraph_answer": "\u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile, \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests. Ms. Rivas\u2019s brewing hysteria and Mr. Gentile\u2019s macho cluelessness are played for both laughs but also something larger and grimmer. They help make a violent Looney Toons bit feel like sick national cataclysm. (Read the review) The HBO All-Stars (Power-Rankings Edition)", "sentence_answer": "\u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile, \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests.", "paragraph_id": "5d705a3fc8e4820a9b66ee34"} +{"question": "By how many points is the projected winner expected to beat the opposing team?", "paragraph": "Eagles (1-2) at Redskins (1-2) 1 p.m. Line: Eagles by 3 Coach Chip Kelly may have amazing offensive schemes, but thus far his players haven\u2019t been able to execute them. Sam Bradford has looked like a bad fit at quarterback and has spent most of the season throwing his running backs short passes that get nowhere. The team has had only two plays of 25 yards or more, and the humdrum execution has been reflected on the scoreboard, with the Eagles averaging 19.3 points a game, tied for 21st in the N.F.L. Relying on the other team to trot out an even worse offense does not seem like a great strategy, but it should work this week for Philadelphia.", "answer": "3", "sentence": "Eagles (1-2) at Redskins (1-2) 1 p.m. Line: Eagles by 3 Coach Chip Kelly may have amazing offensive schemes, but thus far his players haven\u2019t been able to execute them.", "paragraph_sentence": " Eagles (1-2) at Redskins (1-2) 1 p.m. Line: Eagles by 3 Coach Chip Kelly may have amazing offensive schemes, but thus far his players haven\u2019t been able to execute them. Sam Bradford has looked like a bad fit at quarterback and has spent most of the season throwing his running backs short passes that get nowhere. The team has had only two plays of 25 yards or more, and the humdrum execution has been reflected on the scoreboard, with the Eagles averaging 19.3 points a game, tied for 21st in the N.F.L. Relying on the other team to trot out an even worse offense does not seem like a great strategy, but it should work this week for Philadelphia.", "paragraph_answer": "Eagles (1-2) at Redskins (1-2) 1 p.m. Line: Eagles by 3 Coach Chip Kelly may have amazing offensive schemes, but thus far his players haven\u2019t been able to execute them. Sam Bradford has looked like a bad fit at quarterback and has spent most of the season throwing his running backs short passes that get nowhere. The team has had only two plays of 25 yards or more, and the humdrum execution has been reflected on the scoreboard, with the Eagles averaging 19.3 points a game, tied for 21st in the N.F.L. Relying on the other team to trot out an even worse offense does not seem like a great strategy, but it should work this week for Philadelphia.", "sentence_answer": "Eagles (1-2) at Redskins (1-2) 1 p.m. Line: Eagles by 3 Coach Chip Kelly may have amazing offensive schemes, but thus far his players haven\u2019t been able to execute them.", "paragraph_id": "5d702ba5c8e4820a9b66d94d"} +{"question": "Who produced the Broadway debut?", "paragraph": "And they got their own taste of pop stardom the following year, when they traveled to New York for its Broadway debut. But Mr. Lloyd Webber recalls his first viewing of that show, produced by Robert Stigwood and directed by Tom O\u2019Horgan, as \u201cthe worst day of my life.\u201d The production was too ornate and too glitzy by his reckoning, and he was powerless to stop it. \u201cWhat can you do if you\u2019re 23 years old?\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. Four decades later, Mr. Lloyd Webber and his company, the Really Useful Group, allow no such leeway with their worldwide productions of \u201cPhantom,\u201d \u201cSuperstar\u201d and \u201cCats,\u201d which was recently revived on the West End and is being eyed for a Broadway return.", "answer": "Robert Stigwood", "sentence": "But Mr. Lloyd Webber recalls his first viewing of that show, produced by Robert Stigwood and directed by Tom O\u2019Horgan, as \u201cthe worst day of my life.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "And they got their own taste of pop stardom the following year, when they traveled to New York for its Broadway debut. But Mr. Lloyd Webber recalls his first viewing of that show, produced by Robert Stigwood and directed by Tom O\u2019Horgan, as \u201cthe worst day of my life.\u201d The production was too ornate and too glitzy by his reckoning, and he was powerless to stop it. \u201cWhat can you do if you\u2019re 23 years old?\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. Four decades later, Mr. Lloyd Webber and his company, the Really Useful Group, allow no such leeway with their worldwide productions of \u201cPhantom,\u201d \u201cSuperstar\u201d and \u201cCats,\u201d which was recently revived on the West End and is being eyed for a Broadway return.", "paragraph_answer": "And they got their own taste of pop stardom the following year, when they traveled to New York for its Broadway debut. But Mr. Lloyd Webber recalls his first viewing of that show, produced by Robert Stigwood and directed by Tom O\u2019Horgan, as \u201cthe worst day of my life.\u201d The production was too ornate and too glitzy by his reckoning, and he was powerless to stop it. \u201cWhat can you do if you\u2019re 23 years old?\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. Four decades later, Mr. Lloyd Webber and his company, the Really Useful Group, allow no such leeway with their worldwide productions of \u201cPhantom,\u201d \u201cSuperstar\u201d and \u201cCats,\u201d which was recently revived on the West End and is being eyed for a Broadway return.", "sentence_answer": "But Mr. Lloyd Webber recalls his first viewing of that show, produced by Robert Stigwood and directed by Tom O\u2019Horgan, as \u201cthe worst day of my life.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d704477c8e4820a9b66e77c"} +{"question": "What noises are described as being heard?", "paragraph": "BEIRUT, Lebanon \u2014 Scores of Syrian government soldiers and civilians besieged by insurgents for nearly a month in a hospital in northern Syria fled on Friday in a dramatic exit that both the army and its opponents promptly claimed as a victory. Videos posted by each side showed lines of uniformed soldiers trotting away across a field as what sounded like rifle and artillery fire echoed in the background; the government claimed that they reached safety, while insurgents claimed that many were killed or captured.", "answer": "rifle and artillery fire", "sentence": "Videos posted by each side showed lines of uniformed soldiers trotting away across a field as what sounded like rifle and artillery fire echoed in the background; the government claimed that they reached safety, while insurgents claimed that many were killed or captured.", "paragraph_sentence": "BEIRUT, Lebanon \u2014 Scores of Syrian government soldiers and civilians besieged by insurgents for nearly a month in a hospital in northern Syria fled on Friday in a dramatic exit that both the army and its opponents promptly claimed as a victory. Videos posted by each side showed lines of uniformed soldiers trotting away across a field as what sounded like rifle and artillery fire echoed in the background; the government claimed that they reached safety, while insurgents claimed that many were killed or captured. ", "paragraph_answer": "BEIRUT, Lebanon \u2014 Scores of Syrian government soldiers and civilians besieged by insurgents for nearly a month in a hospital in northern Syria fled on Friday in a dramatic exit that both the army and its opponents promptly claimed as a victory. Videos posted by each side showed lines of uniformed soldiers trotting away across a field as what sounded like rifle and artillery fire echoed in the background; the government claimed that they reached safety, while insurgents claimed that many were killed or captured.", "sentence_answer": "Videos posted by each side showed lines of uniformed soldiers trotting away across a field as what sounded like rifle and artillery fire echoed in the background; the government claimed that they reached safety, while insurgents claimed that many were killed or captured.", "paragraph_id": "5d70226ec8e4820a9b66ce7b"} +{"question": "When was \"Steve Jobs\" released in theaters?", "paragraph": "The movie \u201cSteve Jobs\u201d had all the makings of a Hollywood blockbuster. It had a starry cast (Kate Winslet, Jeff Daniels, Michael Fassbender). The screenplay was by the acclaimed writer Aaron Sorkin (who also wrote \u201cThe Social Network\u201d). And it received rave reviews (\u201c\u2018Steve Jobs\u2019 is a rich and potent document of the times,\u201d wrote my colleague A.O. Scott.) But the movie tanked at the box office, earning about $18 million in the seven weeks after its Oct. 9 release. Perhaps Hollywood had overestimated the public\u2019s fascination with the man. Perhaps the film came a couple of years too late or a couple of decades too early. Or perhaps we have Steve Jobs fatigue, after all the books, movies and documentaries on the visionary Apple co-founder. But perhaps most surprising is the way in which Silicon Valley relished in, and contributed to, the film\u2019s demise.", "answer": "Oct. 9", "sentence": "But the movie tanked at the box office, earning about $18 million in the seven weeks after its Oct. 9 release.", "paragraph_sentence": "The movie \u201cSteve Jobs\u201d had all the makings of a Hollywood blockbuster. It had a starry cast (Kate Winslet, Jeff Daniels, Michael Fassbender). The screenplay was by the acclaimed writer Aaron Sorkin (who also wrote \u201cThe Social Network\u201d). And it received rave reviews (\u201c\u2018Steve Jobs\u2019 is a rich and potent document of the times,\u201d wrote my colleague A.O. Scott.) But the movie tanked at the box office, earning about $18 million in the seven weeks after its Oct. 9 release. Perhaps Hollywood had overestimated the public\u2019s fascination with the man. Perhaps the film came a couple of years too late or a couple of decades too early. Or perhaps we have Steve Jobs fatigue, after all the books, movies and documentaries on the visionary Apple co-founder. But perhaps most surprising is the way in which Silicon Valley relished in, and contributed to, the film\u2019s demise.", "paragraph_answer": "The movie \u201cSteve Jobs\u201d had all the makings of a Hollywood blockbuster. It had a starry cast (Kate Winslet, Jeff Daniels, Michael Fassbender). The screenplay was by the acclaimed writer Aaron Sorkin (who also wrote \u201cThe Social Network\u201d). And it received rave reviews (\u201c\u2018Steve Jobs\u2019 is a rich and potent document of the times,\u201d wrote my colleague A.O. Scott.) But the movie tanked at the box office, earning about $18 million in the seven weeks after its Oct. 9 release. Perhaps Hollywood had overestimated the public\u2019s fascination with the man. Perhaps the film came a couple of years too late or a couple of decades too early. Or perhaps we have Steve Jobs fatigue, after all the books, movies and documentaries on the visionary Apple co-founder. But perhaps most surprising is the way in which Silicon Valley relished in, and contributed to, the film\u2019s demise.", "sentence_answer": "But the movie tanked at the box office, earning about $18 million in the seven weeks after its Oct. 9 release.", "paragraph_id": "5d702859c8e4820a9b66d5ff"} +{"question": "Who did Mr. Hincapie say beat a confession out of him?", "paragraph": "The judge\u2019s ruling came after lengthy hearings, starting in February, during which Mr. Hincapie testified that a detective had beaten a confession out of him and a previously unknown witness, Mariluz Santana, came forward to swear she had not seen Mr. Hincapie on the subway platform when the murder happened. Mr. Watkins, a tourist from Utah visiting New York for the United States Open, was stabbed in the chest on Sept. 3, 1990, in a struggle with at least six young men who had tried to rob his family inside the Seventh Avenue subway station at 53rd Street. Some of the men later said they needed money to go dancing at the Roseland Ballroom. Mr. Hincapie, now 43, was arrested the next day and confessed to taking part. He was one of seven young men convicted of felony murder at two separate trials. Under state law, everyone who takes part in a mugging can be held responsible for murder if a victim dies.", "answer": "a detective", "sentence": "The judge\u2019s ruling came after lengthy hearings, starting in February, during which Mr. Hincapie testified that a detective had beaten a confession out of him and a previously unknown witness, Mariluz Santana, came forward to swear she had not seen Mr. Hincapie on the subway platform when the murder happened.", "paragraph_sentence": " The judge\u2019s ruling came after lengthy hearings, starting in February, during which Mr. Hincapie testified that a detective had beaten a confession out of him and a previously unknown witness, Mariluz Santana, came forward to swear she had not seen Mr. Hincapie on the subway platform when the murder happened. Mr. Watkins, a tourist from Utah visiting New York for the United States Open, was stabbed in the chest on Sept. 3, 1990, in a struggle with at least six young men who had tried to rob his family inside the Seventh Avenue subway station at 53rd Street. Some of the men later said they needed money to go dancing at the Roseland Ballroom. Mr. Hincapie, now 43, was arrested the next day and confessed to taking part. He was one of seven young men convicted of felony murder at two separate trials. Under state law, everyone who takes part in a mugging can be held responsible for murder if a victim dies.", "paragraph_answer": "The judge\u2019s ruling came after lengthy hearings, starting in February, during which Mr. Hincapie testified that a detective had beaten a confession out of him and a previously unknown witness, Mariluz Santana, came forward to swear she had not seen Mr. Hincapie on the subway platform when the murder happened. Mr. Watkins, a tourist from Utah visiting New York for the United States Open, was stabbed in the chest on Sept. 3, 1990, in a struggle with at least six young men who had tried to rob his family inside the Seventh Avenue subway station at 53rd Street. Some of the men later said they needed money to go dancing at the Roseland Ballroom. Mr. Hincapie, now 43, was arrested the next day and confessed to taking part. He was one of seven young men convicted of felony murder at two separate trials. Under state law, everyone who takes part in a mugging can be held responsible for murder if a victim dies.", "sentence_answer": "The judge\u2019s ruling came after lengthy hearings, starting in February, during which Mr. Hincapie testified that a detective had beaten a confession out of him and a previously unknown witness, Mariluz Santana, came forward to swear she had not seen Mr. Hincapie on the subway platform when the murder happened.", "paragraph_id": "5d70231cc8e4820a9b66cf3c"} +{"question": "Where does Megan Greene work?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt will be extremely difficult for the Greek people to accept such an adjustment off the back of five years of economic depression,\u201d Megan Greene, a managing director at the financial firm Manulife who has been monitoring the Greek situation, said in a report. The creditors\u2019 insistence on tough terms reflects years of pent-up frustration with Greece\u2019s slow progress in modernizing the economy. Many claim that austerity is harder than it would have otherwise been had Athens moved swiftly to promote change. Mr. Tsipras and most Greeks say that austerity is what killed the economy, especially after previous governments slashed state spending 20 percent since 2010 under previous bailouts, mainly by cutting pensions, wages, health care and social services, impoverishing many Greeks One of the more contentious new demands from creditors \u2014 one that is likely to prompt an outcry among Greeks \u2014 is that Greece transfer \u20ac50 billion worth of state assets to a fund that would have international monitors. The fund would oversee sales to pay down Greece\u2019s debt and help recapitalize its teetering banks. While many Greeks are bewildered at the situation, some see a silver lining.", "answer": "Manulife", "sentence": "\u201cIt will be extremely difficult for the Greek people to accept such an adjustment off the back of five years of economic depression,\u201d Megan Greene, a managing director at the financial firm Manulife who has been monitoring the Greek situation, said in a report.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cIt will be extremely difficult for the Greek people to accept such an adjustment off the back of five years of economic depression,\u201d Megan Greene, a managing director at the financial firm Manulife who has been monitoring the Greek situation, said in a report. The creditors\u2019 insistence on tough terms reflects years of pent-up frustration with Greece\u2019s slow progress in modernizing the economy. Many claim that austerity is harder than it would have otherwise been had Athens moved swiftly to promote change. Mr. Tsipras and most Greeks say that austerity is what killed the economy, especially after previous governments slashed state spending 20 percent since 2010 under previous bailouts, mainly by cutting pensions, wages, health care and social services, impoverishing many Greeks One of the more contentious new demands from creditors \u2014 one that is likely to prompt an outcry among Greeks \u2014 is that Greece transfer \u20ac50 billion worth of state assets to a fund that would have international monitors. The fund would oversee sales to pay down Greece\u2019s debt and help recapitalize its teetering banks. While many Greeks are bewildered at the situation, some see a silver lining.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt will be extremely difficult for the Greek people to accept such an adjustment off the back of five years of economic depression,\u201d Megan Greene, a managing director at the financial firm Manulife who has been monitoring the Greek situation, said in a report. The creditors\u2019 insistence on tough terms reflects years of pent-up frustration with Greece\u2019s slow progress in modernizing the economy. Many claim that austerity is harder than it would have otherwise been had Athens moved swiftly to promote change. Mr. Tsipras and most Greeks say that austerity is what killed the economy, especially after previous governments slashed state spending 20 percent since 2010 under previous bailouts, mainly by cutting pensions, wages, health care and social services, impoverishing many Greeks One of the more contentious new demands from creditors \u2014 one that is likely to prompt an outcry among Greeks \u2014 is that Greece transfer \u20ac50 billion worth of state assets to a fund that would have international monitors. The fund would oversee sales to pay down Greece\u2019s debt and help recapitalize its teetering banks. While many Greeks are bewildered at the situation, some see a silver lining.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt will be extremely difficult for the Greek people to accept such an adjustment off the back of five years of economic depression,\u201d Megan Greene, a managing director at the financial firm Manulife who has been monitoring the Greek situation, said in a report.", "paragraph_id": "5d701addc8e4820a9b66c671"} +{"question": "What group condemned anti-Israel extremists?", "paragraph": "The Israeli government, which has become increasingly concerned by the Boycott, Divest and Sanction movement, reacted swiftly, describing the church\u2019s positions on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as distorted and historically biased against Israel. \u201cThe U.C.C. resolutions on the Middle East conflict have reflected the most radical politics for more than a decade, and in no way reflect a moral stance or reality-based position,\u201d said Emmanuel Nahshon, spokesman for the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs. \u201cPeople of faith ought to be acting to help Israel and the Palestinians to renew efforts to achieve peace, rather than endlessly demonizing one party in the conflict \u2014 in our view, the aggrieved party.\u201d StandWithUs, a pro-Israeli advocacy group based in Los Angeles, condemned what it called \u201canti-Israel extremists within the U.C.C.\u201d for promoting both resolutions debated on Tuesday. \u201cIn doing so, they severely damaged the U.C.C.\u2019s relationship with the vast majority of the Jewish community, promoted hatred and discrimination against Israelis, and undermined efforts to achieve a just peace between Israelis and Palestinians,\u201d the group said in a statement on its website.", "answer": "StandWithUs", "sentence": "\u201cPeople of faith ought to be acting to help Israel and the Palestinians to renew efforts to achieve peace, rather than endlessly demonizing one party in the conflict \u2014 in our view, the aggrieved party.\u201d StandWithUs , a pro-Israeli advocacy group based in Los Angeles, condemned what it called \u201canti-Israel extremists within the U.C.C.\u201d for promoting both resolutions debated on Tuesday.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Israeli government, which has become increasingly concerned by the Boycott, Divest and Sanction movement, reacted swiftly, describing the church\u2019s positions on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as distorted and historically biased against Israel. \u201cThe U.C.C. resolutions on the Middle East conflict have reflected the most radical politics for more than a decade, and in no way reflect a moral stance or reality-based position,\u201d said Emmanuel Nahshon, spokesman for the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs. \u201cPeople of faith ought to be acting to help Israel and the Palestinians to renew efforts to achieve peace, rather than endlessly demonizing one party in the conflict \u2014 in our view, the aggrieved party.\u201d StandWithUs , a pro-Israeli advocacy group based in Los Angeles, condemned what it called \u201canti-Israel extremists within the U.C.C.\u201d for promoting both resolutions debated on Tuesday. \u201cIn doing so, they severely damaged the U.C.C.\u2019s relationship with the vast majority of the Jewish community, promoted hatred and discrimination against Israelis, and undermined efforts to achieve a just peace between Israelis and Palestinians,\u201d the group said in a statement on its website.", "paragraph_answer": "The Israeli government, which has become increasingly concerned by the Boycott, Divest and Sanction movement, reacted swiftly, describing the church\u2019s positions on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as distorted and historically biased against Israel. \u201cThe U.C.C. resolutions on the Middle East conflict have reflected the most radical politics for more than a decade, and in no way reflect a moral stance or reality-based position,\u201d said Emmanuel Nahshon, spokesman for the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs. \u201cPeople of faith ought to be acting to help Israel and the Palestinians to renew efforts to achieve peace, rather than endlessly demonizing one party in the conflict \u2014 in our view, the aggrieved party.\u201d StandWithUs , a pro-Israeli advocacy group based in Los Angeles, condemned what it called \u201canti-Israel extremists within the U.C.C.\u201d for promoting both resolutions debated on Tuesday. \u201cIn doing so, they severely damaged the U.C.C.\u2019s relationship with the vast majority of the Jewish community, promoted hatred and discrimination against Israelis, and undermined efforts to achieve a just peace between Israelis and Palestinians,\u201d the group said in a statement on its website.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cPeople of faith ought to be acting to help Israel and the Palestinians to renew efforts to achieve peace, rather than endlessly demonizing one party in the conflict \u2014 in our view, the aggrieved party.\u201d StandWithUs , a pro-Israeli advocacy group based in Los Angeles, condemned what it called \u201canti-Israel extremists within the U.C.C.\u201d for promoting both resolutions debated on Tuesday.", "paragraph_id": "5d700accc8e4820a9b66b4fe"} +{"question": "According to Ms. Jefferson, where is Mr. Harper-Mercer's big problem?", "paragraph": "\u201cHe\u2019s no babbling idiot nor is his life worthless,\u201d Ms. Harper wrote. \u201cHe\u2019s very intelligent and is working on a career in filmmaking. My 18 years worth of experience with and knowledge about Asperger\u2019s syndrome is paying off.\u201d Alexis Jefferson, who worked with Ms. Harper at a Southern California subacute care center around 2010, said the gunman\u2019s mother sometimes confided the difficulties she had in raising her son, including that she had placed Mr. Harper-Mercer in a psychiatric hospital when he did not take his medication. \u201cShe said that \u2018my son is a real big problem of mine,\u2019 \u201d Ms. Jefferson said in a telephone interview. \u201cShe said: \u2018He has some psychological problems. Sometimes he takes his medication, sometimes he doesn\u2019t. And that\u2019s where the big problem is, when he doesn\u2019t take his medication.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "when he doesn\u2019t take his medication", "sentence": "And that\u2019s where the big problem is, when he doesn\u2019t take his medication .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cHe\u2019s no babbling idiot nor is his life worthless,\u201d Ms. Harper wrote. \u201cHe\u2019s very intelligent and is working on a career in filmmaking. My 18 years worth of experience with and knowledge about Asperger\u2019s syndrome is paying off.\u201d Alexis Jefferson, who worked with Ms. Harper at a Southern California subacute care center around 2010, said the gunman\u2019s mother sometimes confided the difficulties she had in raising her son, including that she had placed Mr. Harper-Mercer in a psychiatric hospital when he did not take his medication. \u201cShe said that \u2018my son is a real big problem of mine,\u2019 \u201d Ms. Jefferson said in a telephone interview. \u201cShe said: \u2018He has some psychological problems. Sometimes he takes his medication, sometimes he doesn\u2019t. And that\u2019s where the big problem is, when he doesn\u2019t take his medication . \u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cHe\u2019s no babbling idiot nor is his life worthless,\u201d Ms. Harper wrote. \u201cHe\u2019s very intelligent and is working on a career in filmmaking. My 18 years worth of experience with and knowledge about Asperger\u2019s syndrome is paying off.\u201d Alexis Jefferson, who worked with Ms. Harper at a Southern California subacute care center around 2010, said the gunman\u2019s mother sometimes confided the difficulties she had in raising her son, including that she had placed Mr. Harper-Mercer in a psychiatric hospital when he did not take his medication. \u201cShe said that \u2018my son is a real big problem of mine,\u2019 \u201d Ms. Jefferson said in a telephone interview. \u201cShe said: \u2018He has some psychological problems. Sometimes he takes his medication, sometimes he doesn\u2019t. And that\u2019s where the big problem is, when he doesn\u2019t take his medication .\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "And that\u2019s where the big problem is, when he doesn\u2019t take his medication .", "paragraph_id": "5d703bcac8e4820a9b66e2bb"} +{"question": "Who did Lisa Brennan-Jobs speak to for the film?", "paragraph": "It felt like a contest among high school classmates vying to be the football captain\u2019s best friend. Here\u2019s the thing: They didn\u2019t know Steve Jobs. None of us did. I don\u2019t care if you had a sleepover party at his house once a week while you watched rom-coms and did each other\u2019s nails. Or if he granted you a 15-second interview after one of his product introductions. The reality is, Steve Jobs was trying to sell things, and he was an absolute master at using the media to do that. Sure, these folks knew a version of Mr. Jobs that he wanted to show, and they knew his products, perhaps better than anyone. But the only people who may have known the true Steve Jobs were his family and a few close friends. And even they had different reactions to the film. His wife, Laurene Powell Jobs, reportedly tried to have the movie killed numerous times and was unusually public about how she disliked the film. And yet his daughter, Lisa Brennan-Jobs, chose to speak to Mr. Sorkin for the film, sharing, as Mr. Sorkin said in an interview, \u201cstories about her father that weren\u2019t necessarily flattering.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Sorkin", "sentence": "And yet his daughter, Lisa Brennan-Jobs, chose to speak to Mr. Sorkin for the film, sharing, as Mr. Sorkin said in an interview, \u201cstories about her father that weren\u2019t necessarily flattering.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "It felt like a contest among high school classmates vying to be the football captain\u2019s best friend. Here\u2019s the thing: They didn\u2019t know Steve Jobs. None of us did. I don\u2019t care if you had a sleepover party at his house once a week while you watched rom-coms and did each other\u2019s nails. Or if he granted you a 15-second interview after one of his product introductions. The reality is, Steve Jobs was trying to sell things, and he was an absolute master at using the media to do that. Sure, these folks knew a version of Mr. Jobs that he wanted to show, and they knew his products, perhaps better than anyone. But the only people who may have known the true Steve Jobs were his family and a few close friends. And even they had different reactions to the film. His wife, Laurene Powell Jobs, reportedly tried to have the movie killed numerous times and was unusually public about how she disliked the film. And yet his daughter, Lisa Brennan-Jobs, chose to speak to Mr. Sorkin for the film, sharing, as Mr. Sorkin said in an interview, \u201cstories about her father that weren\u2019t necessarily flattering.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "It felt like a contest among high school classmates vying to be the football captain\u2019s best friend. Here\u2019s the thing: They didn\u2019t know Steve Jobs. None of us did. I don\u2019t care if you had a sleepover party at his house once a week while you watched rom-coms and did each other\u2019s nails. Or if he granted you a 15-second interview after one of his product introductions. The reality is, Steve Jobs was trying to sell things, and he was an absolute master at using the media to do that. Sure, these folks knew a version of Mr. Jobs that he wanted to show, and they knew his products, perhaps better than anyone. But the only people who may have known the true Steve Jobs were his family and a few close friends. And even they had different reactions to the film. His wife, Laurene Powell Jobs, reportedly tried to have the movie killed numerous times and was unusually public about how she disliked the film. And yet his daughter, Lisa Brennan-Jobs, chose to speak to Mr. Sorkin for the film, sharing, as Mr. Sorkin said in an interview, \u201cstories about her father that weren\u2019t necessarily flattering.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "And yet his daughter, Lisa Brennan-Jobs, chose to speak to Mr. Sorkin for the film, sharing, as Mr. Sorkin said in an interview, \u201cstories about her father that weren\u2019t necessarily flattering.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d702a15c8e4820a9b66d798"} +{"question": "Where does Jamie Dimon work?", "paragraph": "Investor redemption may be nearing for investment banks. Most lenders\u2019 wholesale units have destroyed value for seven years. Some may have done so again in the first quarter of this year. JPMorgan kicks off results season next week and its chief executive, Jamie Dimon, said in his annual letter to shareholders on Wednesday that returns could be attractive in the long run, if not the short term. But if the biggest players cut costs by a relatively modest 2 percent per year while expanding revenue at the same rate, the industry could produce a combined return on equity of more than 12 percent by 2017, a Breakingviews calculator shows.", "answer": "JPMorgan", "sentence": "JPMorgan kicks off results season next week and its chief executive, Jamie Dimon, said in his annual letter to shareholders on Wednesday that returns could be attractive in the long run, if not the short term.", "paragraph_sentence": "Investor redemption may be nearing for investment banks. Most lenders\u2019 wholesale units have destroyed value for seven years. Some may have done so again in the first quarter of this year. JPMorgan kicks off results season next week and its chief executive, Jamie Dimon, said in his annual letter to shareholders on Wednesday that returns could be attractive in the long run, if not the short term. But if the biggest players cut costs by a relatively modest 2 percent per year while expanding revenue at the same rate, the industry could produce a combined return on equity of more than 12 percent by 2017, a Breakingviews calculator shows.", "paragraph_answer": "Investor redemption may be nearing for investment banks. Most lenders\u2019 wholesale units have destroyed value for seven years. Some may have done so again in the first quarter of this year. JPMorgan kicks off results season next week and its chief executive, Jamie Dimon, said in his annual letter to shareholders on Wednesday that returns could be attractive in the long run, if not the short term. But if the biggest players cut costs by a relatively modest 2 percent per year while expanding revenue at the same rate, the industry could produce a combined return on equity of more than 12 percent by 2017, a Breakingviews calculator shows.", "sentence_answer": " JPMorgan kicks off results season next week and its chief executive, Jamie Dimon, said in his annual letter to shareholders on Wednesday that returns could be attractive in the long run, if not the short term.", "paragraph_id": "5d7025d0c8e4820a9b66d209"} +{"question": "Who will Khamenei not let be interviewed?", "paragraph": "\u201cThey say the right to interview nuclear scientists must be given,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei said, according to his website. \u201cThis means interrogation. I will not let foreigners come and talk to scientists and dear children of the nation who have developed this science up to this level.\u201d", "answer": "scientists and dear children", "sentence": "I will not let foreigners come and talk to scientists and dear children of the nation who have developed this science up to this level.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThey say the right to interview nuclear scientists must be given,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei said, according to his website. \u201cThis means interrogation. I will not let foreigners come and talk to scientists and dear children of the nation who have developed this science up to this level.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThey say the right to interview nuclear scientists must be given,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei said, according to his website. \u201cThis means interrogation. I will not let foreigners come and talk to scientists and dear children of the nation who have developed this science up to this level.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "I will not let foreigners come and talk to scientists and dear children of the nation who have developed this science up to this level.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d701840c8e4820a9b66c441"} +{"question": "Who is paying $2.1 billion in cash and shares for Kythera Biopharmaceuticals?", "paragraph": "Allergan, the maker of Botox, said on Wednesday that it would pay about $2.1 billion in cash and shares for Kythera Biopharmaceuticals, which makes a treatment for double chins.", "answer": "Allergan", "sentence": "Allergan , the maker of Botox, said on Wednesday that it would pay about $2.1 billion in cash and shares for Kythera Biopharmaceuticals, which makes a treatment for double chins.", "paragraph_sentence": " Allergan , the maker of Botox, said on Wednesday that it would pay about $2.1 billion in cash and shares for Kythera Biopharmaceuticals, which makes a treatment for double chins. ", "paragraph_answer": " Allergan , the maker of Botox, said on Wednesday that it would pay about $2.1 billion in cash and shares for Kythera Biopharmaceuticals, which makes a treatment for double chins.", "sentence_answer": " Allergan , the maker of Botox, said on Wednesday that it would pay about $2.1 billion in cash and shares for Kythera Biopharmaceuticals, which makes a treatment for double chins.", "paragraph_id": "5d702b54c8e4820a9b66d8e2"} +{"question": "How many dangerous crossings are in New Jersey?", "paragraph": "The metric is not a perfect measurement of danger. (The agency cautions that it does not take into account other factors, like local topography and traffic congestion.) But the 10 crossings, four in New Jersey and six on Long Island, examined by The Times are easily among the most hazardous in the country. Out of almost 130,000 public crossings in the nation, only 112 others have accident-prediction values as high as these 10. The Midland Avenue crossing currently has the eighth highest likelihood of a crash in the country.", "answer": "four", "sentence": "But the 10 crossings, four in New Jersey and six on Long Island, examined by The Times are easily among the most hazardous in the country.", "paragraph_sentence": "The metric is not a perfect measurement of danger. (The agency cautions that it does not take into account other factors, like local topography and traffic congestion.) But the 10 crossings, four in New Jersey and six on Long Island, examined by The Times are easily among the most hazardous in the country. Out of almost 130,000 public crossings in the nation, only 112 others have accident-prediction values as high as these 10. The Midland Avenue crossing currently has the eighth highest likelihood of a crash in the country.", "paragraph_answer": "The metric is not a perfect measurement of danger. (The agency cautions that it does not take into account other factors, like local topography and traffic congestion.) But the 10 crossings, four in New Jersey and six on Long Island, examined by The Times are easily among the most hazardous in the country. Out of almost 130,000 public crossings in the nation, only 112 others have accident-prediction values as high as these 10. The Midland Avenue crossing currently has the eighth highest likelihood of a crash in the country.", "sentence_answer": "But the 10 crossings, four in New Jersey and six on Long Island, examined by The Times are easily among the most hazardous in the country.", "paragraph_id": "5d704cc1c8e4820a9b66ea11"} +{"question": "Who founded Business Insider?", "paragraph": "So let\u2019s talk about our business, the media! This week Business Insider, the scrappy tech- and finance-focused digital publication founded by the former stock analyst Henry Blodget, was sold to the German media company Axel Springer for $343 million. It was just one of many dump trucks full of money pulling up to the digital media business. BuzzFeed and Vox recently each announced that they had raised $200 million from NBC Universal. Vice has also raised a boatload. So is this all great news? Should I start shopping for a McMansion?", "answer": "Henry Blodget,", "sentence": "This week Business Insider, the scrappy tech- and finance-focused digital publication founded by the former stock analyst Henry Blodget, was sold to the German media company Axel Springer for $343 million.", "paragraph_sentence": "So let\u2019s talk about our business, the media! This week Business Insider, the scrappy tech- and finance-focused digital publication founded by the former stock analyst Henry Blodget, was sold to the German media company Axel Springer for $343 million. It was just one of many dump trucks full of money pulling up to the digital media business. BuzzFeed and Vox recently each announced that they had raised $200 million from NBC Universal. Vice has also raised a boatload. So is this all great news? Should I start shopping for a McMansion?", "paragraph_answer": "So let\u2019s talk about our business, the media! This week Business Insider, the scrappy tech- and finance-focused digital publication founded by the former stock analyst Henry Blodget, was sold to the German media company Axel Springer for $343 million. It was just one of many dump trucks full of money pulling up to the digital media business. BuzzFeed and Vox recently each announced that they had raised $200 million from NBC Universal. Vice has also raised a boatload. So is this all great news? Should I start shopping for a McMansion?", "sentence_answer": "This week Business Insider, the scrappy tech- and finance-focused digital publication founded by the former stock analyst Henry Blodget, was sold to the German media company Axel Springer for $343 million.", "paragraph_id": "5d700a4ec8e4820a9b66b3f9"} +{"question": "What colors were Louise Nevelson's forward-looking wood reliefs painted?", "paragraph": "The sculptor Louise Nevelson took up a fair amount of space in New York in the 1960s and early \u201970s. She was one of the most prominent artists of her generation, known for her imperious personality and a penchant for false eyelashes, heavy jewelry and chinchilla capes. More important were her forward-looking wood reliefs, painted entirely black or white, which linked the found-object aesthetic of assemblage to the clean lines and orderly sequences of Minimalism (and also presaged the all-black assemblage sculptures of Rashid Johnson). But by the time she died at age 88 in 1988, the art world had moved on.", "answer": "painted entirely black or white", "sentence": "More important were her forward-looking wood reliefs, painted entirely black or white , which linked the found-object aesthetic of assemblage to the clean lines and orderly sequences of Minimalism (and also presaged the all-black assemblage sculptures of Rashid Johnson).", "paragraph_sentence": "The sculptor Louise Nevelson took up a fair amount of space in New York in the 1960s and early \u201970s. She was one of the most prominent artists of her generation, known for her imperious personality and a penchant for false eyelashes, heavy jewelry and chinchilla capes. More important were her forward-looking wood reliefs, painted entirely black or white , which linked the found-object aesthetic of assemblage to the clean lines and orderly sequences of Minimalism (and also presaged the all-black assemblage sculptures of Rashid Johnson). But by the time she died at age 88 in 1988, the art world had moved on.", "paragraph_answer": "The sculptor Louise Nevelson took up a fair amount of space in New York in the 1960s and early \u201970s. She was one of the most prominent artists of her generation, known for her imperious personality and a penchant for false eyelashes, heavy jewelry and chinchilla capes. More important were her forward-looking wood reliefs, painted entirely black or white , which linked the found-object aesthetic of assemblage to the clean lines and orderly sequences of Minimalism (and also presaged the all-black assemblage sculptures of Rashid Johnson). But by the time she died at age 88 in 1988, the art world had moved on.", "sentence_answer": "More important were her forward-looking wood reliefs, painted entirely black or white , which linked the found-object aesthetic of assemblage to the clean lines and orderly sequences of Minimalism (and also presaged the all-black assemblage sculptures of Rashid Johnson).", "paragraph_id": "5d70065bc8e4820a9b66ab25"} +{"question": "What do new search start-ups focus on?", "paragraph": "Venture capitalists are funding new search start-ups that treat information and the web as legacy products and that focus on actions and apps instead. And while Google, with $65 billion in the bank, can buy any start-up it likes, one company it cannot buy \u2014 Apple \u2014 is also joining the mobile search fray. On Thursday, Apple released an early, or \u201cbeta,\u201d version of the next version of its iOS mobile software, giving iPhone and iPad users the ability to tap Apple\u2019s own search engine for searches of music, apps and local services \u2014 allowing them to potentially bypass Google.", "answer": "actions and apps", "sentence": "Venture capitalists are funding new search start-ups that treat information and the web as legacy products and that focus on actions and apps instead.", "paragraph_sentence": " Venture capitalists are funding new search start-ups that treat information and the web as legacy products and that focus on actions and apps instead. And while Google, with $65 billion in the bank, can buy any start-up it likes, one company it cannot buy \u2014 Apple \u2014 is also joining the mobile search fray. On Thursday, Apple released an early, or \u201cbeta,\u201d version of the next version of its iOS mobile software, giving iPhone and iPad users the ability to tap Apple\u2019s own search engine for searches of music, apps and local services \u2014 allowing them to potentially bypass Google.", "paragraph_answer": "Venture capitalists are funding new search start-ups that treat information and the web as legacy products and that focus on actions and apps instead. And while Google, with $65 billion in the bank, can buy any start-up it likes, one company it cannot buy \u2014 Apple \u2014 is also joining the mobile search fray. On Thursday, Apple released an early, or \u201cbeta,\u201d version of the next version of its iOS mobile software, giving iPhone and iPad users the ability to tap Apple\u2019s own search engine for searches of music, apps and local services \u2014 allowing them to potentially bypass Google.", "sentence_answer": "Venture capitalists are funding new search start-ups that treat information and the web as legacy products and that focus on actions and apps instead.", "paragraph_id": "5d703284c8e4820a9b66ddd6"} +{"question": "Which party had the best political momentum?", "paragraph": "Republicans showing the greatest political momentum in the poll were the three outsiders: Mr. Trump, who drew strong support from self-described moderates, people with family incomes of $50,000 or less, and those without a college degree; Mr. Carson, who edged out Mr. Trump among conservatives and wealthier voters and was much stronger among college graduates; and Carly Fiorina, a former business executive who had support from 4 percent of Republicans, an improvement over her trace amount in August.", "answer": "Republicans", "sentence": "Republicans showing the greatest political momentum in the poll were the three outsiders: Mr. Trump, who drew strong support from self-described moderates, people with family incomes of $50,000 or less, and those without a college degree; Mr. Carson, who edged out Mr. Trump among conservatives and wealthier voters and was much stronger among college graduates; and Carly Fiorina, a former business executive who had support from 4 percent of Republicans, an improvement over her trace amount in August.", "paragraph_sentence": " Republicans showing the greatest political momentum in the poll were the three outsiders: Mr. Trump, who drew strong support from self-described moderates, people with family incomes of $50,000 or less, and those without a college degree; Mr. Carson, who edged out Mr. Trump among conservatives and wealthier voters and was much stronger among college graduates; and Carly Fiorina, a former business executive who had support from 4 percent of Republicans, an improvement over her trace amount in August. ", "paragraph_answer": " Republicans showing the greatest political momentum in the poll were the three outsiders: Mr. Trump, who drew strong support from self-described moderates, people with family incomes of $50,000 or less, and those without a college degree; Mr. Carson, who edged out Mr. Trump among conservatives and wealthier voters and was much stronger among college graduates; and Carly Fiorina, a former business executive who had support from 4 percent of Republicans, an improvement over her trace amount in August.", "sentence_answer": " Republicans showing the greatest political momentum in the poll were the three outsiders: Mr. Trump, who drew strong support from self-described moderates, people with family incomes of $50,000 or less, and those without a college degree; Mr. Carson, who edged out Mr. Trump among conservatives and wealthier voters and was much stronger among college graduates; and Carly Fiorina, a former business executive who had support from 4 percent of Republicans, an improvement over her trace amount in August.", "paragraph_id": "5d70811cc8e4820a9b66f3dd"} +{"question": "Where was Davis's dress to appear if Barnum bought it?", "paragraph": "\u201cNo one will attempt to make a hero of such material,\u201d one account said. \u201cHe will appear in petticoats in history.\u201d Few capitalized on these events as quickly as P. T. Barnum. The era\u2019s undisputed master showman announced that he would pay $500 for Davis\u2019s dress. The possibility that it would soon appear at the Manhattan headquarters of Barnum\u2019s entertainment empire set the country abuzz. Barnum\u2019s American Museum was then the nation\u2019s most popular tourist destination. Located on lower Broadway, it was said to be either the greatest collection of diversions in the greatest city on earth, or an \u201cill-looking, ungainly, rambling structure,\u201d containing a \u201cpaltry collection of preposterous things.\u201d", "answer": "the Manhattan headquarters of Barnum\u2019s entertainment empire", "sentence": "The possibility that it would soon appear at the Manhattan headquarters of Barnum\u2019s entertainment empire set the country abuzz.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cNo one will attempt to make a hero of such material,\u201d one account said. \u201cHe will appear in petticoats in history.\u201d Few capitalized on these events as quickly as P. T. Barnum. The era\u2019s undisputed master showman announced that he would pay $500 for Davis\u2019s dress. The possibility that it would soon appear at the Manhattan headquarters of Barnum\u2019s entertainment empire set the country abuzz. Barnum\u2019s American Museum was then the nation\u2019s most popular tourist destination. Located on lower Broadway, it was said to be either the greatest collection of diversions in the greatest city on earth, or an \u201cill-looking, ungainly, rambling structure,\u201d containing a \u201cpaltry collection of preposterous things.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cNo one will attempt to make a hero of such material,\u201d one account said. \u201cHe will appear in petticoats in history.\u201d Few capitalized on these events as quickly as P. T. Barnum. The era\u2019s undisputed master showman announced that he would pay $500 for Davis\u2019s dress. The possibility that it would soon appear at the Manhattan headquarters of Barnum\u2019s entertainment empire set the country abuzz. Barnum\u2019s American Museum was then the nation\u2019s most popular tourist destination. Located on lower Broadway, it was said to be either the greatest collection of diversions in the greatest city on earth, or an \u201cill-looking, ungainly, rambling structure,\u201d containing a \u201cpaltry collection of preposterous things.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The possibility that it would soon appear at the Manhattan headquarters of Barnum\u2019s entertainment empire set the country abuzz.", "paragraph_id": "5d700691c8e4820a9b66abbf"} +{"question": "What percentage of the equipment was manufactured in the past decade?", "paragraph": "For a moment, he twirled the rope in his hands like a lasso, then threw the hook over the wire, and tugged hard, testing for explosives. When nothing happened he signaled two comrades, who ran up and started snipping the wire with cutters. Although this was a typical training exercise for raw recruits in an elemental soldierly skill, there was nothing typical about the scene. Far from enlistees, these soldiers were regulars in the Ukrainian National Guard, presumably battle-hardened after months on the front lines in eastern Ukraine. And the trainer was an American military instructor, drilling troops for battle with the United States\u2019 former Cold War foe, Russia, and Russian-backed separatists. \u201cIt\u2019s been a long time since I heard a target called an Ivan,\u201d First Sgt. David Dzwik, one of the trainers, said in an interview out in the sunny forest, while observing the Ukrainians run through drills. \u201cNow, I\u2019m hearing it again.\u201d The course on cutting wire is one of 63 classes of remedial military instruction being provided by 300 United States Army trainers in three consecutive two-month courses. Here in western Ukraine, they are far from the fighting, and their job is to instill some basic military know-how in Ukrainian soldiers, who the trainers have discovered are woefully unprepared. The largely unschooled troops are learning such basic skills as how to use an encrypted walkie-talkie; how to break open a door with a sledgehammer and a crowbar; and how to drag a wounded colleague across a field while holding a rifle at the ready. When the war began a year ago, the Ukrainian Army was all but worthless \u2014 rife with corruption and Russian spies, and made up largely of \u201cskeleton\u201d battalions of officers with just a few men. About 1 percent of the equipment was manufactured in the past decade.", "answer": "1 percent", "sentence": "About 1 percent of the equipment was manufactured in the past decade.", "paragraph_sentence": "For a moment, he twirled the rope in his hands like a lasso, then threw the hook over the wire, and tugged hard, testing for explosives. When nothing happened he signaled two comrades, who ran up and started snipping the wire with cutters. Although this was a typical training exercise for raw recruits in an elemental soldierly skill, there was nothing typical about the scene. Far from enlistees, these soldiers were regulars in the Ukrainian National Guard, presumably battle-hardened after months on the front lines in eastern Ukraine. And the trainer was an American military instructor, drilling troops for battle with the United States\u2019 former Cold War foe, Russia, and Russian-backed separatists. \u201cIt\u2019s been a long time since I heard a target called an Ivan,\u201d First Sgt. David Dzwik, one of the trainers, said in an interview out in the sunny forest, while observing the Ukrainians run through drills. \u201cNow, I\u2019m hearing it again.\u201d The course on cutting wire is one of 63 classes of remedial military instruction being provided by 300 United States Army trainers in three consecutive two-month courses. Here in western Ukraine, they are far from the fighting, and their job is to instill some basic military know-how in Ukrainian soldiers, who the trainers have discovered are woefully unprepared. The largely unschooled troops are learning such basic skills as how to use an encrypted walkie-talkie; how to break open a door with a sledgehammer and a crowbar; and how to drag a wounded colleague across a field while holding a rifle at the ready. When the war began a year ago, the Ukrainian Army was all but worthless \u2014 rife with corruption and Russian spies, and made up largely of \u201cskeleton\u201d battalions of officers with just a few men. About 1 percent of the equipment was manufactured in the past decade. ", "paragraph_answer": "For a moment, he twirled the rope in his hands like a lasso, then threw the hook over the wire, and tugged hard, testing for explosives. When nothing happened he signaled two comrades, who ran up and started snipping the wire with cutters. Although this was a typical training exercise for raw recruits in an elemental soldierly skill, there was nothing typical about the scene. Far from enlistees, these soldiers were regulars in the Ukrainian National Guard, presumably battle-hardened after months on the front lines in eastern Ukraine. And the trainer was an American military instructor, drilling troops for battle with the United States\u2019 former Cold War foe, Russia, and Russian-backed separatists. \u201cIt\u2019s been a long time since I heard a target called an Ivan,\u201d First Sgt. David Dzwik, one of the trainers, said in an interview out in the sunny forest, while observing the Ukrainians run through drills. \u201cNow, I\u2019m hearing it again.\u201d The course on cutting wire is one of 63 classes of remedial military instruction being provided by 300 United States Army trainers in three consecutive two-month courses. Here in western Ukraine, they are far from the fighting, and their job is to instill some basic military know-how in Ukrainian soldiers, who the trainers have discovered are woefully unprepared. The largely unschooled troops are learning such basic skills as how to use an encrypted walkie-talkie; how to break open a door with a sledgehammer and a crowbar; and how to drag a wounded colleague across a field while holding a rifle at the ready. When the war began a year ago, the Ukrainian Army was all but worthless \u2014 rife with corruption and Russian spies, and made up largely of \u201cskeleton\u201d battalions of officers with just a few men. About 1 percent of the equipment was manufactured in the past decade.", "sentence_answer": "About 1 percent of the equipment was manufactured in the past decade.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026dbc8e4820a9b66d36f"} +{"question": "What problems did Huckabee face in his last campaign?", "paragraph": "HOPE, Ark. \u2014 Mike Huckabee, who excited evangelical voters in his first presidential race in 2008 and retains much of their good will, announced on Tuesday that he would again seek the Republican nomination despite a crowded field of rivals for his natural base in the party. A former Southern Baptist pastor and Arkansas governor, Mr. Huckabee is returning in hopes of once more dominating among social conservatives, but he is acutely aware he needs broader support to avoid the snares of last time, when he ran dry of money and failed to appeal much beyond the South. After describing a childhood of school prayer, fishing for catfish and running for student council in Hope, Mr. Huckabee said, \u201cSo it seems perfectly fitting that it would be here that I announce I am a candidate for president of the United States.\u201d", "answer": "ran dry of money and failed to appeal much beyond the South", "sentence": "A former Southern Baptist pastor and Arkansas governor, Mr. Huckabee is returning in hopes of once more dominating among social conservatives, but he is acutely aware he needs broader support to avoid the snares of last time, when he ran dry of money and failed to appeal much beyond the South .", "paragraph_sentence": "HOPE, Ark. \u2014 Mike Huckabee, who excited evangelical voters in his first presidential race in 2008 and retains much of their good will, announced on Tuesday that he would again seek the Republican nomination despite a crowded field of rivals for his natural base in the party. A former Southern Baptist pastor and Arkansas governor, Mr. Huckabee is returning in hopes of once more dominating among social conservatives, but he is acutely aware he needs broader support to avoid the snares of last time, when he ran dry of money and failed to appeal much beyond the South . After describing a childhood of school prayer, fishing for catfish and running for student council in Hope, Mr. Huckabee said, \u201cSo it seems perfectly fitting that it would be here that I announce I am a candidate for president of the United States.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "HOPE, Ark. \u2014 Mike Huckabee, who excited evangelical voters in his first presidential race in 2008 and retains much of their good will, announced on Tuesday that he would again seek the Republican nomination despite a crowded field of rivals for his natural base in the party. A former Southern Baptist pastor and Arkansas governor, Mr. Huckabee is returning in hopes of once more dominating among social conservatives, but he is acutely aware he needs broader support to avoid the snares of last time, when he ran dry of money and failed to appeal much beyond the South . After describing a childhood of school prayer, fishing for catfish and running for student council in Hope, Mr. Huckabee said, \u201cSo it seems perfectly fitting that it would be here that I announce I am a candidate for president of the United States.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "A former Southern Baptist pastor and Arkansas governor, Mr. Huckabee is returning in hopes of once more dominating among social conservatives, but he is acutely aware he needs broader support to avoid the snares of last time, when he ran dry of money and failed to appeal much beyond the South .", "paragraph_id": "5d70426ac8e4820a9b66e636"} +{"question": "What political party does James E. Clyburn belong to?", "paragraph": "The man who the police say killed nine Charleston churchgoers had not completed his background check, but he was allowed to buy a gun anyway under a so-called default proceed. Federal law permits a firearms dealer who has initiated a background check to proceed with a sale if the dealer has not been notified of violations within three business days. Representative James E. Clyburn, Democrat of South Carolina, filed legislation that would close the loophole, but Republican leaders have not acted on it.", "answer": "Democrat", "sentence": "Representative James E. Clyburn, Democrat of South Carolina, filed legislation that would close the loophole, but Republican leaders have not acted on it.", "paragraph_sentence": "The man who the police say killed nine Charleston churchgoers had not completed his background check, but he was allowed to buy a gun anyway under a so-called default proceed. Federal law permits a firearms dealer who has initiated a background check to proceed with a sale if the dealer has not been notified of violations within three business days. Representative James E. Clyburn, Democrat of South Carolina, filed legislation that would close the loophole, but Republican leaders have not acted on it. ", "paragraph_answer": "The man who the police say killed nine Charleston churchgoers had not completed his background check, but he was allowed to buy a gun anyway under a so-called default proceed. Federal law permits a firearms dealer who has initiated a background check to proceed with a sale if the dealer has not been notified of violations within three business days. Representative James E. Clyburn, Democrat of South Carolina, filed legislation that would close the loophole, but Republican leaders have not acted on it.", "sentence_answer": "Representative James E. Clyburn, Democrat of South Carolina, filed legislation that would close the loophole, but Republican leaders have not acted on it.", "paragraph_id": "5d702c0ac8e4820a9b66d987"} +{"question": "What is the automated highway driving feature by Tesla Motors called?", "paragraph": "AUTOMAKERS descended on New York for the city\u2019s annual auto show this week with vehicles ready to do more than just respond to drivers\u2019 commands. However, the question of whether drivers want their cars to take charge remained unanswered. The path to fully autonomous driving will still take years to reach consumers, but car manufacturers demonstrated this week that they are now able to offer buyers several levels of so-called active safety features \u2014 in which the car takes over driving in certain instances. And they plan to introduce even more advanced semiautonomous capabilities in the coming months. Tesla Motors made a splash when it recently announced plans to add automated highway driving features, which it calls autopilot, to its Model S sedans by the summer. But such capabilities are coming to a range of vehicles sooner than many realize.", "answer": "autopilot", "sentence": "Tesla Motors made a splash when it recently announced plans to add automated highway driving features, which it calls autopilot , to its Model S sedans by the summer.", "paragraph_sentence": "AUTOMAKERS descended on New York for the city\u2019s annual auto show this week with vehicles ready to do more than just respond to drivers\u2019 commands. However, the question of whether drivers want their cars to take charge remained unanswered. The path to fully autonomous driving will still take years to reach consumers, but car manufacturers demonstrated this week that they are now able to offer buyers several levels of so-called active safety features \u2014 in which the car takes over driving in certain instances. And they plan to introduce even more advanced semiautonomous capabilities in the coming months. Tesla Motors made a splash when it recently announced plans to add automated highway driving features, which it calls autopilot , to its Model S sedans by the summer. But such capabilities are coming to a range of vehicles sooner than many realize.", "paragraph_answer": "AUTOMAKERS descended on New York for the city\u2019s annual auto show this week with vehicles ready to do more than just respond to drivers\u2019 commands. However, the question of whether drivers want their cars to take charge remained unanswered. The path to fully autonomous driving will still take years to reach consumers, but car manufacturers demonstrated this week that they are now able to offer buyers several levels of so-called active safety features \u2014 in which the car takes over driving in certain instances. And they plan to introduce even more advanced semiautonomous capabilities in the coming months. Tesla Motors made a splash when it recently announced plans to add automated highway driving features, which it calls autopilot , to its Model S sedans by the summer. But such capabilities are coming to a range of vehicles sooner than many realize.", "sentence_answer": "Tesla Motors made a splash when it recently announced plans to add automated highway driving features, which it calls autopilot , to its Model S sedans by the summer.", "paragraph_id": "5d702924c8e4820a9b66d6f4"} +{"question": "In the article, the quotes from President Obama were taken from what day?", "paragraph": "So, to the end game, in Idaho, Kansas and beyond. \u201cIt\u2019s amazing what you can bounce back from when you have to,\u201d Obama said on Tuesday. He was quoting from a Minneapolis woman, invited to the speech, but it sounded like a motto for his last two years in office. The president is playing for a legacy. He won\u2019t get much of it this year, or even next. But eventually, if Obama\u2019s finish matches the flourish of the last two months, the United States will resemble the country he envisioned on Tuesday night. Long odds make for better endings.", "answer": "Tuesday.", "sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s amazing what you can bounce back from when you have to,\u201d Obama said on Tuesday. He was quoting from a Minneapolis woman, invited to the speech, but it sounded like a motto for his last two years in office.", "paragraph_sentence": "So, to the end game, in Idaho, Kansas and beyond. \u201cIt\u2019s amazing what you can bounce back from when you have to,\u201d Obama said on Tuesday. He was quoting from a Minneapolis woman, invited to the speech, but it sounded like a motto for his last two years in office. The president is playing for a legacy. He won\u2019t get much of it this year, or even next. But eventually, if Obama\u2019s finish matches the flourish of the last two months, the United States will resemble the country he envisioned on Tuesday night. Long odds make for better endings.", "paragraph_answer": "So, to the end game, in Idaho, Kansas and beyond. \u201cIt\u2019s amazing what you can bounce back from when you have to,\u201d Obama said on Tuesday. He was quoting from a Minneapolis woman, invited to the speech, but it sounded like a motto for his last two years in office. The president is playing for a legacy. He won\u2019t get much of it this year, or even next. But eventually, if Obama\u2019s finish matches the flourish of the last two months, the United States will resemble the country he envisioned on Tuesday night. Long odds make for better endings.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s amazing what you can bounce back from when you have to,\u201d Obama said on Tuesday. He was quoting from a Minneapolis woman, invited to the speech, but it sounded like a motto for his last two years in office.", "paragraph_id": "5d703a37c8e4820a9b66e20a"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700950c8e4820a9b66b1c0"} +{"question": "Where were the knife and revolver hidden?", "paragraph": "As he walked by their cells, this time as a prisoner, they shook the bars and menacingly called out his name. Men came to his cell to make death threats. \u201cI started to live in hell,\u201d said Mr. Silva Neto, 48. Friends gave him a knife and a revolver, which he hid in his bed. He said he witnessed a murder inside the compound. Another time, when he got up in the night to use the bathroom, he came upon a man being sexually assaulted by four others. In Para\u00edba, a poor state in the country\u2019s northeast, inmate killings, including by decapitation, and prison rebellions are commonplace. Those scenes of chaos have become normalized across Brazil, as the country\u2019s prisons have swelled over the past two decades and its incarcerated population surpassed half a million.", "answer": "in his bed", "sentence": "Friends gave him a knife and a revolver, which he hid in his bed .", "paragraph_sentence": "As he walked by their cells, this time as a prisoner, they shook the bars and menacingly called out his name. Men came to his cell to make death threats. \u201cI started to live in hell,\u201d said Mr. Silva Neto, 48. Friends gave him a knife and a revolver, which he hid in his bed . He said he witnessed a murder inside the compound. Another time, when he got up in the night to use the bathroom, he came upon a man being sexually assaulted by four others. In Para\u00edba, a poor state in the country\u2019s northeast, inmate killings, including by decapitation, and prison rebellions are commonplace. Those scenes of chaos have become normalized across Brazil, as the country\u2019s prisons have swelled over the past two decades and its incarcerated population surpassed half a million.", "paragraph_answer": "As he walked by their cells, this time as a prisoner, they shook the bars and menacingly called out his name. Men came to his cell to make death threats. \u201cI started to live in hell,\u201d said Mr. Silva Neto, 48. Friends gave him a knife and a revolver, which he hid in his bed . He said he witnessed a murder inside the compound. Another time, when he got up in the night to use the bathroom, he came upon a man being sexually assaulted by four others. In Para\u00edba, a poor state in the country\u2019s northeast, inmate killings, including by decapitation, and prison rebellions are commonplace. Those scenes of chaos have become normalized across Brazil, as the country\u2019s prisons have swelled over the past two decades and its incarcerated population surpassed half a million.", "sentence_answer": "Friends gave him a knife and a revolver, which he hid in his bed .", "paragraph_id": "5d70262bc8e4820a9b66d270"} +{"question": "What did the jury think of Dolan's decision to fire Browne?", "paragraph": "After the verdict, Dolan and Thomas made a show of suggesting that the jury was gullible and that they would appeal. \u201cI\u2019m very innocent,\u201d Thomas said immediately afterward, tapping his chest for emphasis. \u201cI will appeal.\u201d He did not. During the trial, Dolan took puffed-chest pride in testifying that he had decided to fire Browne all on his own, without talking to his corporate counsel. \u201cAll decisions at the Garden I make on my own,\u201d he said. Yes, well, that worked out, didn\u2019t it? The jury found that Dolan\u2019s decision constituted a retaliatory firing and violated federal law. Dolan\u2019s people vowed that the boss positively, absolutely would appeal. He did not. But he did assure New Yorkers that \u201cthe normal operations of M.S.G. and the New York Knicks will continue unabated.\u201d", "answer": "Dolan\u2019s decision constituted a retaliatory firing and violated federal law", "sentence": "The jury found that Dolan\u2019s decision constituted a retaliatory firing and violated federal law .", "paragraph_sentence": "After the verdict, Dolan and Thomas made a show of suggesting that the jury was gullible and that they would appeal. \u201cI\u2019m very innocent,\u201d Thomas said immediately afterward, tapping his chest for emphasis. \u201cI will appeal.\u201d He did not. During the trial, Dolan took puffed-chest pride in testifying that he had decided to fire Browne all on his own, without talking to his corporate counsel. \u201cAll decisions at the Garden I make on my own,\u201d he said. Yes, well, that worked out, didn\u2019t it? The jury found that Dolan\u2019s decision constituted a retaliatory firing and violated federal law . Dolan\u2019s people vowed that the boss positively, absolutely would appeal. He did not. But he did assure New Yorkers that \u201cthe normal operations of M.S.G. and the New York Knicks will continue unabated.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "After the verdict, Dolan and Thomas made a show of suggesting that the jury was gullible and that they would appeal. \u201cI\u2019m very innocent,\u201d Thomas said immediately afterward, tapping his chest for emphasis. \u201cI will appeal.\u201d He did not. During the trial, Dolan took puffed-chest pride in testifying that he had decided to fire Browne all on his own, without talking to his corporate counsel. \u201cAll decisions at the Garden I make on my own,\u201d he said. Yes, well, that worked out, didn\u2019t it? The jury found that Dolan\u2019s decision constituted a retaliatory firing and violated federal law . Dolan\u2019s people vowed that the boss positively, absolutely would appeal. He did not. But he did assure New Yorkers that \u201cthe normal operations of M.S.G. and the New York Knicks will continue unabated.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The jury found that Dolan\u2019s decision constituted a retaliatory firing and violated federal law .", "paragraph_id": "5d7045aac8e4820a9b66e7f5"} +{"question": "In what city did the church approve the general synod?", "paragraph": "Approval came at the church\u2019s general synod in Cleveland, where delegates voted 508 to 124 in favor of divestment and boycott, with 38 abstentions. It was one of two resolutions on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict debated by the church, which has about one million members and more than 5,000 congregations nationwide. The second resolution, which called the actions of Israel against Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip acts of apartheid, received 51 percent of the vote \u2014 312 for, 295 against and 31 abstentions \u2014 failing to gain the two-thirds majority required for passage. Nonetheless, the slim majority was regarded by supporters of Israel as troubling. Passage of that measure would have made the church the first in the United States to officially describe Israel\u2019s behavior toward the Palestinians as apartheid.", "answer": "Cleveland", "sentence": "Approval came at the church\u2019s general synod in Cleveland , where delegates voted 508 to 124 in favor of divestment and boycott, with 38 abstentions.", "paragraph_sentence": " Approval came at the church\u2019s general synod in Cleveland , where delegates voted 508 to 124 in favor of divestment and boycott, with 38 abstentions. It was one of two resolutions on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict debated by the church, which has about one million members and more than 5,000 congregations nationwide. The second resolution, which called the actions of Israel against Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip acts of apartheid, received 51 percent of the vote \u2014 312 for, 295 against and 31 abstentions \u2014 failing to gain the two-thirds majority required for passage. Nonetheless, the slim majority was regarded by supporters of Israel as troubling. Passage of that measure would have made the church the first in the United States to officially describe Israel\u2019s behavior toward the Palestinians as apartheid.", "paragraph_answer": "Approval came at the church\u2019s general synod in Cleveland , where delegates voted 508 to 124 in favor of divestment and boycott, with 38 abstentions. It was one of two resolutions on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict debated by the church, which has about one million members and more than 5,000 congregations nationwide. The second resolution, which called the actions of Israel against Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip acts of apartheid, received 51 percent of the vote \u2014 312 for, 295 against and 31 abstentions \u2014 failing to gain the two-thirds majority required for passage. Nonetheless, the slim majority was regarded by supporters of Israel as troubling. Passage of that measure would have made the church the first in the United States to officially describe Israel\u2019s behavior toward the Palestinians as apartheid.", "sentence_answer": "Approval came at the church\u2019s general synod in Cleveland , where delegates voted 508 to 124 in favor of divestment and boycott, with 38 abstentions.", "paragraph_id": "5d700686c8e4820a9b66ab91"} +{"question": "Why did Amanda Kessel end her career?", "paragraph": "But Amanda Kessel, a leading scorer for the Americans in Sochi and the college player of the year in 2013, has not played since, ending her career at Minnesota at 23 because of lingering symptoms from a concussion sustained before the Olympics. Her teammate Josephine Pucci retired over the summer at 24, cognizant of her concussion history. A concussion kept Canada\u2019s Haley Irwin out until the Olympic tournament\u2019s semifinals. She assisted on the tying goal in the last minute of the final, but her symptoms returned after the Olympics. Another concussion, in January, has kept her from playing professionally in the Canadian Women\u2019s Hockey League.", "answer": "lingering symptoms from a concussion", "sentence": "But Amanda Kessel, a leading scorer for the Americans in Sochi and the college player of the year in 2013, has not played since, ending her career at Minnesota at 23 because of lingering symptoms from a concussion sustained before the Olympics.", "paragraph_sentence": " But Amanda Kessel, a leading scorer for the Americans in Sochi and the college player of the year in 2013, has not played since, ending her career at Minnesota at 23 because of lingering symptoms from a concussion sustained before the Olympics. Her teammate Josephine Pucci retired over the summer at 24, cognizant of her concussion history. A concussion kept Canada\u2019s Haley Irwin out until the Olympic tournament\u2019s semifinals. She assisted on the tying goal in the last minute of the final, but her symptoms returned after the Olympics. Another concussion, in January, has kept her from playing professionally in the Canadian Women\u2019s Hockey League.", "paragraph_answer": "But Amanda Kessel, a leading scorer for the Americans in Sochi and the college player of the year in 2013, has not played since, ending her career at Minnesota at 23 because of lingering symptoms from a concussion sustained before the Olympics. Her teammate Josephine Pucci retired over the summer at 24, cognizant of her concussion history. A concussion kept Canada\u2019s Haley Irwin out until the Olympic tournament\u2019s semifinals. She assisted on the tying goal in the last minute of the final, but her symptoms returned after the Olympics. Another concussion, in January, has kept her from playing professionally in the Canadian Women\u2019s Hockey League.", "sentence_answer": "But Amanda Kessel, a leading scorer for the Americans in Sochi and the college player of the year in 2013, has not played since, ending her career at Minnesota at 23 because of lingering symptoms from a concussion sustained before the Olympics.", "paragraph_id": "5d701f76c8e4820a9b66cafb"} +{"question": "What government ask the US for help?", "paragraph": "From the earliest days of the war, the government in Kiev had asked for military help from the United States. Its request for a sophisticated antitank missile went nowhere, as Washington feared it would just encourage Russia to send more weapons and men to Ukraine. What eventually arrived was basic training.", "answer": "Kiev", "sentence": "From the earliest days of the war, the government in Kiev had asked for military help from the United States.", "paragraph_sentence": " From the earliest days of the war, the government in Kiev had asked for military help from the United States. Its request for a sophisticated antitank missile went nowhere, as Washington feared it would just encourage Russia to send more weapons and men to Ukraine. What eventually arrived was basic training.", "paragraph_answer": "From the earliest days of the war, the government in Kiev had asked for military help from the United States. Its request for a sophisticated antitank missile went nowhere, as Washington feared it would just encourage Russia to send more weapons and men to Ukraine. What eventually arrived was basic training.", "sentence_answer": "From the earliest days of the war, the government in Kiev had asked for military help from the United States.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026e2c8e4820a9b66d3c7"} +{"question": "What's nearing for investment banks?", "paragraph": "Investor redemption may be nearing for investment banks. Most lenders\u2019 wholesale units have destroyed value for seven years. Some may have done so again in the first quarter of this year. JPMorgan kicks off results season next week and its chief executive, Jamie Dimon, said in his annual letter to shareholders on Wednesday that returns could be attractive in the long run, if not the short term. But if the biggest players cut costs by a relatively modest 2 percent per year while expanding revenue at the same rate, the industry could produce a combined return on equity of more than 12 percent by 2017, a Breakingviews calculator shows.", "answer": "Investor redemption", "sentence": "Investor redemption may be nearing for investment banks.", "paragraph_sentence": " Investor redemption may be nearing for investment banks. Most lenders\u2019 wholesale units have destroyed value for seven years. Some may have done so again in the first quarter of this year. JPMorgan kicks off results season next week and its chief executive, Jamie Dimon, said in his annual letter to shareholders on Wednesday that returns could be attractive in the long run, if not the short term. But if the biggest players cut costs by a relatively modest 2 percent per year while expanding revenue at the same rate, the industry could produce a combined return on equity of more than 12 percent by 2017, a Breakingviews calculator shows.", "paragraph_answer": " Investor redemption may be nearing for investment banks. Most lenders\u2019 wholesale units have destroyed value for seven years. Some may have done so again in the first quarter of this year. JPMorgan kicks off results season next week and its chief executive, Jamie Dimon, said in his annual letter to shareholders on Wednesday that returns could be attractive in the long run, if not the short term. But if the biggest players cut costs by a relatively modest 2 percent per year while expanding revenue at the same rate, the industry could produce a combined return on equity of more than 12 percent by 2017, a Breakingviews calculator shows.", "sentence_answer": " Investor redemption may be nearing for investment banks.", "paragraph_id": "5d7025d0c8e4820a9b66d207"} +{"question": "How is driving restricted in Tianjin when there is an alert?", "paragraph": "When Tianjin imposes a strict odd-even license plate driving restriction under orange and red alerts, it does so only in six urban districts. In Beijing, that restriction, imposed under a red alert, applies to the entire municipal area.", "answer": "odd-even license plate", "sentence": "When Tianjin imposes a strict odd-even license plate driving restriction under orange and red alerts, it does so only in six urban districts.", "paragraph_sentence": " When Tianjin imposes a strict odd-even license plate driving restriction under orange and red alerts, it does so only in six urban districts. In Beijing, that restriction, imposed under a red alert, applies to the entire municipal area.", "paragraph_answer": "When Tianjin imposes a strict odd-even license plate driving restriction under orange and red alerts, it does so only in six urban districts. In Beijing, that restriction, imposed under a red alert, applies to the entire municipal area.", "sentence_answer": "When Tianjin imposes a strict odd-even license plate driving restriction under orange and red alerts, it does so only in six urban districts.", "paragraph_id": "5d700e1ac8e4820a9b66b9e5"} +{"question": "What is the market capitalization of Freescale Semiconductors?", "paragraph": "NXP Semiconductors, a big chip manufacturer, is near a deal to acquire a smaller peer, Freescale Semiconductor, in a cash-and-stock transaction, people briefed on the matter said on Sunday. An agreement could be announced as soon as Sunday evening, one of these people said, while cautioning that the talks could still collapse. If completed, the combination would unite two big makers of chips for industries ranging from automobiles to networking to mobile payments. As of Friday evening, NXP had a market value of about $21 billion, while Freescale had a market capitalization of about $11 billion.", "answer": "11 billion", "sentence": "As of Friday evening, NXP had a market value of about $21 billion, while Freescale had a market capitalization of about $ 11 billion .", "paragraph_sentence": "NXP Semiconductors, a big chip manufacturer, is near a deal to acquire a smaller peer, Freescale Semiconductor, in a cash-and-stock transaction, people briefed on the matter said on Sunday. An agreement could be announced as soon as Sunday evening, one of these people said, while cautioning that the talks could still collapse. If completed, the combination would unite two big makers of chips for industries ranging from automobiles to networking to mobile payments. As of Friday evening, NXP had a market value of about $21 billion, while Freescale had a market capitalization of about $ 11 billion . ", "paragraph_answer": "NXP Semiconductors, a big chip manufacturer, is near a deal to acquire a smaller peer, Freescale Semiconductor, in a cash-and-stock transaction, people briefed on the matter said on Sunday. An agreement could be announced as soon as Sunday evening, one of these people said, while cautioning that the talks could still collapse. If completed, the combination would unite two big makers of chips for industries ranging from automobiles to networking to mobile payments. As of Friday evening, NXP had a market value of about $21 billion, while Freescale had a market capitalization of about $ 11 billion .", "sentence_answer": "As of Friday evening, NXP had a market value of about $21 billion, while Freescale had a market capitalization of about $ 11 billion .", "paragraph_id": "5d7045c2c8e4820a9b66e813"} +{"question": "Who did Tim Robbins play in Shawshank Redemption?", "paragraph": "Like many who followed the prison break, Mr. Sweat and Mr. Matt could not help but compare their efforts to the escape in \u201cThe Shawshank Redemption.\u201d Indeed, Mr. Sweat told investigators that he and Mr. Matt had joked that while it had taken Andy Dufresne, the character in the movie played by Tim Robbins, 20 years to escape, it would take them only 10 years.", "answer": "Andy Dufresne", "sentence": "Indeed, Mr. Sweat told investigators that he and Mr. Matt had joked that while it had taken Andy Dufresne , the character in the movie played by Tim Robbins, 20 years to escape, it would take them only 10 years.", "paragraph_sentence": "Like many who followed the prison break, Mr. Sweat and Mr. Matt could not help but compare their efforts to the escape in \u201cThe Shawshank Redemption.\u201d Indeed, Mr. Sweat told investigators that he and Mr. Matt had joked that while it had taken Andy Dufresne , the character in the movie played by Tim Robbins, 20 years to escape, it would take them only 10 years. ", "paragraph_answer": "Like many who followed the prison break, Mr. Sweat and Mr. Matt could not help but compare their efforts to the escape in \u201cThe Shawshank Redemption.\u201d Indeed, Mr. Sweat told investigators that he and Mr. Matt had joked that while it had taken Andy Dufresne , the character in the movie played by Tim Robbins, 20 years to escape, it would take them only 10 years.", "sentence_answer": "Indeed, Mr. Sweat told investigators that he and Mr. Matt had joked that while it had taken Andy Dufresne , the character in the movie played by Tim Robbins, 20 years to escape, it would take them only 10 years.", "paragraph_id": "5d70597bc8e4820a9b66ee0e"} +{"question": "What kind of injury one guard did suffer from?", "paragraph": "No one could say for sure what set off the confrontation with Mr. Harrell. There were no surveillance cameras in that area, according to inmates, and corrections officials acknowledged that there are only a few for the entire prison. James Miller, a spokesman for the corrections officers\u2019 union, the New York State Correctional Officers & Police Benevolent Association, said in an email last month that Mr. Harrell was \u201cacting violently and appeared delusional as a result of apparently ingesting drugs.\u201d While trying to subdue him, one guard had several ribs broken, Mr. Miller said. Officials have described abuse of K2 by inmates as a problem throughout the state prison system. On Monday, Mr. Miller wrote in an email that the union was \u201creviewing all the facts before rushing to judgment.\u201d", "answer": "several ribs broken", "sentence": "While trying to subdue him, one guard had several ribs broken , Mr. Miller said.", "paragraph_sentence": "No one could say for sure what set off the confrontation with Mr. Harrell. There were no surveillance cameras in that area, according to inmates, and corrections officials acknowledged that there are only a few for the entire prison. James Miller, a spokesman for the corrections officers\u2019 union, the New York State Correctional Officers & Police Benevolent Association, said in an email last month that Mr. Harrell was \u201cacting violently and appeared delusional as a result of apparently ingesting drugs.\u201d While trying to subdue him, one guard had several ribs broken , Mr. Miller said. Officials have described abuse of K2 by inmates as a problem throughout the state prison system. On Monday, Mr. Miller wrote in an email that the union was \u201creviewing all the facts before rushing to judgment.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "No one could say for sure what set off the confrontation with Mr. Harrell. There were no surveillance cameras in that area, according to inmates, and corrections officials acknowledged that there are only a few for the entire prison. James Miller, a spokesman for the corrections officers\u2019 union, the New York State Correctional Officers & Police Benevolent Association, said in an email last month that Mr. Harrell was \u201cacting violently and appeared delusional as a result of apparently ingesting drugs.\u201d While trying to subdue him, one guard had several ribs broken , Mr. Miller said. Officials have described abuse of K2 by inmates as a problem throughout the state prison system. On Monday, Mr. Miller wrote in an email that the union was \u201creviewing all the facts before rushing to judgment.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "While trying to subdue him, one guard had several ribs broken , Mr. Miller said.", "paragraph_id": "5d701cf2c8e4820a9b66c86b"} +{"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", "paragraph_id": "5d700ab3c8e4820a9b66b4c6"} +{"question": "What did Trice tell his teammate afterwards?", "paragraph": "\u201cI\u2019ve always felt like that was part of my job as the point guard,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd truthfully, in my head, I am trying to stay calm and be sure I\u2019m thinking straight.\u201d Trice\u2019s measured approach to the game was evident at least three times in the regional final. Near the end of regulation, after his teammate Marvin Clark Jr. missed two free throws, shots that might have clinched the victory for Michigan State, Trice went to Clark at the next whistle \u2014 with the game still very much in doubt. \u201cI told him that those misses weren\u2019t going to lose us the game,\u201d Trice said. \u201cI told him he was going to get another big rebound or another chance to help us win. We needed him now so we could win.\u201d", "answer": "\u201cI told him that those misses weren\u2019t going to lose us the game,\u201d", "sentence": "\u201cI told him that those misses weren\u2019t going to lose us the game,\u201d Trice said.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI\u2019ve always felt like that was part of my job as the point guard,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd truthfully, in my head, I am trying to stay calm and be sure I\u2019m thinking straight.\u201d Trice\u2019s measured approach to the game was evident at least three times in the regional final. Near the end of regulation, after his teammate Marvin Clark Jr. missed two free throws, shots that might have clinched the victory for Michigan State, Trice went to Clark at the next whistle \u2014 with the game still very much in doubt. \u201cI told him that those misses weren\u2019t going to lose us the game,\u201d Trice said. \u201cI told him he was going to get another big rebound or another chance to help us win. We needed him now so we could win.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI\u2019ve always felt like that was part of my job as the point guard,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd truthfully, in my head, I am trying to stay calm and be sure I\u2019m thinking straight.\u201d Trice\u2019s measured approach to the game was evident at least three times in the regional final. Near the end of regulation, after his teammate Marvin Clark Jr. missed two free throws, shots that might have clinched the victory for Michigan State, Trice went to Clark at the next whistle \u2014 with the game still very much in doubt. \u201cI told him that those misses weren\u2019t going to lose us the game,\u201d Trice said. \u201cI told him he was going to get another big rebound or another chance to help us win. We needed him now so we could win.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " \u201cI told him that those misses weren\u2019t going to lose us the game,\u201d Trice said.", "paragraph_id": "5d700527c8e4820a9b66a889"} +{"question": "What team is the NHL point leader?", "paragraph": "Washington Capitals at Montreal Canadiens, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Entering Tuesday\u2019s games, Montreal led the N.H.L. with 39 points, but faced a second long stretch without goaltender Carey Price, who will miss at least six weeks with a lower-body injury (more on that later). With a five-game winning streak, Washington (17-5-1) has caught up to the Rangers in the Metropolitan Division. Goalie Braden Holtby has won his last seven starts and leads the N.H.L. with a 1.95 goals-against average. Buffalo Sabres at Edmonton Oilers, Sunday, 8 p.m.", "answer": "Montreal led the N.H.L.", "sentence": "Entering Tuesday\u2019s games, Montreal led the N.H.L. with 39 points, but faced a second long stretch without goaltender Carey Price, who will miss at least six weeks with a lower-body injury (more on that later).", "paragraph_sentence": "Washington Capitals at Montreal Canadiens, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Entering Tuesday\u2019s games, Montreal led the N.H.L. with 39 points, but faced a second long stretch without goaltender Carey Price, who will miss at least six weeks with a lower-body injury (more on that later). With a five-game winning streak, Washington (17-5-1) has caught up to the Rangers in the Metropolitan Division. Goalie Braden Holtby has won his last seven starts and leads the N.H.L. with a 1.95 goals-against average. Buffalo Sabres at Edmonton Oilers, Sunday, 8 p.m.", "paragraph_answer": "Washington Capitals at Montreal Canadiens, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Entering Tuesday\u2019s games, Montreal led the N.H.L. with 39 points, but faced a second long stretch without goaltender Carey Price, who will miss at least six weeks with a lower-body injury (more on that later). With a five-game winning streak, Washington (17-5-1) has caught up to the Rangers in the Metropolitan Division. Goalie Braden Holtby has won his last seven starts and leads the N.H.L. with a 1.95 goals-against average. Buffalo Sabres at Edmonton Oilers, Sunday, 8 p.m.", "sentence_answer": "Entering Tuesday\u2019s games, Montreal led the N.H.L. with 39 points, but faced a second long stretch without goaltender Carey Price, who will miss at least six weeks with a lower-body injury (more on that later).", "paragraph_id": "5d702133c8e4820a9b66ccf9"} +{"question": "Who contributed to the Women in the World event?", "paragraph": "In the weeks since New York Times Magazine readers had the opportunity to experience the magazine\u2019s \u201cThe Displaced\u201d virtual-reality film with Google Cardboard V.R. viewers delivered to subscribers, the film has been shown around the world. Before a screening in New Delhi on Friday, Women in the World, a live-event series associated with The Times, hosted a discussion on the global refugee and migrant crisis moderated by the actress Cate Blanchett and featuring the photojournalist and frequent Times Magazine contributor Lynsey Addario among its guests.", "answer": "Lynsey Addario", "sentence": "Before a screening in New Delhi on Friday, Women in the World, a live-event series associated with The Times, hosted a discussion on the global refugee and migrant crisis moderated by the actress Cate Blanchett and featuring the photojournalist and frequent Times Magazine contributor Lynsey Addario among its guests.", "paragraph_sentence": "In the weeks since New York Times Magazine readers had the opportunity to experience the magazine\u2019s \u201cThe Displaced\u201d virtual-reality film with Google Cardboard V.R. viewers delivered to subscribers, the film has been shown around the world. Before a screening in New Delhi on Friday, Women in the World, a live-event series associated with The Times, hosted a discussion on the global refugee and migrant crisis moderated by the actress Cate Blanchett and featuring the photojournalist and frequent Times Magazine contributor Lynsey Addario among its guests. ", "paragraph_answer": "In the weeks since New York Times Magazine readers had the opportunity to experience the magazine\u2019s \u201cThe Displaced\u201d virtual-reality film with Google Cardboard V.R. viewers delivered to subscribers, the film has been shown around the world. Before a screening in New Delhi on Friday, Women in the World, a live-event series associated with The Times, hosted a discussion on the global refugee and migrant crisis moderated by the actress Cate Blanchett and featuring the photojournalist and frequent Times Magazine contributor Lynsey Addario among its guests.", "sentence_answer": "Before a screening in New Delhi on Friday, Women in the World, a live-event series associated with The Times, hosted a discussion on the global refugee and migrant crisis moderated by the actress Cate Blanchett and featuring the photojournalist and frequent Times Magazine contributor Lynsey Addario among its guests.", "paragraph_id": "5d7031cbc8e4820a9b66dd73"} +{"question": "Which senator said he would oppose the Iran nuclear deal?", "paragraph": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Senator Benjamin L. Cardin, the senior Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee and a prominent Jewish voice in Congress, said on Friday that he would oppose the Iran nuclear deal, increasing the chance that President Obama will have to use a veto to prevent it from being scuttled. While the president has been working to gain enough support to block a vote on a resolution to disapprove the deal and thus avoid a diplomatic embarrassment, Mr. Cardin\u2019s announcement puts opponents close to securing enough votes to overcome any filibuster. Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, said on Friday that it would be \u201coutrageous\u201d for Democrats to prevent a vote.", "answer": "Benjamin L. Cardin", "sentence": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Senator Benjamin L. Cardin , the senior Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee and a prominent Jewish voice in Congress, said on Friday that he would oppose the Iran nuclear deal, increasing the chance that President Obama will have to use a veto to prevent it from being scuttled.", "paragraph_sentence": " WASHINGTON \u2014 Senator Benjamin L. Cardin , the senior Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee and a prominent Jewish voice in Congress, said on Friday that he would oppose the Iran nuclear deal, increasing the chance that President Obama will have to use a veto to prevent it from being scuttled. While the president has been working to gain enough support to block a vote on a resolution to disapprove the deal and thus avoid a diplomatic embarrassment, Mr. Cardin\u2019s announcement puts opponents close to securing enough votes to overcome any filibuster. Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, said on Friday that it would be \u201coutrageous\u201d for Democrats to prevent a vote.", "paragraph_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Senator Benjamin L. Cardin , the senior Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee and a prominent Jewish voice in Congress, said on Friday that he would oppose the Iran nuclear deal, increasing the chance that President Obama will have to use a veto to prevent it from being scuttled. While the president has been working to gain enough support to block a vote on a resolution to disapprove the deal and thus avoid a diplomatic embarrassment, Mr. Cardin\u2019s announcement puts opponents close to securing enough votes to overcome any filibuster. Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, said on Friday that it would be \u201coutrageous\u201d for Democrats to prevent a vote.", "sentence_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Senator Benjamin L. Cardin , the senior Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee and a prominent Jewish voice in Congress, said on Friday that he would oppose the Iran nuclear deal, increasing the chance that President Obama will have to use a veto to prevent it from being scuttled.", "paragraph_id": "5d70115fc8e4820a9b66bdce"} +{"question": "Which provinces had violence?", "paragraph": "ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia \u2014 Up and down the stairs of the five-star Radisson Blue Hotel, they moved from one meeting to another. Some wore suits, some came in traditional white clothing with turbans, some dressed casually. One rebel leader wore a baseball cap. In a rarity, anyone who is anyone in Sudanese politics \u2014 government officials, rebels, politicians, activists and international observers \u2014 was in one place, to talk peace. For a moment, it seemed like the momentum in this country \u2014 fractured by chronic instability in Darfur, violence in provinces like South Kordofan and Blue Nile, and simmering political tensions in the capital, Khartoum \u2014 was finally shifting.", "answer": "South Kordofan and Blue Nile", "sentence": "For a moment, it seemed like the momentum in this country \u2014 fractured by chronic instability in Darfur, violence in provinces like South Kordofan and Blue Nile , and simmering political tensions in the capital, Khartoum \u2014 was finally shifting.", "paragraph_sentence": "ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia \u2014 Up and down the stairs of the five-star Radisson Blue Hotel, they moved from one meeting to another. Some wore suits, some came in traditional white clothing with turbans, some dressed casually. One rebel leader wore a baseball cap. In a rarity, anyone who is anyone in Sudanese politics \u2014 government officials, rebels, politicians, activists and international observers \u2014 was in one place, to talk peace. For a moment, it seemed like the momentum in this country \u2014 fractured by chronic instability in Darfur, violence in provinces like South Kordofan and Blue Nile , and simmering political tensions in the capital, Khartoum \u2014 was finally shifting. ", "paragraph_answer": "ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia \u2014 Up and down the stairs of the five-star Radisson Blue Hotel, they moved from one meeting to another. Some wore suits, some came in traditional white clothing with turbans, some dressed casually. One rebel leader wore a baseball cap. In a rarity, anyone who is anyone in Sudanese politics \u2014 government officials, rebels, politicians, activists and international observers \u2014 was in one place, to talk peace. For a moment, it seemed like the momentum in this country \u2014 fractured by chronic instability in Darfur, violence in provinces like South Kordofan and Blue Nile , and simmering political tensions in the capital, Khartoum \u2014 was finally shifting.", "sentence_answer": "For a moment, it seemed like the momentum in this country \u2014 fractured by chronic instability in Darfur, violence in provinces like South Kordofan and Blue Nile , and simmering political tensions in the capital, Khartoum \u2014 was finally shifting.", "paragraph_id": "5d703941c8e4820a9b66e194"} +{"question": "What are some upsides of a mortgage?", "paragraph": "This type of arrangement can potentially cut buyers\u2019 individual expenses, while providing them with a potential equity gain and a mortgage interest tax deduction. But these ventures can also end badly if buyers assume that friendship alone will see them through any future difficulty. Before applying for a mortgage, the co-borrowers should fully reveal their income, debt and credit status to each other, said Mike Venable, a senior vice president and head of underwriting for retail bank operations at TD Bank. \u201cIt definitely needs to be someone you really trust,\u201d he said.", "answer": "potential equity gain and a mortgage interest tax deduction", "sentence": "a potential equity gain and a mortgage interest tax deduction .", "paragraph_sentence": "This type of arrangement can potentially cut buyers\u2019 individual expenses, while providing them with a potential equity gain and a mortgage interest tax deduction . But these ventures can also end badly if buyers assume that friendship alone will see them through any future difficulty. Before applying for a mortgage, the co-borrowers should fully reveal their income, debt and credit status to each other, said Mike Venable, a senior vice president and head of underwriting for retail bank operations at TD Bank. \u201cIt definitely needs to be someone you really trust,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "This type of arrangement can potentially cut buyers\u2019 individual expenses, while providing them with a potential equity gain and a mortgage interest tax deduction . But these ventures can also end badly if buyers assume that friendship alone will see them through any future difficulty. Before applying for a mortgage, the co-borrowers should fully reveal their income, debt and credit status to each other, said Mike Venable, a senior vice president and head of underwriting for retail bank operations at TD Bank. \u201cIt definitely needs to be someone you really trust,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "a potential equity gain and a mortgage interest tax deduction .", "paragraph_id": "5d706737c8e4820a9b66f0d2"} +{"question": "What group focused on hunting Qaeda suspects?", "paragraph": "As part of a bureaucratic reshuffling last month by John O. Brennan, the C.I.A. director, Mr. D\u2019Andrea has been replaced as head of the drone program by Chris Wood. After the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, Mr. Wood held leadership roles in Alec Station, the group that led the hunt for Qaeda suspects and was central to the interrogation program. He ultimately was in charge of that unit and would later serve as station chief in Kabul. Most recently, he supervised all operations in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Mr. Wood now runs a targeted killing program that is the subject of multiple investigations that Mr. Obama announced last week.", "answer": "Alec Station", "sentence": "After the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, Mr. Wood held leadership roles in Alec Station , the group that led the hunt for Qaeda suspects and was central to the interrogation program.", "paragraph_sentence": "As part of a bureaucratic reshuffling last month by John O. Brennan, the C.I.A. director, Mr. D\u2019Andrea has been replaced as head of the drone program by Chris Wood. After the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, Mr. Wood held leadership roles in Alec Station , the group that led the hunt for Qaeda suspects and was central to the interrogation program. He ultimately was in charge of that unit and would later serve as station chief in Kabul. Most recently, he supervised all operations in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Mr. Wood now runs a targeted killing program that is the subject of multiple investigations that Mr. Obama announced last week.", "paragraph_answer": "As part of a bureaucratic reshuffling last month by John O. Brennan, the C.I.A. director, Mr. D\u2019Andrea has been replaced as head of the drone program by Chris Wood. After the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, Mr. Wood held leadership roles in Alec Station , the group that led the hunt for Qaeda suspects and was central to the interrogation program. He ultimately was in charge of that unit and would later serve as station chief in Kabul. Most recently, he supervised all operations in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Mr. Wood now runs a targeted killing program that is the subject of multiple investigations that Mr. Obama announced last week.", "sentence_answer": "After the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, Mr. Wood held leadership roles in Alec Station , the group that led the hunt for Qaeda suspects and was central to the interrogation program.", "paragraph_id": "5d70352ec8e4820a9b66df61"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d7009dcc8e4820a9b66b2f1"} +{"question": "What has Douglas done a remarkable job of?", "paragraph": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "answer": "shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult", "sentence": "For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult .", "paragraph_sentence": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult . (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "paragraph_answer": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult . (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "sentence_answer": "For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult .", "paragraph_id": "5d705881c8e4820a9b66edc1"} +{"question": "Who was already pursuing a conventional investigation when the government applied for a wiretap?", "paragraph": "Raj Rajaratnam, the hedge fund magnate whose insider trading conviction in 2011 represented the government\u2019s first major victory, also challenged wiretapped evidence the government collected against him. He argued that the government\u2019s wiretap application failed to disclose that the S.E.C. was already pursuing a conventional investigation. While the judge overseeing Mr. Rajaratnam\u2019s trial ultimately admitted the recordings as evidence, he admonished the government, saying \u201cthe omissions here are troubling to say the least.\u201d After Mr. Rajaratnam\u2019s arrest, prosecutors and the F.B.I. turned the spotlight onto Level Global and others, setting up the Nov. 22, 2010, raid. During the raid, one of the items the F.B.I. collected was a \u201clist of artwork\u201d belonging to Mr. Ganek in addition to a DVD that contained \u201cextractions\u201d from his iPhone and BlackBerry. In the course of the raid, the F.B.I. also seized a folder labeled \u201cS/A/C/ Correspondence,\u201d with a name that was redacted, according to the warrant materials.", "answer": "S.E.C.", "sentence": "He argued that the government\u2019s wiretap application failed to disclose that the S.E.C. was already pursuing a conventional investigation.", "paragraph_sentence": "Raj Rajaratnam, the hedge fund magnate whose insider trading conviction in 2011 represented the government\u2019s first major victory, also challenged wiretapped evidence the government collected against him. He argued that the government\u2019s wiretap application failed to disclose that the S.E.C. was already pursuing a conventional investigation. While the judge overseeing Mr. Rajaratnam\u2019s trial ultimately admitted the recordings as evidence, he admonished the government, saying \u201cthe omissions here are troubling to say the least.\u201d After Mr. Rajaratnam\u2019s arrest, prosecutors and the F.B.I. turned the spotlight onto Level Global and others, setting up the Nov. 22, 2010, raid. During the raid, one of the items the F.B.I. collected was a \u201clist of artwork\u201d belonging to Mr. Ganek in addition to a DVD that contained \u201cextractions\u201d from his iPhone and BlackBerry. In the course of the raid, the F.B.I. also seized a folder labeled \u201cS/A/C/ Correspondence,\u201d with a name that was redacted, according to the warrant materials.", "paragraph_answer": "Raj Rajaratnam, the hedge fund magnate whose insider trading conviction in 2011 represented the government\u2019s first major victory, also challenged wiretapped evidence the government collected against him. He argued that the government\u2019s wiretap application failed to disclose that the S.E.C. was already pursuing a conventional investigation. While the judge overseeing Mr. Rajaratnam\u2019s trial ultimately admitted the recordings as evidence, he admonished the government, saying \u201cthe omissions here are troubling to say the least.\u201d After Mr. Rajaratnam\u2019s arrest, prosecutors and the F.B.I. turned the spotlight onto Level Global and others, setting up the Nov. 22, 2010, raid. During the raid, one of the items the F.B.I. collected was a \u201clist of artwork\u201d belonging to Mr. Ganek in addition to a DVD that contained \u201cextractions\u201d from his iPhone and BlackBerry. In the course of the raid, the F.B.I. also seized a folder labeled \u201cS/A/C/ Correspondence,\u201d with a name that was redacted, according to the warrant materials.", "sentence_answer": "He argued that the government\u2019s wiretap application failed to disclose that the S.E.C. was already pursuing a conventional investigation.", "paragraph_id": "5d70378ac8e4820a9b66e0cf"} +{"question": "What was burned?", "paragraph": "The tit for tat has been so obvious that even pro-Kremlin commentators have dropped the pretense, saying the flower burning is intended as a warning to the Netherlands over risks to trade if the investigation proceeds unfavorably for Russia. \u201cThis is connected to the Malaysian Boeing,\u201d Sergei A. Markov, a former member of Parliament in the pro-government United Russia party, said in a telephone interview. \u201cRussia is certain that the Dutch government is falsifying this investigation,\u201d he said, but cannot say so directly.", "answer": "flower", "sentence": "The tit for tat has been so obvious that even pro-Kremlin commentators have dropped the pretense, saying the flower burning is intended as a warning to the Netherlands over risks to trade if the investigation proceeds unfavorably for Russia.", "paragraph_sentence": " The tit for tat has been so obvious that even pro-Kremlin commentators have dropped the pretense, saying the flower burning is intended as a warning to the Netherlands over risks to trade if the investigation proceeds unfavorably for Russia. \u201cThis is connected to the Malaysian Boeing,\u201d Sergei A. Markov, a former member of Parliament in the pro-government United Russia party, said in a telephone interview. \u201cRussia is certain that the Dutch government is falsifying this investigation,\u201d he said, but cannot say so directly.", "paragraph_answer": "The tit for tat has been so obvious that even pro-Kremlin commentators have dropped the pretense, saying the flower burning is intended as a warning to the Netherlands over risks to trade if the investigation proceeds unfavorably for Russia. \u201cThis is connected to the Malaysian Boeing,\u201d Sergei A. Markov, a former member of Parliament in the pro-government United Russia party, said in a telephone interview. \u201cRussia is certain that the Dutch government is falsifying this investigation,\u201d he said, but cannot say so directly.", "sentence_answer": "The tit for tat has been so obvious that even pro-Kremlin commentators have dropped the pretense, saying the flower burning is intended as a warning to the Netherlands over risks to trade if the investigation proceeds unfavorably for Russia.", "paragraph_id": "5d700edcc8e4820a9b66bae9"} +{"question": "What was her sister's first job after school?", "paragraph": "A. No. I think for women it wasn\u2019t expected in my family, even though my sister ended up studying gemology. She was a diamond grader in New York and eventually worked for our gemstones division. When I did look to enter the business, the idea wasn\u2019t rejected, but it was just not expected. Q. Why did you want to join? A. I think very innately I had a strong connection to the product and the business because I grew up in it. Every single meal conversation was about the company, and growing up as a child I was interested. But later on my first reaction was, \u201cI\u2019m not going to go into the business, I\u2019m going to find my own identity, and do my own thing,\u201d which is why I studied art history and languages and started working in the art world and then the fashion industry.", "answer": "diamond grader", "sentence": "She was a diamond grader in New York and eventually worked for our gemstones division.", "paragraph_sentence": "A. No. I think for women it wasn\u2019t expected in my family, even though my sister ended up studying gemology. She was a diamond grader in New York and eventually worked for our gemstones division. When I did look to enter the business, the idea wasn\u2019t rejected, but it was just not expected. Q. Why did you want to join? A. I think very innately I had a strong connection to the product and the business because I grew up in it. Every single meal conversation was about the company, and growing up as a child I was interested. But later on my first reaction was, \u201cI\u2019m not going to go into the business, I\u2019m going to find my own identity, and do my own thing,\u201d which is why I studied art history and languages and started working in the art world and then the fashion industry.", "paragraph_answer": "A. No. I think for women it wasn\u2019t expected in my family, even though my sister ended up studying gemology. She was a diamond grader in New York and eventually worked for our gemstones division. When I did look to enter the business, the idea wasn\u2019t rejected, but it was just not expected. Q. Why did you want to join? A. I think very innately I had a strong connection to the product and the business because I grew up in it. Every single meal conversation was about the company, and growing up as a child I was interested. But later on my first reaction was, \u201cI\u2019m not going to go into the business, I\u2019m going to find my own identity, and do my own thing,\u201d which is why I studied art history and languages and started working in the art world and then the fashion industry.", "sentence_answer": "She was a diamond grader in New York and eventually worked for our gemstones division.", "paragraph_id": "5d70289ec8e4820a9b66d638"} +{"question": "At what rate did the economy expand in the April-to-June quarter?", "paragraph": "That put the seasonally adjusted annual rate at an estimated $1.08 trillion, the highest level since May 2008. The report also revised the June increase in construction spending to 0.7 percent, from 0.1 percent previously. Groundbreakings for houses, apartment complexes and commercial centers have helped improve overall economic growth. The government said last week that the economy expanded at an annual rate of 3.7 percent in the April-to-June quarter, after edging up just 0.6 percent in the first quarter. \u201cWe expect housing activity will continue to strengthen, underpinning greater residential investment in the coming quarters,\u201d said Gregory Daco, head of United States macroeconomics at the forecasting firm Oxford Economics. After the construction spending report, analysts at Barclays projected that the economy was on track to grow 2.6 percent in the third quarter and that the second-quarter growth rate would be revised up to 3.8 percent.", "answer": "3.7 percent", "sentence": "The government said last week that the economy expanded at an annual rate of 3.7 percent in the April-to-June quarter, after edging up just 0.6 percent in the first quarter.", "paragraph_sentence": "That put the seasonally adjusted annual rate at an estimated $1.08 trillion, the highest level since May 2008. The report also revised the June increase in construction spending to 0.7 percent, from 0.1 percent previously. Groundbreakings for houses, apartment complexes and commercial centers have helped improve overall economic growth. The government said last week that the economy expanded at an annual rate of 3.7 percent in the April-to-June quarter, after edging up just 0.6 percent in the first quarter. \u201cWe expect housing activity will continue to strengthen, underpinning greater residential investment in the coming quarters,\u201d said Gregory Daco, head of United States macroeconomics at the forecasting firm Oxford Economics. After the construction spending report, analysts at Barclays projected that the economy was on track to grow 2.6 percent in the third quarter and that the second-quarter growth rate would be revised up to 3.8 percent.", "paragraph_answer": "That put the seasonally adjusted annual rate at an estimated $1.08 trillion, the highest level since May 2008. The report also revised the June increase in construction spending to 0.7 percent, from 0.1 percent previously. Groundbreakings for houses, apartment complexes and commercial centers have helped improve overall economic growth. The government said last week that the economy expanded at an annual rate of 3.7 percent in the April-to-June quarter, after edging up just 0.6 percent in the first quarter. \u201cWe expect housing activity will continue to strengthen, underpinning greater residential investment in the coming quarters,\u201d said Gregory Daco, head of United States macroeconomics at the forecasting firm Oxford Economics. After the construction spending report, analysts at Barclays projected that the economy was on track to grow 2.6 percent in the third quarter and that the second-quarter growth rate would be revised up to 3.8 percent.", "sentence_answer": "The government said last week that the economy expanded at an annual rate of 3.7 percent in the April-to-June quarter, after edging up just 0.6 percent in the first quarter.", "paragraph_id": "5d700fa1c8e4820a9b66bbbe"} +{"question": "Who made a solid effort for the Tigers?", "paragraph": "Texas Southern\u2019s Madarious Gibbs led the Tigers with 15 points. But once behind minutes after tip-off, the Tigers never mustered a meaningful run to reverse Arizona\u2019s momentum. \u201cThey just overwhelmed us with length, size, athleticism in the first half,\u201d Texas Southern Coach Mike Davis said. Arizona, the Pacific-12 Conference regular-season and tournament champion, will meet No. 10 Ohio State on Saturday for a slot in the round of 16. Last year, Arizona was a No. 1 seed and lost in overtime to Wisconsin in the round of 8. But that team was without the 6-foot-9 forward Brandon Ashley, whose midseason foot injury kept him out of the postseason. Ashley, fully healthy, was the outstanding player in Arizona\u2019s romp through the Pacific-12 tournament last week. Against Texas Southern (22-13), he scored 14 points and grabbed 4 rebounds.", "answer": "Madarious Gibbs", "sentence": "Texas Southern\u2019s Madarious Gibbs led the Tigers with 15 points.", "paragraph_sentence": " Texas Southern\u2019s Madarious Gibbs led the Tigers with 15 points. But once behind minutes after tip-off, the Tigers never mustered a meaningful run to reverse Arizona\u2019s momentum. \u201cThey just overwhelmed us with length, size, athleticism in the first half,\u201d Texas Southern Coach Mike Davis said. Arizona, the Pacific-12 Conference regular-season and tournament champion, will meet No. 10 Ohio State on Saturday for a slot in the round of 16. Last year, Arizona was a No. 1 seed and lost in overtime to Wisconsin in the round of 8. But that team was without the 6-foot-9 forward Brandon Ashley, whose midseason foot injury kept him out of the postseason. Ashley, fully healthy, was the outstanding player in Arizona\u2019s romp through the Pacific-12 tournament last week. Against Texas Southern (22-13), he scored 14 points and grabbed 4 rebounds.", "paragraph_answer": "Texas Southern\u2019s Madarious Gibbs led the Tigers with 15 points. But once behind minutes after tip-off, the Tigers never mustered a meaningful run to reverse Arizona\u2019s momentum. \u201cThey just overwhelmed us with length, size, athleticism in the first half,\u201d Texas Southern Coach Mike Davis said. Arizona, the Pacific-12 Conference regular-season and tournament champion, will meet No. 10 Ohio State on Saturday for a slot in the round of 16. Last year, Arizona was a No. 1 seed and lost in overtime to Wisconsin in the round of 8. But that team was without the 6-foot-9 forward Brandon Ashley, whose midseason foot injury kept him out of the postseason. Ashley, fully healthy, was the outstanding player in Arizona\u2019s romp through the Pacific-12 tournament last week. Against Texas Southern (22-13), he scored 14 points and grabbed 4 rebounds.", "sentence_answer": "Texas Southern\u2019s Madarious Gibbs led the Tigers with 15 points.", "paragraph_id": "5d702784c8e4820a9b66d549"} +{"question": "Which conference is a league of historically black colleges?", "paragraph": "\u201cI think we become a strong candidate now for all of these leagues,\u201d Engles said. \u201cWe can attract some conferences now with a new facility.\u201d Kaplan said the institute was hoping for a September 2017 completion date. Commissioners for the Northeast Conference, the America East Conference and the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference each congratulated N.J.I.T. on the announcement of the new arena. But beyond that, they deferred comment. One hope for N.J.I.T. could come from the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference, a league of historically black colleges and universities.", "answer": "the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference", "sentence": "One hope for N.J.I.T. could come from the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference , a league of historically black colleges and universities.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI think we become a strong candidate now for all of these leagues,\u201d Engles said. \u201cWe can attract some conferences now with a new facility.\u201d Kaplan said the institute was hoping for a September 2017 completion date. Commissioners for the Northeast Conference, the America East Conference and the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference each congratulated N.J.I.T. on the announcement of the new arena. But beyond that, they deferred comment. One hope for N.J.I.T. could come from the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference , a league of historically black colleges and universities. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI think we become a strong candidate now for all of these leagues,\u201d Engles said. \u201cWe can attract some conferences now with a new facility.\u201d Kaplan said the institute was hoping for a September 2017 completion date. Commissioners for the Northeast Conference, the America East Conference and the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference each congratulated N.J.I.T. on the announcement of the new arena. But beyond that, they deferred comment. One hope for N.J.I.T. could come from the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference , a league of historically black colleges and universities.", "sentence_answer": "One hope for N.J.I.T. could come from the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference , a league of historically black colleges and universities.", "paragraph_id": "5d701e29c8e4820a9b66c994"} +{"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", "paragraph_id": "5d700893c8e4820a9b66b046"} +{"question": "What use if taking on debt?", "paragraph": "\u201cA middle class that believed deeply that the motherland would become strong has been eviscerated,\u201d said an essay circulating on Chinese websites this week that was credited to an investor who had lost most of his savings. \u201cThis was a stock wipeout that thoroughly damaged middle-class assets from a decade of striving. For us, the China Dream really is just a dream.\u201d The giddiest investors, including those who took on debt to buy stock, are wondering if they can recover their fortunes. Some have posted notices on property rental and sales websites saying they need to sell their homes quickly to raise cash.", "answer": "buy stock", "sentence": "The giddiest investors, including those who took on debt to buy stock , are wondering if they can recover their fortunes.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cA middle class that believed deeply that the motherland would become strong has been eviscerated,\u201d said an essay circulating on Chinese websites this week that was credited to an investor who had lost most of his savings. \u201cThis was a stock wipeout that thoroughly damaged middle-class assets from a decade of striving. For us, the China Dream really is just a dream.\u201d The giddiest investors, including those who took on debt to buy stock , are wondering if they can recover their fortunes. Some have posted notices on property rental and sales websites saying they need to sell their homes quickly to raise cash.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cA middle class that believed deeply that the motherland would become strong has been eviscerated,\u201d said an essay circulating on Chinese websites this week that was credited to an investor who had lost most of his savings. \u201cThis was a stock wipeout that thoroughly damaged middle-class assets from a decade of striving. For us, the China Dream really is just a dream.\u201d The giddiest investors, including those who took on debt to buy stock , are wondering if they can recover their fortunes. Some have posted notices on property rental and sales websites saying they need to sell their homes quickly to raise cash.", "sentence_answer": "The giddiest investors, including those who took on debt to buy stock , are wondering if they can recover their fortunes.", "paragraph_id": "5d7014e4c8e4820a9b66c0ed"} +{"question": "which scholars are responsible for the new critical edition", "paragraph": "Severo finds out that Paolina has married, and in a secret meeting with him, she refuses to be unfaithful. Aided by Callistene, whose machinations drive much of the plot, Poliuto finds them and vows revenge. But when Callistene arrests Nearco, another Christian, Poliuto puts his faith before his love, and confesses his baptism. Visiting Poliuto in prison, Paolina urges him to recant. When Poliuto remains steadfast, she converts, too, following him to an unseen death in the arena. Does Paolina really mean it? Is her baptism a response to Severo\u2019s return, or genuinely a matter of faith? Is Poliuto a political figure or a religious one, if the two could be separated? Using a new critical edition by the scholars William Ashbrook and Roger Parker that excises all the French accretions, Ms. Cl\u00e9ment\u2019s production tries to tease out these gray areas. But in a relentlessly monochrome production, she deals with politics weakly, vacillating between forcing the point and not making it at all.", "answer": "William Ashbrook and Roger Parker", "sentence": "Using a new critical edition by the scholars William Ashbrook and Roger Parker that excises all the French accretions, Ms. Cl\u00e9ment\u2019s production tries to tease out these gray areas.", "paragraph_sentence": "Severo finds out that Paolina has married, and in a secret meeting with him, she refuses to be unfaithful. Aided by Callistene, whose machinations drive much of the plot, Poliuto finds them and vows revenge. But when Callistene arrests Nearco, another Christian, Poliuto puts his faith before his love, and confesses his baptism. Visiting Poliuto in prison, Paolina urges him to recant. When Poliuto remains steadfast, she converts, too, following him to an unseen death in the arena. Does Paolina really mean it? Is her baptism a response to Severo\u2019s return, or genuinely a matter of faith? Is Poliuto a political figure or a religious one, if the two could be separated? Using a new critical edition by the scholars William Ashbrook and Roger Parker that excises all the French accretions, Ms. Cl\u00e9ment\u2019s production tries to tease out these gray areas. But in a relentlessly monochrome production, she deals with politics weakly, vacillating between forcing the point and not making it at all.", "paragraph_answer": "Severo finds out that Paolina has married, and in a secret meeting with him, she refuses to be unfaithful. Aided by Callistene, whose machinations drive much of the plot, Poliuto finds them and vows revenge. But when Callistene arrests Nearco, another Christian, Poliuto puts his faith before his love, and confesses his baptism. Visiting Poliuto in prison, Paolina urges him to recant. When Poliuto remains steadfast, she converts, too, following him to an unseen death in the arena. Does Paolina really mean it? Is her baptism a response to Severo\u2019s return, or genuinely a matter of faith? Is Poliuto a political figure or a religious one, if the two could be separated? Using a new critical edition by the scholars William Ashbrook and Roger Parker that excises all the French accretions, Ms. Cl\u00e9ment\u2019s production tries to tease out these gray areas. But in a relentlessly monochrome production, she deals with politics weakly, vacillating between forcing the point and not making it at all.", "sentence_answer": "Using a new critical edition by the scholars William Ashbrook and Roger Parker that excises all the French accretions, Ms. Cl\u00e9ment\u2019s production tries to tease out these gray areas.", "paragraph_id": "5d703c44c8e4820a9b66e2f6"} +{"question": "The new part added to meet emissions standards has the same diametere as what?", "paragraph": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "answer": "the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels", "sentence": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels .", "paragraph_sentence": " WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels . The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "paragraph_answer": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels . The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "sentence_answer": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels .", "paragraph_id": "5d701852c8e4820a9b66c473"} +{"question": "Who did the rhino lose its horn to?", "paragraph": "Perhaps it seems inefficient to put so much effort into helping individual animals, but the counterweight to that perception is that many of their problems are caused by humans. The rhinoceros, for instance, lost its horn to poachers. Part of the beauty of the presentation is that it lets you work out the ethical issues for yourself rather than beating you over the head with them. That restraint sets \u201cOperation Wild\u201d apart from its cousins on basic cable, where outlets like Animal Planet and the National Geographic Channel have been turning veterinarians into TV stars for years: \u201cDr. Oakley, Yukon Vet,\u201d \u201cThe Incredible Dr. Pol,\u201d \u201cEmergency Vets.\u201d A new entry comes along next Saturday on Animal Planet: \u201cDr. Jeff, Rocky Mountain Vet.\u201d The differences between that show and \u201cOperation Wild\u201d are pronounced. \u201cDr. Jeff\u201d is about a Colorado veterinarian named Jeff Young, who has a sprawling practice that includes a mobile clinic. It\u2019s typical of these shows: heavy on cats and dogs, but with a smattering of more exotic domesticated animals. In the premiere, for instance, a camel is gelded.", "answer": "poachers", "sentence": "The rhinoceros, for instance, lost its horn to poachers .", "paragraph_sentence": "Perhaps it seems inefficient to put so much effort into helping individual animals, but the counterweight to that perception is that many of their problems are caused by humans. The rhinoceros, for instance, lost its horn to poachers . Part of the beauty of the presentation is that it lets you work out the ethical issues for yourself rather than beating you over the head with them. That restraint sets \u201cOperation Wild\u201d apart from its cousins on basic cable, where outlets like Animal Planet and the National Geographic Channel have been turning veterinarians into TV stars for years: \u201cDr. Oakley, Yukon Vet,\u201d \u201cThe Incredible Dr. Pol,\u201d \u201cEmergency Vets.\u201d A new entry comes along next Saturday on Animal Planet: \u201cDr. Jeff, Rocky Mountain Vet.\u201d The differences between that show and \u201cOperation Wild\u201d are pronounced. \u201cDr. Jeff\u201d is about a Colorado veterinarian named Jeff Young, who has a sprawling practice that includes a mobile clinic. It\u2019s typical of these shows: heavy on cats and dogs, but with a smattering of more exotic domesticated animals. In the premiere, for instance, a camel is gelded.", "paragraph_answer": "Perhaps it seems inefficient to put so much effort into helping individual animals, but the counterweight to that perception is that many of their problems are caused by humans. The rhinoceros, for instance, lost its horn to poachers . Part of the beauty of the presentation is that it lets you work out the ethical issues for yourself rather than beating you over the head with them. That restraint sets \u201cOperation Wild\u201d apart from its cousins on basic cable, where outlets like Animal Planet and the National Geographic Channel have been turning veterinarians into TV stars for years: \u201cDr. Oakley, Yukon Vet,\u201d \u201cThe Incredible Dr. Pol,\u201d \u201cEmergency Vets.\u201d A new entry comes along next Saturday on Animal Planet: \u201cDr. Jeff, Rocky Mountain Vet.\u201d The differences between that show and \u201cOperation Wild\u201d are pronounced. \u201cDr. Jeff\u201d is about a Colorado veterinarian named Jeff Young, who has a sprawling practice that includes a mobile clinic. It\u2019s typical of these shows: heavy on cats and dogs, but with a smattering of more exotic domesticated animals. In the premiere, for instance, a camel is gelded.", "sentence_answer": "The rhinoceros, for instance, lost its horn to poachers .", "paragraph_id": "5d703b5fc8e4820a9b66e2a0"} +{"question": "What did a lot of customers say they'd miss at Zaro's when they close?", "paragraph": "The Bronx led the city\u2019s five boroughs in the largest percentage of new chain stores from 2014 to 2015, up to 944 from 914. Nur Moznu, a manager who has worked for Zaro\u2019s for nine years, said many customers had come in to say they would miss the fresh bread and bagels.", "answer": "fresh bread and bagels", "sentence": "Nur Moznu, a manager who has worked for Zaro\u2019s for nine years, said many customers had come in to say they would miss the fresh bread and bagels .", "paragraph_sentence": "The Bronx led the city\u2019s five boroughs in the largest percentage of new chain stores from 2014 to 2015, up to 944 from 914. Nur Moznu, a manager who has worked for Zaro\u2019s for nine years, said many customers had come in to say they would miss the fresh bread and bagels . ", "paragraph_answer": "The Bronx led the city\u2019s five boroughs in the largest percentage of new chain stores from 2014 to 2015, up to 944 from 914. Nur Moznu, a manager who has worked for Zaro\u2019s for nine years, said many customers had come in to say they would miss the fresh bread and bagels .", "sentence_answer": "Nur Moznu, a manager who has worked for Zaro\u2019s for nine years, said many customers had come in to say they would miss the fresh bread and bagels .", "paragraph_id": "5d7030adc8e4820a9b66dce0"} +{"question": "What did the Ukraine Parliament do?", "paragraph": "Another was Russia, where Ukraine\u2019s entry into NATO has always been a red flag. When the Ukrainian Parliament voted, the reaction in Moscow was swift.", "answer": "voted", "sentence": "When the Ukrainian Parliament voted , the reaction in Moscow was swift.", "paragraph_sentence": "Another was Russia, where Ukraine\u2019s entry into NATO has always been a red flag. When the Ukrainian Parliament voted , the reaction in Moscow was swift. ", "paragraph_answer": "Another was Russia, where Ukraine\u2019s entry into NATO has always been a red flag. When the Ukrainian Parliament voted , the reaction in Moscow was swift.", "sentence_answer": "When the Ukrainian Parliament voted , the reaction in Moscow was swift.", "paragraph_id": "5d700dc7c8e4820a9b66b96b"} +{"question": "In what part of Lebanon is Hana Abdullah currently present?", "paragraph": "Shooting images for the print magazine component of \u201cThe Displaced,\u201d Addario accompanied Hana Abdullah, a 12-year-old Syrian girl now living in a refugee settlement in Lebanon\u2019s Bekaa Valley, for 21 hours a day, documenting her daily life. At one point, she found herself in a plum orchard where Hana worked with other child refugees. \u201cThey had started working at 5 in the morning,\u201d Addario told Blanchett. \u201cAnd around 11 in the morning, they started falling out of the trees \u2014 literally the children were collapsing out of the trees. It was something I had never seen before.\u201d Addario and Blanchett discussed the crisis with the Iraqi-American journalist Zainab Salbi and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees spokeswoman Melissa Fleming. \u201cFor children like \u2026 Hana, the situation has just got a hell of a lot worse and more complicated following the Beirut and Paris attacks,\u201d Blanchett said. And yet \u201cthese people are not going to evaporate,\u201d she said. \u201cThe problem is not going to go away overnight.\u201d Watch the full video here:", "answer": "Bekaa Valley", "sentence": "Shooting images for the print magazine component of \u201cThe Displaced,\u201d Addario accompanied Hana Abdullah, a 12-year-old Syrian girl now living in a refugee settlement in Lebanon\u2019s Bekaa Valley , for 21 hours a day, documenting her daily life.", "paragraph_sentence": " Shooting images for the print magazine component of \u201cThe Displaced,\u201d Addario accompanied Hana Abdullah, a 12-year-old Syrian girl now living in a refugee settlement in Lebanon\u2019s Bekaa Valley , for 21 hours a day, documenting her daily life. At one point, she found herself in a plum orchard where Hana worked with other child refugees. \u201cThey had started working at 5 in the morning,\u201d Addario told Blanchett. \u201cAnd around 11 in the morning, they started falling out of the trees \u2014 literally the children were collapsing out of the trees. It was something I had never seen before.\u201d Addario and Blanchett discussed the crisis with the Iraqi-American journalist Zainab Salbi and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees spokeswoman Melissa Fleming. \u201cFor children like \u2026 Hana, the situation has just got a hell of a lot worse and more complicated following the Beirut and Paris attacks,\u201d Blanchett said. And yet \u201cthese people are not going to evaporate,\u201d she said. \u201cThe problem is not going to go away overnight.\u201d Watch the full video here:", "paragraph_answer": "Shooting images for the print magazine component of \u201cThe Displaced,\u201d Addario accompanied Hana Abdullah, a 12-year-old Syrian girl now living in a refugee settlement in Lebanon\u2019s Bekaa Valley , for 21 hours a day, documenting her daily life. At one point, she found herself in a plum orchard where Hana worked with other child refugees. \u201cThey had started working at 5 in the morning,\u201d Addario told Blanchett. \u201cAnd around 11 in the morning, they started falling out of the trees \u2014 literally the children were collapsing out of the trees. It was something I had never seen before.\u201d Addario and Blanchett discussed the crisis with the Iraqi-American journalist Zainab Salbi and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees spokeswoman Melissa Fleming. \u201cFor children like \u2026 Hana, the situation has just got a hell of a lot worse and more complicated following the Beirut and Paris attacks,\u201d Blanchett said. And yet \u201cthese people are not going to evaporate,\u201d she said. \u201cThe problem is not going to go away overnight.\u201d Watch the full video here:", "sentence_answer": "Shooting images for the print magazine component of \u201cThe Displaced,\u201d Addario accompanied Hana Abdullah, a 12-year-old Syrian girl now living in a refugee settlement in Lebanon\u2019s Bekaa Valley , for 21 hours a day, documenting her daily life.", "paragraph_id": "5d70344dc8e4820a9b66deed"} +{"question": "What country is the Pope dissapointed with?", "paragraph": "Confronted by the continuing and largely ignored persecution of Catholics and other Christians in the Middle East, it is no surprise that as forthright and courageous a pope as Francis would set aside diplomatic nicety and call genocide what it is: genocide. It is a great pity that as important a country as Turkey should continue to object as strongly as it does to what is by now so clearly the verdict of history, particularly after President Recep Tayyip Erdogan\u2019s unprecedented and powerful offer of condolences last year to the victims\u2019 grandchildren.", "answer": "Turkey", "sentence": "It is a great pity that as important a country as Turkey should continue to object as strongly as it does to what is by now so clearly the verdict of history, particularly after President Recep Tayyip Erdogan\u2019s unprecedented and powerful offer of condolences last year to the victims\u2019 grandchildren.", "paragraph_sentence": "Confronted by the continuing and largely ignored persecution of Catholics and other Christians in the Middle East, it is no surprise that as forthright and courageous a pope as Francis would set aside diplomatic nicety and call genocide what it is: genocide. It is a great pity that as important a country as Turkey should continue to object as strongly as it does to what is by now so clearly the verdict of history, particularly after President Recep Tayyip Erdogan\u2019s unprecedented and powerful offer of condolences last year to the victims\u2019 grandchildren. ", "paragraph_answer": "Confronted by the continuing and largely ignored persecution of Catholics and other Christians in the Middle East, it is no surprise that as forthright and courageous a pope as Francis would set aside diplomatic nicety and call genocide what it is: genocide. It is a great pity that as important a country as Turkey should continue to object as strongly as it does to what is by now so clearly the verdict of history, particularly after President Recep Tayyip Erdogan\u2019s unprecedented and powerful offer of condolences last year to the victims\u2019 grandchildren.", "sentence_answer": "It is a great pity that as important a country as Turkey should continue to object as strongly as it does to what is by now so clearly the verdict of history, particularly after President Recep Tayyip Erdogan\u2019s unprecedented and powerful offer of condolences last year to the victims\u2019 grandchildren.", "paragraph_id": "5d700cd5c8e4820a9b66b83d"} +{"question": "What if the bill does not pass?", "paragraph": "Mr. Reid is using his power to filibuster bills and toss up chaff \u2014 a role Senate Republicans enjoyed for several years \u2014 to push back on anything Mr. McConnell may wish to accomplish. \u201cThere seems to be a pattern of Harry Reid whipping his members into a frenzy,\u201d said Senator Shelley Moore Capito, Republican of West Virginia. For years, Congress has had to settle for temporary patches to prevent deep cuts in Medicare payments to doctors, like a 21 percent cut scheduled to take effect April 1 if Congress does not intervene. The House measure would permanently remove the threat of such cuts, and would require some higher-income Medicare beneficiaries to pay higher premiums, a change Republicans hail as a major reform. It also would renew the popular Children\u2019s Health Insurance Program and provide $7.2 billion for community health centers \u2014 crucial to both rural and urban areas where doctors are scarce \u2014 over two years.", "answer": "a 21 percent cut scheduled to take effect April 1 if Congress does not intervene", "sentence": "For years, Congress has had to settle for temporary patches to prevent deep cuts in Medicare payments to doctors, like a 21 percent cut scheduled to take effect April 1 if Congress does not intervene .", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Reid is using his power to filibuster bills and toss up chaff \u2014 a role Senate Republicans enjoyed for several years \u2014 to push back on anything Mr. McConnell may wish to accomplish. \u201cThere seems to be a pattern of Harry Reid whipping his members into a frenzy,\u201d said Senator Shelley Moore Capito, Republican of West Virginia. For years, Congress has had to settle for temporary patches to prevent deep cuts in Medicare payments to doctors, like a 21 percent cut scheduled to take effect April 1 if Congress does not intervene . The House measure would permanently remove the threat of such cuts, and would require some higher-income Medicare beneficiaries to pay higher premiums, a change Republicans hail as a major reform. It also would renew the popular Children\u2019s Health Insurance Program and provide $7.2 billion for community health centers \u2014 crucial to both rural and urban areas where doctors are scarce \u2014 over two years.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Reid is using his power to filibuster bills and toss up chaff \u2014 a role Senate Republicans enjoyed for several years \u2014 to push back on anything Mr. McConnell may wish to accomplish. \u201cThere seems to be a pattern of Harry Reid whipping his members into a frenzy,\u201d said Senator Shelley Moore Capito, Republican of West Virginia. For years, Congress has had to settle for temporary patches to prevent deep cuts in Medicare payments to doctors, like a 21 percent cut scheduled to take effect April 1 if Congress does not intervene . The House measure would permanently remove the threat of such cuts, and would require some higher-income Medicare beneficiaries to pay higher premiums, a change Republicans hail as a major reform. It also would renew the popular Children\u2019s Health Insurance Program and provide $7.2 billion for community health centers \u2014 crucial to both rural and urban areas where doctors are scarce \u2014 over two years.", "sentence_answer": "For years, Congress has had to settle for temporary patches to prevent deep cuts in Medicare payments to doctors, like a 21 percent cut scheduled to take effect April 1 if Congress does not intervene .", "paragraph_id": "5d70196ec8e4820a9b66c572"} +{"question": "What type of defense were the Panthers in when Odell Beckham caught the fourth-quarter touchdown pass?", "paragraph": "\u201cHe cried a little bit,\u201d Manning said. \u201cI didn\u2019t think that was really necessary. I think Odell took the higher road, and I\u2019m proud of him for that.\u201d Manning later did a little trash talking, although in his typically subtle way. He credited Beckham for regaining his composure later in the game, and then Manning mentioned that the Panthers were in a zone defense for almost the entire game \u2014 except for when Beckham caught a fourth-quarter touchdown pass. \u201cIt was probably the only time Norman played Odell man-to-man, and Odell beat him.\u201d", "answer": "man-to-man", "sentence": "\u201cIt was probably the only time Norman played Odell man-to-man , and Odell beat him.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cHe cried a little bit,\u201d Manning said. \u201cI didn\u2019t think that was really necessary. I think Odell took the higher road, and I\u2019m proud of him for that.\u201d Manning later did a little trash talking, although in his typically subtle way. He credited Beckham for regaining his composure later in the game, and then Manning mentioned that the Panthers were in a zone defense for almost the entire game \u2014 except for when Beckham caught a fourth-quarter touchdown pass. \u201cIt was probably the only time Norman played Odell man-to-man , and Odell beat him.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cHe cried a little bit,\u201d Manning said. \u201cI didn\u2019t think that was really necessary. I think Odell took the higher road, and I\u2019m proud of him for that.\u201d Manning later did a little trash talking, although in his typically subtle way. He credited Beckham for regaining his composure later in the game, and then Manning mentioned that the Panthers were in a zone defense for almost the entire game \u2014 except for when Beckham caught a fourth-quarter touchdown pass. \u201cIt was probably the only time Norman played Odell man-to-man , and Odell beat him.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt was probably the only time Norman played Odell man-to-man , and Odell beat him.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d703d6ac8e4820a9b66e396"} +{"question": "How long is the play?", "paragraph": "But this 40-minute play from 1921, seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense. Its full title, \u201cReread Another A Play to Be Played Indoors or Out I Wish to Be a School,\u201d offers an accurate idea of what to expect. Staged by the Target Margin artistic director David Herskovits, a man celebrated for bringing cobwebbed theatrical arcana into the light, it is performed with tripping grace by Clare Barron, Purva Bedi and Ugo Chukwu (and a participatory sound man, Jesse Freedman), who wear kimonos and sailor stripes, suggesting extras from some hybrid Gilbert & Sullivan operetta. Using kitschy objects like white plastic globes and shiny party hats as visual aids, they speak in cryptic fragments of mountains and men and mothers and colorblind house painters.", "answer": "40-minute", "sentence": "But this 40-minute play from 1921, seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense.", "paragraph_sentence": " But this 40-minute play from 1921, seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense. Its full title, \u201cReread Another A Play to Be Played Indoors or Out I Wish to Be a School,\u201d offers an accurate idea of what to expect. Staged by the Target Margin artistic director David Herskovits, a man celebrated for bringing cobwebbed theatrical arcana into the light, it is performed with tripping grace by Clare Barron, Purva Bedi and Ugo Chukwu (and a participatory sound man, Jesse Freedman), who wear kimonos and sailor stripes, suggesting extras from some hybrid Gilbert & Sullivan operetta. Using kitschy objects like white plastic globes and shiny party hats as visual aids, they speak in cryptic fragments of mountains and men and mothers and colorblind house painters.", "paragraph_answer": "But this 40-minute play from 1921, seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense. Its full title, \u201cReread Another A Play to Be Played Indoors or Out I Wish to Be a School,\u201d offers an accurate idea of what to expect. Staged by the Target Margin artistic director David Herskovits, a man celebrated for bringing cobwebbed theatrical arcana into the light, it is performed with tripping grace by Clare Barron, Purva Bedi and Ugo Chukwu (and a participatory sound man, Jesse Freedman), who wear kimonos and sailor stripes, suggesting extras from some hybrid Gilbert & Sullivan operetta. Using kitschy objects like white plastic globes and shiny party hats as visual aids, they speak in cryptic fragments of mountains and men and mothers and colorblind house painters.", "sentence_answer": "But this 40-minute play from 1921, seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense.", "paragraph_id": "5d707f7bc8e4820a9b66f3b6"} +{"question": "During what decade did the Russian debacle in Afghanistan take place?", "paragraph": "If the Islamic State seemed a distant threat at one point, the Kremlin now appears genuinely concerned about repercussions. About 2,400 Russians have joined the extremist movement, a senior security official announced recently, and an additional 3,000 men from Central Asian states are believed to be fighting in Syria. It is considered unlikely that Mr. Putin will propose sending Russian troops to join the fighting. The memories of the Russian debacle in Afghanistan in the 1980s remain too fresh. Even Russian casualties fighting next door in Ukraine \u2014 a war the public accepted as necessary for its own protection \u2014 were hidden by the state.", "answer": "1980s", "sentence": "The memories of the Russian debacle in Afghanistan in the 1980s remain too fresh.", "paragraph_sentence": "If the Islamic State seemed a distant threat at one point, the Kremlin now appears genuinely concerned about repercussions. About 2,400 Russians have joined the extremist movement, a senior security official announced recently, and an additional 3,000 men from Central Asian states are believed to be fighting in Syria. It is considered unlikely that Mr. Putin will propose sending Russian troops to join the fighting. The memories of the Russian debacle in Afghanistan in the 1980s remain too fresh. Even Russian casualties fighting next door in Ukraine \u2014 a war the public accepted as necessary for its own protection \u2014 were hidden by the state.", "paragraph_answer": "If the Islamic State seemed a distant threat at one point, the Kremlin now appears genuinely concerned about repercussions. About 2,400 Russians have joined the extremist movement, a senior security official announced recently, and an additional 3,000 men from Central Asian states are believed to be fighting in Syria. It is considered unlikely that Mr. Putin will propose sending Russian troops to join the fighting. The memories of the Russian debacle in Afghanistan in the 1980s remain too fresh. Even Russian casualties fighting next door in Ukraine \u2014 a war the public accepted as necessary for its own protection \u2014 were hidden by the state.", "sentence_answer": "The memories of the Russian debacle in Afghanistan in the 1980s remain too fresh.", "paragraph_id": "5d70197fc8e4820a9b66c584"} +{"question": "Who played interference?", "paragraph": "Pekka Rinne made 19 saves for the Predators, who fell to 11-6-3 with their third straight shutout loss. Nashville has not scored in a franchise-record 213 minutes 47 seconds, since Miikka Salmomaki\u2019s goal at 6:13 of the second period in a 3-2 win over Anaheim last Tuesday. Nashville outshot the Rangers by 14-3 in a scoreless first period. The Predators spent 7:21 on the power play, as Dan Girardi (interference), Keith Yandle (holding) and Stepan (double-minor for high-sticking) committed penalties. Still, the Predators were stymied by an aggressive Lundqvist, who challenged Nashville\u2019s shooters throughout. Lundqvist\u2019s play kept the Rangers in the game, and Nash\u2019s sixth goal of the season at 4:32 of the second period gave them the lead. The goal was Nash\u2019s fourth in the Rangers\u2019 past two games. BRUINS 4, MAPLE LEAFS 3 David Krejci scored the only goal in a shootout and Patrice Bergeron extended his point streak to eight games as Boston won in Toronto to sweep a home-and-home series.", "answer": "Dan Girardi", "sentence": "The Predators spent 7:21 on the power play, as Dan Girardi (interference), Keith Yandle (holding) and Stepan (double-minor for high-sticking) committed penalties.", "paragraph_sentence": "Pekka Rinne made 19 saves for the Predators, who fell to 11-6-3 with their third straight shutout loss. Nashville has not scored in a franchise-record 213 minutes 47 seconds, since Miikka Salmomaki\u2019s goal at 6:13 of the second period in a 3-2 win over Anaheim last Tuesday. Nashville outshot the Rangers by 14-3 in a scoreless first period. The Predators spent 7:21 on the power play, as Dan Girardi (interference), Keith Yandle (holding) and Stepan (double-minor for high-sticking) committed penalties. Still, the Predators were stymied by an aggressive Lundqvist, who challenged Nashville\u2019s shooters throughout. Lundqvist\u2019s play kept the Rangers in the game, and Nash\u2019s sixth goal of the season at 4:32 of the second period gave them the lead. The goal was Nash\u2019s fourth in the Rangers\u2019 past two games. BRUINS 4, MAPLE LEAFS 3 David Krejci scored the only goal in a shootout and Patrice Bergeron extended his point streak to eight games as Boston won in Toronto to sweep a home-and-home series.", "paragraph_answer": "Pekka Rinne made 19 saves for the Predators, who fell to 11-6-3 with their third straight shutout loss. Nashville has not scored in a franchise-record 213 minutes 47 seconds, since Miikka Salmomaki\u2019s goal at 6:13 of the second period in a 3-2 win over Anaheim last Tuesday. Nashville outshot the Rangers by 14-3 in a scoreless first period. The Predators spent 7:21 on the power play, as Dan Girardi (interference), Keith Yandle (holding) and Stepan (double-minor for high-sticking) committed penalties. Still, the Predators were stymied by an aggressive Lundqvist, who challenged Nashville\u2019s shooters throughout. Lundqvist\u2019s play kept the Rangers in the game, and Nash\u2019s sixth goal of the season at 4:32 of the second period gave them the lead. The goal was Nash\u2019s fourth in the Rangers\u2019 past two games. BRUINS 4, MAPLE LEAFS 3 David Krejci scored the only goal in a shootout and Patrice Bergeron extended his point streak to eight games as Boston won in Toronto to sweep a home-and-home series.", "sentence_answer": "The Predators spent 7:21 on the power play, as Dan Girardi (interference), Keith Yandle (holding) and Stepan (double-minor for high-sticking) committed penalties.", "paragraph_id": "5d70539ac8e4820a9b66ec38"} +{"question": "What city did all this take place in?", "paragraph": "After a newborn was abandoned by his mother and discovered in the cr\u00e8che of a Roman Catholic church in Queens last month, calls and emails offering help poured into the parish and to New York City\u2019s child welfare agency. Many people, including members of the church\u2019s own congregation, asked whether they might be able to adopt the child. Officials from the agency, the Administration for Children\u2019s Services, visited the church on Sunday to thank its parishioners for their part in rescuing the boy and to let them know he was healthy and being cared for in a foster home.", "answer": "New York City", "sentence": "After a newborn was abandoned by his mother and discovered in the cr\u00e8che of a Roman Catholic church in Queens last month, calls and emails offering help poured into the parish and to New York City \u2019s child welfare agency.", "paragraph_sentence": " After a newborn was abandoned by his mother and discovered in the cr\u00e8che of a Roman Catholic church in Queens last month, calls and emails offering help poured into the parish and to New York City \u2019s child welfare agency. Many people, including members of the church\u2019s own congregation, asked whether they might be able to adopt the child. Officials from the agency, the Administration for Children\u2019s Services, visited the church on Sunday to thank its parishioners for their part in rescuing the boy and to let them know he was healthy and being cared for in a foster home.", "paragraph_answer": "After a newborn was abandoned by his mother and discovered in the cr\u00e8che of a Roman Catholic church in Queens last month, calls and emails offering help poured into the parish and to New York City \u2019s child welfare agency. Many people, including members of the church\u2019s own congregation, asked whether they might be able to adopt the child. Officials from the agency, the Administration for Children\u2019s Services, visited the church on Sunday to thank its parishioners for their part in rescuing the boy and to let them know he was healthy and being cared for in a foster home.", "sentence_answer": "After a newborn was abandoned by his mother and discovered in the cr\u00e8che of a Roman Catholic church in Queens last month, calls and emails offering help poured into the parish and to New York City \u2019s child welfare agency.", "paragraph_id": "5d701e4ac8e4820a9b66c9ce"} +{"question": "What was flavorful?", "paragraph": "On a balmy September evening, the place was marked by the hushed whispers of diners trying to figure out their first dish, ourselves included. After a cursory, but necessary, explanation from one of the chefs, we all tucked into fresh tortellini stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion in an Iranian lemon bouillon with chunks of orange-hued Mimolette cheese. This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes, then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e. Sesame ice cream crowned with crumbled hazelnuts and fresh figs ended the meal. Going against the local grain, the wine offering is a careful edit of foreign producers. \u201cThe idea behind the wine was like our cooking: Make it as international as possible,\u201d Mr. Lahaut said.", "answer": "herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes", "sentence": "This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes , then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e.", "paragraph_sentence": "On a balmy September evening, the place was marked by the hushed whispers of diners trying to figure out their first dish, ourselves included. After a cursory, but necessary, explanation from one of the chefs, we all tucked into fresh tortellini stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion in an Iranian lemon bouillon with chunks of orange-hued Mimolette cheese. This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes , then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e. Sesame ice cream crowned with crumbled hazelnuts and fresh figs ended the meal. Going against the local grain, the wine offering is a careful edit of foreign producers. \u201cThe idea behind the wine was like our cooking: Make it as international as possible,\u201d Mr. Lahaut said.", "paragraph_answer": "On a balmy September evening, the place was marked by the hushed whispers of diners trying to figure out their first dish, ourselves included. After a cursory, but necessary, explanation from one of the chefs, we all tucked into fresh tortellini stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion in an Iranian lemon bouillon with chunks of orange-hued Mimolette cheese. This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes , then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e. Sesame ice cream crowned with crumbled hazelnuts and fresh figs ended the meal. Going against the local grain, the wine offering is a careful edit of foreign producers. \u201cThe idea behind the wine was like our cooking: Make it as international as possible,\u201d Mr. Lahaut said.", "sentence_answer": "This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes , then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e.", "paragraph_id": "5d704e57c8e4820a9b66ea94"} +{"question": "How long after her Amnestic M.C.I. diagnosis did Sandy progress to Alzheimer's disease?", "paragraph": "On a quiet Friday morning in November 2010, Sandy sat down with a mug of honey-\u00adginger tea to read two books that Daryl had brought her. By this point, a year and a half after her amnestic M.C.I. diagnosis, she had progressed to what Duffy said was Alzheimer\u2019s disease. She had retired from Cornell, but she was doing well. She could still travel alone to familiar destinations, including Austin, Tex., where Emily was living. Jeremy had temporarily moved back home to be with her. She could read novels, even difficult ones like Cormac McCarthy\u2019s \u201cThe Road.\u201d She played tennis, gardened and went for walks around Ithaca with a handful of friends, most of them former colleagues from Cornell. She saw a few psychotherapy patients. One would later say that even though Sandy was having some trouble remembering words, \u201cit didn\u2019t really matter. In a therapy relationship you\u2019re talking more about emotions \u2014 and in that regard, she didn\u2019t miss a beat.\u201d", "answer": "a year and a half", "sentence": "By this point, a year and a half after her amnestic M.C.I. diagnosis, she had progressed to what Duffy said was Alzheimer\u2019s disease.", "paragraph_sentence": "On a quiet Friday morning in November 2010, Sandy sat down with a mug of honey-\u00adginger tea to read two books that Daryl had brought her. By this point, a year and a half after her amnestic M.C.I. diagnosis, she had progressed to what Duffy said was Alzheimer\u2019s disease. She had retired from Cornell, but she was doing well. She could still travel alone to familiar destinations, including Austin, Tex., where Emily was living. Jeremy had temporarily moved back home to be with her. She could read novels, even difficult ones like Cormac McCarthy\u2019s \u201cThe Road.\u201d She played tennis, gardened and went for walks around Ithaca with a handful of friends, most of them former colleagues from Cornell. She saw a few psychotherapy patients. One would later say that even though Sandy was having some trouble remembering words, \u201cit didn\u2019t really matter. In a therapy relationship you\u2019re talking more about emotions \u2014 and in that regard, she didn\u2019t miss a beat.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "On a quiet Friday morning in November 2010, Sandy sat down with a mug of honey-\u00adginger tea to read two books that Daryl had brought her. By this point, a year and a half after her amnestic M.C.I. diagnosis, she had progressed to what Duffy said was Alzheimer\u2019s disease. She had retired from Cornell, but she was doing well. She could still travel alone to familiar destinations, including Austin, Tex., where Emily was living. Jeremy had temporarily moved back home to be with her. She could read novels, even difficult ones like Cormac McCarthy\u2019s \u201cThe Road.\u201d She played tennis, gardened and went for walks around Ithaca with a handful of friends, most of them former colleagues from Cornell. She saw a few psychotherapy patients. One would later say that even though Sandy was having some trouble remembering words, \u201cit didn\u2019t really matter. In a therapy relationship you\u2019re talking more about emotions \u2014 and in that regard, she didn\u2019t miss a beat.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "By this point, a year and a half after her amnestic M.C.I. diagnosis, she had progressed to what Duffy said was Alzheimer\u2019s disease.", "paragraph_id": "5d702b07c8e4820a9b66d883"} +{"question": "The Labor Department said it would work to assign what to investment managers?", "paragraph": "The Labor Department said on Monday that it would try to do something about that last problem. It has set to work on rules that would assign a \u201cfiduciary duty\u201d to investment managers who handle retirement savings accounts. That means that they would need to put their clients in suitable investment products, and could be sued if they didn\u2019t.", "answer": "fiduciary duty", "sentence": "It has set to work on rules that would assign a \u201c fiduciary duty \u201d to investment managers who handle retirement savings accounts.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Labor Department said on Monday that it would try to do something about that last problem. It has set to work on rules that would assign a \u201c fiduciary duty \u201d to investment managers who handle retirement savings accounts. That means that they would need to put their clients in suitable investment products, and could be sued if they didn\u2019t.", "paragraph_answer": "The Labor Department said on Monday that it would try to do something about that last problem. It has set to work on rules that would assign a \u201c fiduciary duty \u201d to investment managers who handle retirement savings accounts. That means that they would need to put their clients in suitable investment products, and could be sued if they didn\u2019t.", "sentence_answer": "It has set to work on rules that would assign a \u201c fiduciary duty \u201d to investment managers who handle retirement savings accounts.", "paragraph_id": "5d70148ec8e4820a9b66c0a5"} +{"question": "Which Ohio team played in the college championship game?", "paragraph": "James does know about a young Ohio team whose players stuck together through adversity and played with grit and guts. Not his Cavaliers, mind you, but the Ohio State Buckeyes. Between Monday\u2019s practice and Tuesday\u2019s game, James traveled to and from Texas in a private jet to attend the College Football Playoff championship game. \u201cI\u2019m a big supporter of the university,\u201d James said. \u201cWhat that school does for the state of Ohio you would only understand if you\u2019re from the state of Ohio.\u201d But you do not have to be from that state to understand that the Cavaliers, at least for the moment, are something of a mess.", "answer": "Ohio State Buckeyes", "sentence": "Not his Cavaliers, mind you, but the Ohio State Buckeyes .", "paragraph_sentence": "James does know about a young Ohio team whose players stuck together through adversity and played with grit and guts. Not his Cavaliers, mind you, but the Ohio State Buckeyes . Between Monday\u2019s practice and Tuesday\u2019s game, James traveled to and from Texas in a private jet to attend the College Football Playoff championship game. \u201cI\u2019m a big supporter of the university,\u201d James said. \u201cWhat that school does for the state of Ohio you would only understand if you\u2019re from the state of Ohio.\u201d But you do not have to be from that state to understand that the Cavaliers, at least for the moment, are something of a mess.", "paragraph_answer": "James does know about a young Ohio team whose players stuck together through adversity and played with grit and guts. Not his Cavaliers, mind you, but the Ohio State Buckeyes . Between Monday\u2019s practice and Tuesday\u2019s game, James traveled to and from Texas in a private jet to attend the College Football Playoff championship game. \u201cI\u2019m a big supporter of the university,\u201d James said. \u201cWhat that school does for the state of Ohio you would only understand if you\u2019re from the state of Ohio.\u201d But you do not have to be from that state to understand that the Cavaliers, at least for the moment, are something of a mess.", "sentence_answer": "Not his Cavaliers, mind you, but the Ohio State Buckeyes .", "paragraph_id": "5d703bf5c8e4820a9b66e2d0"} +{"question": "What was asked?", "paragraph": "In the N.C.A.A. tournament, Trice has averaged 19.8 points a game, an increase from a season average of 14.8 entering the tournament. The seventh-seeded Spartans will play Duke, the top seed from the South Region, in the national semifinals Saturday in Indianapolis. Asked to explain Trice\u2019s jump in production, Izzo grinned and said, \u201cThe bigger the game, the more often you want the ball in Travis\u2019s hands.\u201d When his two free throws dropped with 10 seconds left Sunday for his 16th and 17th points, Trice allowed himself a small smile. But when the game ended, he collapsed to the floor. \u201cThat\u2019s the first time I\u2019ve ever seen Travis cry,\u201d said Dawson, who has been his teammate for many seasons. Julie Trice said: \u201cThat wasn\u2019t like him. But I was kind of happy to see it. I was saying, \u2018Let it go, baby.\u2019 \u201d As he lay on the court, Trice was absolutely still again.", "answer": "Asked to explain Trice\u2019s jump in production", "sentence": "Asked to explain Trice\u2019s jump in production , Izzo grinned and said, \u201cThe bigger the game, the more often you want the ball in Travis\u2019s hands.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "In the N.C.A.A. tournament, Trice has averaged 19.8 points a game, an increase from a season average of 14.8 entering the tournament. The seventh-seeded Spartans will play Duke, the top seed from the South Region, in the national semifinals Saturday in Indianapolis. Asked to explain Trice\u2019s jump in production , Izzo grinned and said, \u201cThe bigger the game, the more often you want the ball in Travis\u2019s hands.\u201d When his two free throws dropped with 10 seconds left Sunday for his 16th and 17th points, Trice allowed himself a small smile. But when the game ended, he collapsed to the floor. \u201cThat\u2019s the first time I\u2019ve ever seen Travis cry,\u201d said Dawson, who has been his teammate for many seasons. Julie Trice said: \u201cThat wasn\u2019t like him. But I was kind of happy to see it. I was saying, \u2018Let it go, baby.\u2019 \u201d As he lay on the court, Trice was absolutely still again.", "paragraph_answer": "In the N.C.A.A. tournament, Trice has averaged 19.8 points a game, an increase from a season average of 14.8 entering the tournament. The seventh-seeded Spartans will play Duke, the top seed from the South Region, in the national semifinals Saturday in Indianapolis. Asked to explain Trice\u2019s jump in production , Izzo grinned and said, \u201cThe bigger the game, the more often you want the ball in Travis\u2019s hands.\u201d When his two free throws dropped with 10 seconds left Sunday for his 16th and 17th points, Trice allowed himself a small smile. But when the game ended, he collapsed to the floor. \u201cThat\u2019s the first time I\u2019ve ever seen Travis cry,\u201d said Dawson, who has been his teammate for many seasons. Julie Trice said: \u201cThat wasn\u2019t like him. But I was kind of happy to see it. I was saying, \u2018Let it go, baby.\u2019 \u201d As he lay on the court, Trice was absolutely still again.", "sentence_answer": " Asked to explain Trice\u2019s jump in production , Izzo grinned and said, \u201cThe bigger the game, the more often you want the ball in Travis\u2019s hands.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d7009c6c8e4820a9b66b2d1"} +{"question": "Who is the lawyer for Prisoner's legal Services?", "paragraph": "Indeed, it is prison employees who have been implicated: One has pleaded guilty to aiding the escape; another faces criminal charges; nine officers have been suspended; and the leadership of the prison, in Dannemora, has been removed. More than 60 inmates have filed complaints with Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services of New York, an organization that assists indigent prisoners. And 10 members of an inmate council at Clinton signed a letter last month to state corrections officials making similar allegations. \u201cWe have been daily getting complaints along these lines from around the state,\u201d said Michael Cassidy, a lawyer for Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services.", "answer": "Michael Cassidy", "sentence": "\u201cWe have been daily getting complaints along these lines from around the state,\u201d said Michael Cassidy , a lawyer for Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services.", "paragraph_sentence": "Indeed, it is prison employees who have been implicated: One has pleaded guilty to aiding the escape; another faces criminal charges; nine officers have been suspended; and the leadership of the prison, in Dannemora, has been removed. More than 60 inmates have filed complaints with Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services of New York, an organization that assists indigent prisoners. And 10 members of an inmate council at Clinton signed a letter last month to state corrections officials making similar allegations. \u201cWe have been daily getting complaints along these lines from around the state,\u201d said Michael Cassidy , a lawyer for Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services. ", "paragraph_answer": "Indeed, it is prison employees who have been implicated: One has pleaded guilty to aiding the escape; another faces criminal charges; nine officers have been suspended; and the leadership of the prison, in Dannemora, has been removed. More than 60 inmates have filed complaints with Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services of New York, an organization that assists indigent prisoners. And 10 members of an inmate council at Clinton signed a letter last month to state corrections officials making similar allegations. \u201cWe have been daily getting complaints along these lines from around the state,\u201d said Michael Cassidy , a lawyer for Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe have been daily getting complaints along these lines from around the state,\u201d said Michael Cassidy , a lawyer for Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services.", "paragraph_id": "5d7078fdc8e4820a9b66f2e3"} +{"question": "what titles does Arizona hold?", "paragraph": "Texas Southern\u2019s Madarious Gibbs led the Tigers with 15 points. But once behind minutes after tip-off, the Tigers never mustered a meaningful run to reverse Arizona\u2019s momentum. \u201cThey just overwhelmed us with length, size, athleticism in the first half,\u201d Texas Southern Coach Mike Davis said. Arizona, the Pacific-12 Conference regular-season and tournament champion, will meet No. 10 Ohio State on Saturday for a slot in the round of 16. Last year, Arizona was a No. 1 seed and lost in overtime to Wisconsin in the round of 8. But that team was without the 6-foot-9 forward Brandon Ashley, whose midseason foot injury kept him out of the postseason. Ashley, fully healthy, was the outstanding player in Arizona\u2019s romp through the Pacific-12 tournament last week. Against Texas Southern (22-13), he scored 14 points and grabbed 4 rebounds.", "answer": "Pacific-12 Conference regular-season and tournament champion", "sentence": "Arizona, the Pacific-12 Conference regular-season and tournament champion , will meet No. 10 Ohio State on Saturday for a slot in the round of 16.", "paragraph_sentence": "Texas Southern\u2019s Madarious Gibbs led the Tigers with 15 points. But once behind minutes after tip-off, the Tigers never mustered a meaningful run to reverse Arizona\u2019s momentum. \u201cThey just overwhelmed us with length, size, athleticism in the first half,\u201d Texas Southern Coach Mike Davis said. Arizona, the Pacific-12 Conference regular-season and tournament champion , will meet No. 10 Ohio State on Saturday for a slot in the round of 16. Last year, Arizona was a No. 1 seed and lost in overtime to Wisconsin in the round of 8. But that team was without the 6-foot-9 forward Brandon Ashley, whose midseason foot injury kept him out of the postseason. Ashley, fully healthy, was the outstanding player in Arizona\u2019s romp through the Pacific-12 tournament last week. Against Texas Southern (22-13), he scored 14 points and grabbed 4 rebounds.", "paragraph_answer": "Texas Southern\u2019s Madarious Gibbs led the Tigers with 15 points. But once behind minutes after tip-off, the Tigers never mustered a meaningful run to reverse Arizona\u2019s momentum. \u201cThey just overwhelmed us with length, size, athleticism in the first half,\u201d Texas Southern Coach Mike Davis said. Arizona, the Pacific-12 Conference regular-season and tournament champion , will meet No. 10 Ohio State on Saturday for a slot in the round of 16. Last year, Arizona was a No. 1 seed and lost in overtime to Wisconsin in the round of 8. But that team was without the 6-foot-9 forward Brandon Ashley, whose midseason foot injury kept him out of the postseason. Ashley, fully healthy, was the outstanding player in Arizona\u2019s romp through the Pacific-12 tournament last week. Against Texas Southern (22-13), he scored 14 points and grabbed 4 rebounds.", "sentence_answer": "Arizona, the Pacific-12 Conference regular-season and tournament champion , will meet No. 10 Ohio State on Saturday for a slot in the round of 16.", "paragraph_id": "5d702784c8e4820a9b66d54c"} +{"question": "What did Harris say when people applauded Oyelowo's name?", "paragraph": "This year, in addition to Ms. Arquette\u2019s speech, the question of race in Hollywood was addressed with both humor \u2014 in his opening monologue, Mr. Harris made a barbed allusion to the lack of diversity among the Academy by saying, \u201cTonight we honor Hollywood\u2019s best and whitest, sorry, brightest\u201d \u2014 and emotion. The latter came at the hands of actors, musicians and others who wanted to express indignation that the director of \u201cSelma,\u201d Ava DuVernay, wasn\u2019t nominated and neither was David Oyelowo, who played the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. When the audience applauded Mr. Oyelowo, who participated in a bit with Mr. Harris, the host said with a smirk, \u201cOh sure, now you like him.\u201d", "answer": "Oh sure, now you like him", "sentence": "The latter came at the hands of actors, musicians and others who wanted to express indignation that the director of \u201cSelma,\u201d Ava DuVernay, wasn\u2019t nominated and neither was David Oyelowo, who played the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. When the audience applauded Mr. Oyelowo, who participated in a bit with Mr. Harris, the host said with a smirk, \u201c Oh sure, now you like him .", "paragraph_sentence": "This year, in addition to Ms. Arquette\u2019s speech, the question of race in Hollywood was addressed with both humor \u2014 in his opening monologue, Mr. Harris made a barbed allusion to the lack of diversity among the Academy by saying, \u201cTonight we honor Hollywood\u2019s best and whitest, sorry, brightest\u201d \u2014 and emotion. The latter came at the hands of actors, musicians and others who wanted to express indignation that the director of \u201cSelma,\u201d Ava DuVernay, wasn\u2019t nominated and neither was David Oyelowo, who played the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. When the audience applauded Mr. Oyelowo, who participated in a bit with Mr. Harris, the host said with a smirk, \u201c Oh sure, now you like him . \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "This year, in addition to Ms. Arquette\u2019s speech, the question of race in Hollywood was addressed with both humor \u2014 in his opening monologue, Mr. Harris made a barbed allusion to the lack of diversity among the Academy by saying, \u201cTonight we honor Hollywood\u2019s best and whitest, sorry, brightest\u201d \u2014 and emotion. The latter came at the hands of actors, musicians and others who wanted to express indignation that the director of \u201cSelma,\u201d Ava DuVernay, wasn\u2019t nominated and neither was David Oyelowo, who played the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. When the audience applauded Mr. Oyelowo, who participated in a bit with Mr. Harris, the host said with a smirk, \u201c Oh sure, now you like him .\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The latter came at the hands of actors, musicians and others who wanted to express indignation that the director of \u201cSelma,\u201d Ava DuVernay, wasn\u2019t nominated and neither was David Oyelowo, who played the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. When the audience applauded Mr. Oyelowo, who participated in a bit with Mr. Harris, the host said with a smirk, \u201c Oh sure, now you like him .", "paragraph_id": "5d700dc2c8e4820a9b66b962"} +{"question": "Where is Kid Comet from?", "paragraph": "Her decision to quit the tights-and-cape existence and take up a normal job naturally causes a fight for leadership among the remaining superheroes: El Fuego (Andrew Call), a short-order cook from Bay Ridge who now has the ability to shoot fire; Blue Nixie (Grace McLean), a former marine biologist from Brighton Beach, who can control the tides; Kid Comet (Gerard Canonico), a messenger from Dumbo transformed into the fastest man living (\u201cI finish my commute just as I begin it,\u201d he sings); Captain Clear, a file clerk who\u2019s now completely invisible (we just hear his voice); and Avenging Angelo (Nick Cordero), an unemployed gamer from Bensonhurst whose rather modest (if hilarious) gift is being able to locate empty parking spots.", "answer": "Dumbo", "sentence": "El Fuego (Andrew Call), a short-order cook from Bay Ridge who now has the ability to shoot fire; Blue Nixie (Grace McLean), a former marine biologist from Brighton Beach, who can control the tides; Kid Comet (Gerard Canonico), a messenger from Dumbo transformed into the fastest man living (\u201cI finish my commute just as I begin it,\u201d he sings); Captain Clear, a file clerk who\u2019s now completely invisible (we just hear his voice); and Avenging Angelo (Nick Cordero), an unemployed gamer from Bensonhurst whose rather modest (if hilarious) gift is being able to locate empty parking spots.", "paragraph_sentence": "Her decision to quit the tights-and-cape existence and take up a normal job naturally causes a fight for leadership among the remaining superheroes: El Fuego (Andrew Call), a short-order cook from Bay Ridge who now has the ability to shoot fire; Blue Nixie (Grace McLean), a former marine biologist from Brighton Beach, who can control the tides; Kid Comet (Gerard Canonico), a messenger from Dumbo transformed into the fastest man living (\u201cI finish my commute just as I begin it,\u201d he sings); Captain Clear, a file clerk who\u2019s now completely invisible (we just hear his voice); and Avenging Angelo (Nick Cordero), an unemployed gamer from Bensonhurst whose rather modest (if hilarious) gift is being able to locate empty parking spots. ", "paragraph_answer": "Her decision to quit the tights-and-cape existence and take up a normal job naturally causes a fight for leadership among the remaining superheroes: El Fuego (Andrew Call), a short-order cook from Bay Ridge who now has the ability to shoot fire; Blue Nixie (Grace McLean), a former marine biologist from Brighton Beach, who can control the tides; Kid Comet (Gerard Canonico), a messenger from Dumbo transformed into the fastest man living (\u201cI finish my commute just as I begin it,\u201d he sings); Captain Clear, a file clerk who\u2019s now completely invisible (we just hear his voice); and Avenging Angelo (Nick Cordero), an unemployed gamer from Bensonhurst whose rather modest (if hilarious) gift is being able to locate empty parking spots.", "sentence_answer": "El Fuego (Andrew Call), a short-order cook from Bay Ridge who now has the ability to shoot fire; Blue Nixie (Grace McLean), a former marine biologist from Brighton Beach, who can control the tides; Kid Comet (Gerard Canonico), a messenger from Dumbo transformed into the fastest man living (\u201cI finish my commute just as I begin it,\u201d he sings); Captain Clear, a file clerk who\u2019s now completely invisible (we just hear his voice); and Avenging Angelo (Nick Cordero), an unemployed gamer from Bensonhurst whose rather modest (if hilarious) gift is being able to locate empty parking spots.", "paragraph_id": "5d700c41c8e4820a9b66b72d"} +{"question": "Who was Mr. Shalabi's lawyer?", "paragraph": "Mr. Shalabi\u2019s lawyer, Tariq Bargouth, said the basis for the conviction and punishment never established that Mr. Shalabi\u2019s posts had encouraged any specific militant attack. There have been a series of so-called lone-wolf attacks in Jerusalem, in which Palestinian men, without any political backing or leadership, attack Israeli civilians or security officers. Avner Pinchuk, a lawyer with the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, which follows freedom of speech cases, said it was the first time he had heard that \u201cincitement to terror in social media concluded in jail.\u201d Majd Kayyal, the media coordinator for Adalah, an organization that pursues the legal rights of Palestinians in Israel, accused security services of a double standard, saying they had not cracked down on Israeli Jews for incitement to violence online. He said his organization had tracked officials from the police and ambulance services who had encouraged violence against Palestinians on their Facebook pages, without punishment. Mr. Kayyal said he also feared government officials were using the word \u201cincitement\u201d too loosely, saying they had to \u201cprove a relation between what was written, and an incident that happened in reality.\u201d", "answer": "Tariq Bargouth", "sentence": "Mr. Shalabi\u2019s lawyer, Tariq Bargouth , said the basis for the conviction and punishment never established that Mr. Shalabi\u2019s posts had encouraged any specific militant attack.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Shalabi\u2019s lawyer, Tariq Bargouth , said the basis for the conviction and punishment never established that Mr. Shalabi\u2019s posts had encouraged any specific militant attack. There have been a series of so-called lone-wolf attacks in Jerusalem, in which Palestinian men, without any political backing or leadership, attack Israeli civilians or security officers. Avner Pinchuk, a lawyer with the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, which follows freedom of speech cases, said it was the first time he had heard that \u201cincitement to terror in social media concluded in jail.\u201d Majd Kayyal, the media coordinator for Adalah, an organization that pursues the legal rights of Palestinians in Israel, accused security services of a double standard, saying they had not cracked down on Israeli Jews for incitement to violence online. He said his organization had tracked officials from the police and ambulance services who had encouraged violence against Palestinians on their Facebook pages, without punishment. Mr. Kayyal said he also feared government officials were using the word \u201cincitement\u201d too loosely, saying they had to \u201cprove a relation between what was written, and an incident that happened in reality.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Shalabi\u2019s lawyer, Tariq Bargouth , said the basis for the conviction and punishment never established that Mr. Shalabi\u2019s posts had encouraged any specific militant attack. There have been a series of so-called lone-wolf attacks in Jerusalem, in which Palestinian men, without any political backing or leadership, attack Israeli civilians or security officers. Avner Pinchuk, a lawyer with the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, which follows freedom of speech cases, said it was the first time he had heard that \u201cincitement to terror in social media concluded in jail.\u201d Majd Kayyal, the media coordinator for Adalah, an organization that pursues the legal rights of Palestinians in Israel, accused security services of a double standard, saying they had not cracked down on Israeli Jews for incitement to violence online. He said his organization had tracked officials from the police and ambulance services who had encouraged violence against Palestinians on their Facebook pages, without punishment. Mr. Kayyal said he also feared government officials were using the word \u201cincitement\u201d too loosely, saying they had to \u201cprove a relation between what was written, and an incident that happened in reality.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Shalabi\u2019s lawyer, Tariq Bargouth , said the basis for the conviction and punishment never established that Mr. Shalabi\u2019s posts had encouraged any specific militant attack.", "paragraph_id": "5d7012fcc8e4820a9b66bf8d"} +{"question": "Which political party does Nita M. Lowey belong to?", "paragraph": "Democratic members were no less critical. Representative Nita M. Lowey of New York, the ranking Democrat on the committee, urged the agency\u2019s director, Joseph P. Clancy, who took over last month, to demand discipline. She repeatedly pressed him to fire the agents in question, saying their actions proved they were \u201cnot the kind of person\u201d that should be employed to protect the president. Under aggressive questioning, Mr. Clancy cautioned that some of the facts about the March 4 accident had not been verified. Contrary to initial reports of a dramatic crash into a White House barricade, Mr. Clancy said, a surveillance video showed the agents\u2019 car slowly nudging an orange construction barrel out of the way so it could move forward.", "answer": "Democrat", "sentence": "Democrat ic members were no less critical.", "paragraph_sentence": " Democrat ic members were no less critical. Representative Nita M. Lowey of New York, the ranking Democrat on the committee, urged the agency\u2019s director, Joseph P. Clancy, who took over last month, to demand discipline. She repeatedly pressed him to fire the agents in question, saying their actions proved they were \u201cnot the kind of person\u201d that should be employed to protect the president. Under aggressive questioning, Mr. Clancy cautioned that some of the facts about the March 4 accident had not been verified. Contrary to initial reports of a dramatic crash into a White House barricade, Mr. Clancy said, a surveillance video showed the agents\u2019 car slowly nudging an orange construction barrel out of the way so it could move forward.", "paragraph_answer": " Democrat ic members were no less critical. Representative Nita M. Lowey of New York, the ranking Democrat on the committee, urged the agency\u2019s director, Joseph P. Clancy, who took over last month, to demand discipline. She repeatedly pressed him to fire the agents in question, saying their actions proved they were \u201cnot the kind of person\u201d that should be employed to protect the president. Under aggressive questioning, Mr. Clancy cautioned that some of the facts about the March 4 accident had not been verified. Contrary to initial reports of a dramatic crash into a White House barricade, Mr. Clancy said, a surveillance video showed the agents\u2019 car slowly nudging an orange construction barrel out of the way so it could move forward.", "sentence_answer": " Democrat ic members were no less critical.", "paragraph_id": "5d701c74c8e4820a9b66c7c6"} +{"question": "What new employee benefit did Netflix recently introduce?", "paragraph": "\u201cWhat I worry about is how unidimensional computer science students have become as a result of the rigor of the curriculum,\u201d Mr. Sacca said. \u201cThey don\u2019t get to study abroad. They don\u2019t have summer jobs. They don\u2019t wait on tables \u2014 what you get is a 23-year-old engineer at Google yelling at a chef because they ran out of pheasant that day. They don\u2019t understand how people get by in the developing worlds. They don\u2019t know anyone trying to make payday loan payments. I really worry about how homogeneous our culture is getting in Silicon Valley because of the lack of experience.\u201d Some Silicon Valley chiefs are trying to steer the culture from the top. Netflix\u2019s chief executive and one of its founders, Reed Hastings, says he takes six weeks of vacation a year and hopes the company\u2019s leave policies will inspire loyalty and trust with his workers. The company, which has long had unlimited vacation for employees, recently introduced unlimited parental leave.", "answer": "unlimited parental leave", "sentence": "The company, which has long had unlimited vacation for employees, recently introduced unlimited parental leave .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWhat I worry about is how unidimensional computer science students have become as a result of the rigor of the curriculum,\u201d Mr. Sacca said. \u201cThey don\u2019t get to study abroad. They don\u2019t have summer jobs. They don\u2019t wait on tables \u2014 what you get is a 23-year-old engineer at Google yelling at a chef because they ran out of pheasant that day. They don\u2019t understand how people get by in the developing worlds. They don\u2019t know anyone trying to make payday loan payments. I really worry about how homogeneous our culture is getting in Silicon Valley because of the lack of experience.\u201d Some Silicon Valley chiefs are trying to steer the culture from the top. Netflix\u2019s chief executive and one of its founders, Reed Hastings, says he takes six weeks of vacation a year and hopes the company\u2019s leave policies will inspire loyalty and trust with his workers. The company, which has long had unlimited vacation for employees, recently introduced unlimited parental leave . ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWhat I worry about is how unidimensional computer science students have become as a result of the rigor of the curriculum,\u201d Mr. Sacca said. \u201cThey don\u2019t get to study abroad. They don\u2019t have summer jobs. They don\u2019t wait on tables \u2014 what you get is a 23-year-old engineer at Google yelling at a chef because they ran out of pheasant that day. They don\u2019t understand how people get by in the developing worlds. They don\u2019t know anyone trying to make payday loan payments. I really worry about how homogeneous our culture is getting in Silicon Valley because of the lack of experience.\u201d Some Silicon Valley chiefs are trying to steer the culture from the top. Netflix\u2019s chief executive and one of its founders, Reed Hastings, says he takes six weeks of vacation a year and hopes the company\u2019s leave policies will inspire loyalty and trust with his workers. The company, which has long had unlimited vacation for employees, recently introduced unlimited parental leave .", "sentence_answer": "The company, which has long had unlimited vacation for employees, recently introduced unlimited parental leave .", "paragraph_id": "5d7035f8c8e4820a9b66dfdf"} +{"question": "Who testified that Mr. Hincapie was with them at the moment the robbery happened?", "paragraph": "But Mr. Hincapie now maintains he gave a false confession after a detective beat him. He testified in February he was walking down an escalator to the platform when the murder occurred. He was looking for a friend and had tarried at the turnstiles to flirt with some girls, he said. His story was buttressed by the testimony of Luis Montero, who testified he recalled Mr. Hincapie\u2019s being with him at the turnstiles just before the commotion erupted on the platform below. The police arrested Mr. Montero on suspicion of taking part in the mugging as well, but later dropped charges against him. He never confessed. Another man convicted in the attack, Anthony Anderson, took the stand and testified he did not remember Mr. Hincapie\u2019s being on the platform when another teenager, Yul Gary Morales, stabbed Mr. Watkins in the chest. Ms. Santana, a 45-year-old hospital worker, also corroborated Mr. Hincapie\u2019s claim. Having read about the hearing, she voluntarily came forward this year and swore on the stand she had seen the murder but had not seen Mr. Hincapie among the men attacking the Watkins family.", "answer": "Luis Montero", "sentence": "His story was buttressed by the testimony of Luis Montero , who testified he recalled Mr. Hincapie\u2019s being with him at the turnstiles just before the commotion erupted on the platform below.", "paragraph_sentence": "But Mr. Hincapie now maintains he gave a false confession after a detective beat him. He testified in February he was walking down an escalator to the platform when the murder occurred. He was looking for a friend and had tarried at the turnstiles to flirt with some girls, he said. His story was buttressed by the testimony of Luis Montero , who testified he recalled Mr. Hincapie\u2019s being with him at the turnstiles just before the commotion erupted on the platform below. The police arrested Mr. Montero on suspicion of taking part in the mugging as well, but later dropped charges against him. He never confessed. Another man convicted in the attack, Anthony Anderson, took the stand and testified he did not remember Mr. Hincapie\u2019s being on the platform when another teenager, Yul Gary Morales, stabbed Mr. Watkins in the chest. Ms. Santana, a 45-year-old hospital worker, also corroborated Mr. Hincapie\u2019s claim. Having read about the hearing, she voluntarily came forward this year and swore on the stand she had seen the murder but had not seen Mr. Hincapie among the men attacking the Watkins family.", "paragraph_answer": "But Mr. Hincapie now maintains he gave a false confession after a detective beat him. He testified in February he was walking down an escalator to the platform when the murder occurred. He was looking for a friend and had tarried at the turnstiles to flirt with some girls, he said. His story was buttressed by the testimony of Luis Montero , who testified he recalled Mr. Hincapie\u2019s being with him at the turnstiles just before the commotion erupted on the platform below. The police arrested Mr. Montero on suspicion of taking part in the mugging as well, but later dropped charges against him. He never confessed. Another man convicted in the attack, Anthony Anderson, took the stand and testified he did not remember Mr. Hincapie\u2019s being on the platform when another teenager, Yul Gary Morales, stabbed Mr. Watkins in the chest. Ms. Santana, a 45-year-old hospital worker, also corroborated Mr. Hincapie\u2019s claim. Having read about the hearing, she voluntarily came forward this year and swore on the stand she had seen the murder but had not seen Mr. Hincapie among the men attacking the Watkins family.", "sentence_answer": "His story was buttressed by the testimony of Luis Montero , who testified he recalled Mr. Hincapie\u2019s being with him at the turnstiles just before the commotion erupted on the platform below.", "paragraph_id": "5d70253cc8e4820a9b66d1ae"} +{"question": "What is the phone number for the Bushnell Center for the Performing Arts?", "paragraph": "EAST HADDAM Goodspeed Opera House \u201cLa Cage aux Folles,\u201d musical by Harvey Fierstein and Jerry Herman. June 26 through Sept. 6. $28 to $75. Goodspeed Opera House, 6 Main Street. goodspeed.org; 860-873-8668. HARTFORD Bushnell Center for the Performing Arts \u201cKinky Boots,\u201d musical by Cyndi Lauper and Harvey Fierstein. June 23 through 28. $21 to $82. Bushnell Center for the Performing Arts, 166 Capitol Avenue. 860-987-5900; bushnell.org. HARTFORD TheaterWorks \u201cGood People,\u201d drama by David Lindsay-Abaire. Through June 28. $15 to $65. TheaterWorks, 233 Pearl Street. theaterworkshartford.org; 860-527-7838.", "answer": "860-987-5900", "sentence": "860-987-5900 ; bushnell.org.", "paragraph_sentence": "EAST HADDAM Goodspeed Opera House \u201cLa Cage aux Folles,\u201d musical by Harvey Fierstein and Jerry Herman. June 26 through Sept. 6. $28 to $75. Goodspeed Opera House, 6 Main Street. goodspeed.org; 860-873-8668. HARTFORD Bushnell Center for the Performing Arts \u201cKinky Boots,\u201d musical by Cyndi Lauper and Harvey Fierstein. June 23 through 28. $21 to $82. Bushnell Center for the Performing Arts, 166 Capitol Avenue. 860-987-5900 ; bushnell.org. HARTFORD TheaterWorks \u201cGood People,\u201d drama by David Lindsay-Abaire. Through June 28. $15 to $65. TheaterWorks, 233 Pearl Street. theaterworkshartford.org; 860-527-7838.", "paragraph_answer": "EAST HADDAM Goodspeed Opera House \u201cLa Cage aux Folles,\u201d musical by Harvey Fierstein and Jerry Herman. June 26 through Sept. 6. $28 to $75. Goodspeed Opera House, 6 Main Street. goodspeed.org; 860-873-8668. HARTFORD Bushnell Center for the Performing Arts \u201cKinky Boots,\u201d musical by Cyndi Lauper and Harvey Fierstein. June 23 through 28. $21 to $82. Bushnell Center for the Performing Arts, 166 Capitol Avenue. 860-987-5900 ; bushnell.org. HARTFORD TheaterWorks \u201cGood People,\u201d drama by David Lindsay-Abaire. Through June 28. $15 to $65. TheaterWorks, 233 Pearl Street. theaterworkshartford.org; 860-527-7838.", "sentence_answer": " 860-987-5900 ; bushnell.org.", "paragraph_id": "5d70914dc8e4820a9b66f59a"} +{"question": "What are the names of the mother and daughter that survived?", "paragraph": "Ms. Sassoon and Siporah sustained burns and smoke inhalation and were in critical condition on Sunday. Ms. Sassoon was at Jacobi Medical Center in the Bronx. Siporah was at Staten Island University Hospital North. Speaking of his wife and daughter, Mr. Sassoon asked the community, \u201cGive us the strength to continue.\u201d The funeral subsided, sending the Sassoon family into a period of mourning whose end was not in sight. In the absence of words, Mr. Sassoon said, the only antidote was faith. \u201cThere\u2019s nothing to say,\u201d he said. \u201cThere\u2019s nothing to say. There\u2019s only one way to survive this: complete and utter, total surrender. Surrender. That\u2019s it.\u201d", "answer": "Ms. Sassoon and Siporah", "sentence": "Ms. Sassoon and Siporah sustained burns and smoke inhalation and were in critical condition on Sunday.", "paragraph_sentence": " Ms. Sassoon and Siporah sustained burns and smoke inhalation and were in critical condition on Sunday. Ms. Sassoon was at Jacobi Medical Center in the Bronx. Siporah was at Staten Island University Hospital North. Speaking of his wife and daughter, Mr. Sassoon asked the community, \u201cGive us the strength to continue.\u201d The funeral subsided, sending the Sassoon family into a period of mourning whose end was not in sight. In the absence of words, Mr. Sassoon said, the only antidote was faith. \u201cThere\u2019s nothing to say,\u201d he said. \u201cThere\u2019s nothing to say. There\u2019s only one way to survive this: complete and utter, total surrender. Surrender. That\u2019s it.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": " Ms. Sassoon and Siporah sustained burns and smoke inhalation and were in critical condition on Sunday. Ms. Sassoon was at Jacobi Medical Center in the Bronx. Siporah was at Staten Island University Hospital North. Speaking of his wife and daughter, Mr. Sassoon asked the community, \u201cGive us the strength to continue.\u201d The funeral subsided, sending the Sassoon family into a period of mourning whose end was not in sight. In the absence of words, Mr. Sassoon said, the only antidote was faith. \u201cThere\u2019s nothing to say,\u201d he said. \u201cThere\u2019s nothing to say. There\u2019s only one way to survive this: complete and utter, total surrender. Surrender. That\u2019s it.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Ms. Sassoon and Siporah sustained burns and smoke inhalation and were in critical condition on Sunday.", "paragraph_id": "5d7009d1c8e4820a9b66b2e3"} +{"question": "Who is the confession address?", "paragraph": "The great achievement of \u201cThe Sympathizer\u201d is that it gives the Vietnamese a voice and demands that we pay attention. Until now, it\u2019s been largely a one-sided conversation \u2014 or at least that\u2019s how it seems in American popular culture. As the narrator explains, \u201cthis was the first war where the losers would write history instead of the victors,\u201d and so it is that we\u2019ve heard about the Vietnam War mostly from the point of view of American soldiers, American politicians and American journalists. We\u2019ve never had a story quite like this one before. Mr. Nguyen, who teaches English and American studies at the University of Southern California, was born in Vietnam but raised in the United States. He is the author of an academic book, \u201cRace and Resistance.\u201d How exciting that he also writes fiction, because he has a great deal to say and a knowing, playful, deeply intelligent voice. His novel is a spy thriller, a philosophical exploration, a coming-of-age tale, the story of what it\u2019s like to be an immigrant, to be part-Asian, to be the illegitimate child of a forbidden liaison. It\u2019s about being forced to hide yourself under so many layers that you\u2019re not sure who you are. The story is framed as a confession addressed to a figure called the Commandant, who, it gradually becomes clear, is keeping the captain prisoner in some unknown location. (We won\u2019t learn where or why until the book\u2019s shattering conclusion.) But the captain\u2019s account is less an appeal for absolution than an attempt to explain what he did and the reasons behind it. It also allows him to be, as he says, an anthropologist of Vietnamese and American culture. The story flits around, intermingling past and present, scenes from childhood with scenes from pre-fall Saigon with scenes from contemporary America, conversations spilling together, so it\u2019s necessary to read carefully to orient yourself. The tone is set in the very first sentence. \u201cI am a spy, a sleeper, a spook, a man of two faces,\u201d the narrator confesses. \u201cI am also a man of two minds.\u201d That\u2019s a point Mr. Nguyen will return to over and over again \u2014 the blessing and the curse of finding subtlety where others see certainty. As children, the narrator and two other boys, Bon and Man, swore blood brotherhood and have remained fierce friends. Bon is pro-American, a veteran of the C.I.A.-sponsored Phoenix program of assassination; he leaves Saigon with the narrator on that plane. Man is a Communist and the narrator\u2019s handler; he stays behind. Once in Los Angeles, the narrator takes a job with his former university professor and begins a sensual affair with an older Japanese-American woman. Students of Graham Greene, whose spare, precise writing contrasts with Mr. Nguyen\u2019s exuberant, expansive and sometimes repetitious style, will recognize in her one of Mr. Nguyen\u2019s many sly ripostes to and upendings of \u201cThe Quiet American,\u201d the subject of the narrator\u2019s thesis. While the love interest in that book is an annoyingly passive cipher, the narrator\u2019s girlfriend is a free-love feminist with trenchant views on Asian stereotyping.", "answer": "Phoenix", "sentence": "Bon is pro-American, a veteran of the C.I.A.-sponsored Phoenix program of assassination; he leaves Saigon with the narrator on that plane.", "paragraph_sentence": "The great achievement of \u201cThe Sympathizer\u201d is that it gives the Vietnamese a voice and demands that we pay attention. Until now, it\u2019s been largely a one-sided conversation \u2014 or at least that\u2019s how it seems in American popular culture. As the narrator explains, \u201cthis was the first war where the losers would write history instead of the victors,\u201d and so it is that we\u2019ve heard about the Vietnam War mostly from the point of view of American soldiers, American politicians and American journalists. We\u2019ve never had a story quite like this one before. Mr. Nguyen, who teaches English and American studies at the University of Southern California, was born in Vietnam but raised in the United States. He is the author of an academic book, \u201cRace and Resistance.\u201d How exciting that he also writes fiction, because he has a great deal to say and a knowing, playful, deeply intelligent voice. His novel is a spy thriller, a philosophical exploration, a coming-of-age tale, the story of what it\u2019s like to be an immigrant, to be part-Asian, to be the illegitimate child of a forbidden liaison. It\u2019s about being forced to hide yourself under so many layers that you\u2019re not sure who you are. The story is framed as a confession addressed to a figure called the Commandant, who, it gradually becomes clear, is keeping the captain prisoner in some unknown location. (We won\u2019t learn where or why until the book\u2019s shattering conclusion.) But the captain\u2019s account is less an appeal for absolution than an attempt to explain what he did and the reasons behind it. It also allows him to be, as he says, an anthropologist of Vietnamese and American culture. The story flits around, intermingling past and present, scenes from childhood with scenes from pre-fall Saigon with scenes from contemporary America, conversations spilling together, so it\u2019s necessary to read carefully to orient yourself. The tone is set in the very first sentence. \u201cI am a spy, a sleeper, a spook, a man of two faces,\u201d the narrator confesses. \u201cI am also a man of two minds.\u201d That\u2019s a point Mr. Nguyen will return to over and over again \u2014 the blessing and the curse of finding subtlety where others see certainty. As children, the narrator and two other boys, Bon and Man, swore blood brotherhood and have remained fierce friends. Bon is pro-American, a veteran of the C.I.A.-sponsored Phoenix program of assassination; he leaves Saigon with the narrator on that plane. Man is a Communist and the narrator\u2019s handler; he stays behind. Once in Los Angeles, the narrator takes a job with his former university professor and begins a sensual affair with an older Japanese-American woman. Students of Graham Greene, whose spare, precise writing contrasts with Mr. Nguyen\u2019s exuberant, expansive and sometimes repetitious style, will recognize in her one of Mr. Nguyen\u2019s many sly ripostes to and upendings of \u201cThe Quiet American,\u201d the subject of the narrator\u2019s thesis. While the love interest in that book is an annoyingly passive cipher, the narrator\u2019s girlfriend is a free-love feminist with trenchant views on Asian stereotyping.", "paragraph_answer": "The great achievement of \u201cThe Sympathizer\u201d is that it gives the Vietnamese a voice and demands that we pay attention. Until now, it\u2019s been largely a one-sided conversation \u2014 or at least that\u2019s how it seems in American popular culture. As the narrator explains, \u201cthis was the first war where the losers would write history instead of the victors,\u201d and so it is that we\u2019ve heard about the Vietnam War mostly from the point of view of American soldiers, American politicians and American journalists. We\u2019ve never had a story quite like this one before. Mr. Nguyen, who teaches English and American studies at the University of Southern California, was born in Vietnam but raised in the United States. He is the author of an academic book, \u201cRace and Resistance.\u201d How exciting that he also writes fiction, because he has a great deal to say and a knowing, playful, deeply intelligent voice. His novel is a spy thriller, a philosophical exploration, a coming-of-age tale, the story of what it\u2019s like to be an immigrant, to be part-Asian, to be the illegitimate child of a forbidden liaison. It\u2019s about being forced to hide yourself under so many layers that you\u2019re not sure who you are. The story is framed as a confession addressed to a figure called the Commandant, who, it gradually becomes clear, is keeping the captain prisoner in some unknown location. (We won\u2019t learn where or why until the book\u2019s shattering conclusion.) But the captain\u2019s account is less an appeal for absolution than an attempt to explain what he did and the reasons behind it. It also allows him to be, as he says, an anthropologist of Vietnamese and American culture. The story flits around, intermingling past and present, scenes from childhood with scenes from pre-fall Saigon with scenes from contemporary America, conversations spilling together, so it\u2019s necessary to read carefully to orient yourself. The tone is set in the very first sentence. \u201cI am a spy, a sleeper, a spook, a man of two faces,\u201d the narrator confesses. \u201cI am also a man of two minds.\u201d That\u2019s a point Mr. Nguyen will return to over and over again \u2014 the blessing and the curse of finding subtlety where others see certainty. As children, the narrator and two other boys, Bon and Man, swore blood brotherhood and have remained fierce friends. Bon is pro-American, a veteran of the C.I.A.-sponsored Phoenix program of assassination; he leaves Saigon with the narrator on that plane. Man is a Communist and the narrator\u2019s handler; he stays behind. Once in Los Angeles, the narrator takes a job with his former university professor and begins a sensual affair with an older Japanese-American woman. Students of Graham Greene, whose spare, precise writing contrasts with Mr. Nguyen\u2019s exuberant, expansive and sometimes repetitious style, will recognize in her one of Mr. Nguyen\u2019s many sly ripostes to and upendings of \u201cThe Quiet American,\u201d the subject of the narrator\u2019s thesis. While the love interest in that book is an annoyingly passive cipher, the narrator\u2019s girlfriend is a free-love feminist with trenchant views on Asian stereotyping.", "sentence_answer": "Bon is pro-American, a veteran of the C.I.A.-sponsored Phoenix program of assassination; he leaves Saigon with the narrator on that plane.", "paragraph_id": "5d702afcc8e4820a9b66d876"} +{"question": "Why was Ms. Santana's testimony questioned?", "paragraph": "Prosecutors from the district attorney\u2019s office argued her testimony proved nothing. The crime scene was chaotic, and Ms. Santana had started to run as soon as the violence began; she might not have spotted everyone involved. Eugene R. Hurley III, a senior Manhattan prosecutor, said in his closing argument that Mr. Hincapie\u2019s story made no sense, because the escalator he claimed to have run down was going up at the time. He also emphasized that three other men convicted with Mr. Hincapie \u2014 Pascal Carpenter, Emiliano Fernandez and Ricardo Nova \u2014 all told the police he had participated in the robbery.", "answer": "The crime scene was chaotic,", "sentence": "The crime scene was chaotic, and Ms. Santana had started to run as soon as the violence began; she might not have spotted everyone involved.", "paragraph_sentence": "Prosecutors from the district attorney\u2019s office argued her testimony proved nothing. The crime scene was chaotic, and Ms. Santana had started to run as soon as the violence began; she might not have spotted everyone involved. Eugene R. Hurley III, a senior Manhattan prosecutor, said in his closing argument that Mr. Hincapie\u2019s story made no sense, because the escalator he claimed to have run down was going up at the time. He also emphasized that three other men convicted with Mr. Hincapie \u2014 Pascal Carpenter, Emiliano Fernandez and Ricardo Nova \u2014 all told the police he had participated in the robbery.", "paragraph_answer": "Prosecutors from the district attorney\u2019s office argued her testimony proved nothing. The crime scene was chaotic, and Ms. Santana had started to run as soon as the violence began; she might not have spotted everyone involved. Eugene R. Hurley III, a senior Manhattan prosecutor, said in his closing argument that Mr. Hincapie\u2019s story made no sense, because the escalator he claimed to have run down was going up at the time. He also emphasized that three other men convicted with Mr. Hincapie \u2014 Pascal Carpenter, Emiliano Fernandez and Ricardo Nova \u2014 all told the police he had participated in the robbery.", "sentence_answer": " The crime scene was chaotic, and Ms. Santana had started to run as soon as the violence began; she might not have spotted everyone involved.", "paragraph_id": "5d702693c8e4820a9b66d2f1"} +{"question": "Who was it that created the legal district of Peculier of Masham?", "paragraph": "Theakston\u2019s best bitter and XB were excellent, with more of that yeast aroma I\u2019d noticed at the Black Sheep. But the big surprise was the brewery\u2019s strong ale, Old Peculier, named after the Peculier of Masham, a legal district created by the Archbishop of York in the 12th century. Dark, plummy and mysteriously bitter, with 5.6 percent alcohol it was much stronger than many of the local beers, though still weaker than many American craft brews. After the two traditional breweries in Masham, I wanted to see how things were changing elsewhere in Yorkshire. After a night in the beautiful walled city of York and an afternoon in Tadcaster, Samuel Smith\u2019s hometown, I headed down to Sheffield, the South Yorkshire manufacturing city. Sheffield seemed to be in transition, not quite recovered from its industrial past, including the wartime bombing that had scarred it. But the town\u2019s two major universities gave it a youthful air, as did Sheffield\u2019s diverse list of bands and musicians, including Joe Cocker, the Human League, Pulp, Def Leppard and the Arctic Monkeys.", "answer": "the Archbishop of York", "sentence": "But the big surprise was the brewery\u2019s strong ale, Old Peculier, named after the Peculier of Masham, a legal district created by the Archbishop of York in the 12th century.", "paragraph_sentence": "Theakston\u2019s best bitter and XB were excellent, with more of that yeast aroma I\u2019d noticed at the Black Sheep. But the big surprise was the brewery\u2019s strong ale, Old Peculier, named after the Peculier of Masham, a legal district created by the Archbishop of York in the 12th century. Dark, plummy and mysteriously bitter, with 5.6 percent alcohol it was much stronger than many of the local beers, though still weaker than many American craft brews. After the two traditional breweries in Masham, I wanted to see how things were changing elsewhere in Yorkshire. After a night in the beautiful walled city of York and an afternoon in Tadcaster, Samuel Smith\u2019s hometown, I headed down to Sheffield, the South Yorkshire manufacturing city. Sheffield seemed to be in transition, not quite recovered from its industrial past, including the wartime bombing that had scarred it. But the town\u2019s two major universities gave it a youthful air, as did Sheffield\u2019s diverse list of bands and musicians, including Joe Cocker, the Human League, Pulp, Def Leppard and the Arctic Monkeys.", "paragraph_answer": "Theakston\u2019s best bitter and XB were excellent, with more of that yeast aroma I\u2019d noticed at the Black Sheep. But the big surprise was the brewery\u2019s strong ale, Old Peculier, named after the Peculier of Masham, a legal district created by the Archbishop of York in the 12th century. Dark, plummy and mysteriously bitter, with 5.6 percent alcohol it was much stronger than many of the local beers, though still weaker than many American craft brews. After the two traditional breweries in Masham, I wanted to see how things were changing elsewhere in Yorkshire. After a night in the beautiful walled city of York and an afternoon in Tadcaster, Samuel Smith\u2019s hometown, I headed down to Sheffield, the South Yorkshire manufacturing city. Sheffield seemed to be in transition, not quite recovered from its industrial past, including the wartime bombing that had scarred it. But the town\u2019s two major universities gave it a youthful air, as did Sheffield\u2019s diverse list of bands and musicians, including Joe Cocker, the Human League, Pulp, Def Leppard and the Arctic Monkeys.", "sentence_answer": "But the big surprise was the brewery\u2019s strong ale, Old Peculier, named after the Peculier of Masham, a legal district created by the Archbishop of York in the 12th century.", "paragraph_id": "5d703866c8e4820a9b66e11d"} +{"question": "When did the War in Afghanistan begin?", "paragraph": "Separately, Bernadette Meehan, a spokeswoman for the council, said, \u201cPresident Obama has not opened the door to anything larger than an embassy force after 2016.\u201d Mr. Eggers\u2019s comments are in line with what other officials say is being debated within the administration, even if Mr. Obama\u2019s focus is currently on what to do next year, not afterward. Like so many of the plans for Afghanistan laid out in Washington since the war\u2019s outset in 2001, realities on the ground appear to again be forcing American officials to consider revamping their strategy for ending the war. Peace talks appear to be a far-off possibility after a stretch in February and early March in which it appeared that the Taliban might be willing to meet with the Afghan government. So instead of talking about how to end the war, Afghan and American officials are preparing for violence to intensify as the snow melts in the high passes that separate the insurgents from their safe havens in Pakistan and what is known as the fighting season gets underway. Afghan forces, which have done the bulk of the fighting and dying over the past two years, are still very much a work in progress. They managed to keep the Taliban from making significant gains last summer only with help from the American-led coalition.", "answer": "2001", "sentence": "Like so many of the plans for Afghanistan laid out in Washington since the war\u2019s outset in 2001 , realities on the ground appear to again be forcing American officials to consider revamping their strategy for ending the war.", "paragraph_sentence": "Separately, Bernadette Meehan, a spokeswoman for the council, said, \u201cPresident Obama has not opened the door to anything larger than an embassy force after 2016.\u201d Mr. Eggers\u2019s comments are in line with what other officials say is being debated within the administration, even if Mr. Obama\u2019s focus is currently on what to do next year, not afterward. Like so many of the plans for Afghanistan laid out in Washington since the war\u2019s outset in 2001 , realities on the ground appear to again be forcing American officials to consider revamping their strategy for ending the war. Peace talks appear to be a far-off possibility after a stretch in February and early March in which it appeared that the Taliban might be willing to meet with the Afghan government. So instead of talking about how to end the war, Afghan and American officials are preparing for violence to intensify as the snow melts in the high passes that separate the insurgents from their safe havens in Pakistan and what is known as the fighting season gets underway. Afghan forces, which have done the bulk of the fighting and dying over the past two years, are still very much a work in progress. They managed to keep the Taliban from making significant gains last summer only with help from the American-led coalition.", "paragraph_answer": "Separately, Bernadette Meehan, a spokeswoman for the council, said, \u201cPresident Obama has not opened the door to anything larger than an embassy force after 2016.\u201d Mr. Eggers\u2019s comments are in line with what other officials say is being debated within the administration, even if Mr. Obama\u2019s focus is currently on what to do next year, not afterward. Like so many of the plans for Afghanistan laid out in Washington since the war\u2019s outset in 2001 , realities on the ground appear to again be forcing American officials to consider revamping their strategy for ending the war. Peace talks appear to be a far-off possibility after a stretch in February and early March in which it appeared that the Taliban might be willing to meet with the Afghan government. So instead of talking about how to end the war, Afghan and American officials are preparing for violence to intensify as the snow melts in the high passes that separate the insurgents from their safe havens in Pakistan and what is known as the fighting season gets underway. Afghan forces, which have done the bulk of the fighting and dying over the past two years, are still very much a work in progress. They managed to keep the Taliban from making significant gains last summer only with help from the American-led coalition.", "sentence_answer": "Like so many of the plans for Afghanistan laid out in Washington since the war\u2019s outset in 2001 , realities on the ground appear to again be forcing American officials to consider revamping their strategy for ending the war.", "paragraph_id": "5d7004c7c8e4820a9b66a807"} +{"question": "where did Dr. Pai go to school?", "paragraph": "At first blush, Dr. Pai\u2019s profile and career seem at odds with the stereotype that has long been affixed to midcentury graduates of Sweet Briar: as Southern belles (perhaps accompanied by their horses) polished to a high sheen for careers as wives, mothers and volunteers. Yet the Pink Bubble, as Sweet Briar women have long called their alma mater, has also nurtured generations of feisty professionals, many of them working in the sciences, who attended the school before the era of widespread coeducation at the college level. Since March, when the school\u2019s board suddenly said it would close the college because of dwindling enrollment and strapped finances, a campaign to save it has pursued legal and other actions with increasing gusto and success; last month, the Commonwealth of Virginia sued to keep the college open. Last week, a judge ruled that, for a period of 60 days, the board could not close the school using funds solicited for its operation.. The campaign #Save Sweet Briar has raised $1 million, and another $10 million has been pledged. Against this backdrop, the experiences of Sweet Briar\u2019s postwar graduates, who have been galvanized by the campaign and are reconnecting on Facebook, email and by phone, paint a vivid picture of an era marked by conflicting cultures: one that was still defined by hostess houses, white gloves and the \u201cring before spring\u201d doctrine that cast women\u2019s colleges as mere finishing schools, and one with a commitment to educating women for roles far from the home.", "answer": "Sweet Briar", "sentence": "At first blush, Dr. Pai\u2019s profile and career seem at odds with the stereotype that has long been affixed to midcentury graduates of Sweet Briar : as Southern belles (perhaps accompanied by their horses) polished to a high sheen for careers as wives, mothers and volunteers.", "paragraph_sentence": " At first blush, Dr. Pai\u2019s profile and career seem at odds with the stereotype that has long been affixed to midcentury graduates of Sweet Briar : as Southern belles (perhaps accompanied by their horses) polished to a high sheen for careers as wives, mothers and volunteers. Yet the Pink Bubble, as Sweet Briar women have long called their alma mater, has also nurtured generations of feisty professionals, many of them working in the sciences, who attended the school before the era of widespread coeducation at the college level. Since March, when the school\u2019s board suddenly said it would close the college because of dwindling enrollment and strapped finances, a campaign to save it has pursued legal and other actions with increasing gusto and success; last month, the Commonwealth of Virginia sued to keep the college open. Last week, a judge ruled that, for a period of 60 days, the board could not close the school using funds solicited for its operation.. The campaign #Save Sweet Briar has raised $1 million, and another $10 million has been pledged. Against this backdrop, the experiences of Sweet Briar\u2019s postwar graduates, who have been galvanized by the campaign and are reconnecting on Facebook, email and by phone, paint a vivid picture of an era marked by conflicting cultures: one that was still defined by hostess houses, white gloves and the \u201cring before spring\u201d doctrine that cast women\u2019s colleges as mere finishing schools, and one with a commitment to educating women for roles far from the home.", "paragraph_answer": "At first blush, Dr. Pai\u2019s profile and career seem at odds with the stereotype that has long been affixed to midcentury graduates of Sweet Briar : as Southern belles (perhaps accompanied by their horses) polished to a high sheen for careers as wives, mothers and volunteers. Yet the Pink Bubble, as Sweet Briar women have long called their alma mater, has also nurtured generations of feisty professionals, many of them working in the sciences, who attended the school before the era of widespread coeducation at the college level. Since March, when the school\u2019s board suddenly said it would close the college because of dwindling enrollment and strapped finances, a campaign to save it has pursued legal and other actions with increasing gusto and success; last month, the Commonwealth of Virginia sued to keep the college open. Last week, a judge ruled that, for a period of 60 days, the board could not close the school using funds solicited for its operation.. The campaign #Save Sweet Briar has raised $1 million, and another $10 million has been pledged. Against this backdrop, the experiences of Sweet Briar\u2019s postwar graduates, who have been galvanized by the campaign and are reconnecting on Facebook, email and by phone, paint a vivid picture of an era marked by conflicting cultures: one that was still defined by hostess houses, white gloves and the \u201cring before spring\u201d doctrine that cast women\u2019s colleges as mere finishing schools, and one with a commitment to educating women for roles far from the home.", "sentence_answer": "At first blush, Dr. Pai\u2019s profile and career seem at odds with the stereotype that has long been affixed to midcentury graduates of Sweet Briar : as Southern belles (perhaps accompanied by their horses) polished to a high sheen for careers as wives, mothers and volunteers.", "paragraph_id": "5d702e69c8e4820a9b66db97"} +{"question": "Where did Basti Lopez first began attending college?", "paragraph": "\u201cFor a lot of first-generation students, it\u2019s very hard for parents to understand how to help their child prepare for college expenses,\u201d said Basti Lopez, who emigrated with her parents from Mexico as a child and graduated from Irvine in May. She had started at Santa Ana College, a two-year college, before applying to four-year colleges as a junior transfer. She was admitted to Berkeley, Irvine and Santa Cruz and chose Irvine, both because of the financial-aid package and because it was closer to home. She is now back working at Santa Ana, helping students with the transfer process, and she\u2019s studying for the law-school admission exam, hoping to become an immigration lawyer.", "answer": "Santa Ana College", "sentence": "She had started at Santa Ana College , a two-year college, before applying to four-year colleges as a junior transfer.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cFor a lot of first-generation students, it\u2019s very hard for parents to understand how to help their child prepare for college expenses,\u201d said Basti Lopez, who emigrated with her parents from Mexico as a child and graduated from Irvine in May. She had started at Santa Ana College , a two-year college, before applying to four-year colleges as a junior transfer. She was admitted to Berkeley, Irvine and Santa Cruz and chose Irvine, both because of the financial-aid package and because it was closer to home. She is now back working at Santa Ana, helping students with the transfer process, and she\u2019s studying for the law-school admission exam, hoping to become an immigration lawyer.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cFor a lot of first-generation students, it\u2019s very hard for parents to understand how to help their child prepare for college expenses,\u201d said Basti Lopez, who emigrated with her parents from Mexico as a child and graduated from Irvine in May. She had started at Santa Ana College , a two-year college, before applying to four-year colleges as a junior transfer. She was admitted to Berkeley, Irvine and Santa Cruz and chose Irvine, both because of the financial-aid package and because it was closer to home. She is now back working at Santa Ana, helping students with the transfer process, and she\u2019s studying for the law-school admission exam, hoping to become an immigration lawyer.", "sentence_answer": "She had started at Santa Ana College , a two-year college, before applying to four-year colleges as a junior transfer.", "paragraph_id": "5d704880c8e4820a9b66e8e1"} +{"question": "What role was Rep. Ryan asked to take on?", "paragraph": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Last week, as members of Congress did the things they do during recess \u2014 drink merlot at fund-raisers, zip to fact-finding missions abroad, meet with local chambers of commerce \u2014 Representative Paul D. Ryan of Wisconsin and two of his three children strung Halloween decorations across their Janesville lawn. In his lengthy enumeration of conditions for taking on the role of House speaker, Mr. Ryan made it clear to his Republican colleagues Tuesday night that one was sacrosanct: \u201cI cannot and will not give up my family time.\u201d", "answer": "House speaker", "sentence": "In his lengthy enumeration of conditions for taking on the role of House speaker , Mr. Ryan made it clear to his Republican colleagues Tuesday night that one was sacrosanct: \u201cI cannot and will not give up my family time.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Last week, as members of Congress did the things they do during recess \u2014 drink merlot at fund-raisers, zip to fact-finding missions abroad, meet with local chambers of commerce \u2014 Representative Paul D. Ryan of Wisconsin and two of his three children strung Halloween decorations across their Janesville lawn. In his lengthy enumeration of conditions for taking on the role of House speaker , Mr. Ryan made it clear to his Republican colleagues Tuesday night that one was sacrosanct: \u201cI cannot and will not give up my family time.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Last week, as members of Congress did the things they do during recess \u2014 drink merlot at fund-raisers, zip to fact-finding missions abroad, meet with local chambers of commerce \u2014 Representative Paul D. Ryan of Wisconsin and two of his three children strung Halloween decorations across their Janesville lawn. In his lengthy enumeration of conditions for taking on the role of House speaker , Mr. Ryan made it clear to his Republican colleagues Tuesday night that one was sacrosanct: \u201cI cannot and will not give up my family time.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In his lengthy enumeration of conditions for taking on the role of House speaker , Mr. Ryan made it clear to his Republican colleagues Tuesday night that one was sacrosanct: \u201cI cannot and will not give up my family time.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d700586c8e4820a9b66a929"} +{"question": "When does the climax of the film occur?", "paragraph": "Instead, the film\u2019s emotional climax comes as Mr. Homsi himself reaches Istanbul, released from captivity and torture by the Islamic State. He and Mr. Saleh, ask themselves if their revolution is to blame for the Islamists\u2019 rise, and their country\u2019s destruction. Mr. Homsi tries to reassure Mr. Saleh that he was right to flee, saying an older man would break if arrested by jihadists or the secret police, especially a man so \u201cpure inside.\u201d Mr. Saleh covers his eyes; a muscle in his jaw twitches. \u201cThat\u2019s what you think,\u201d he says.", "answer": "Mr. Homsi himself reaches Istanbul", "sentence": "Instead, the film\u2019s emotional climax comes as Mr. Homsi himself reaches Istanbul , released from captivity and torture by the Islamic State.", "paragraph_sentence": " Instead, the film\u2019s emotional climax comes as Mr. Homsi himself reaches Istanbul , released from captivity and torture by the Islamic State. He and Mr. Saleh, ask themselves if their revolution is to blame for the Islamists\u2019 rise, and their country\u2019s destruction. Mr. Homsi tries to reassure Mr. Saleh that he was right to flee, saying an older man would break if arrested by jihadists or the secret police, especially a man so \u201cpure inside.\u201d Mr. Saleh covers his eyes; a muscle in his jaw twitches. \u201cThat\u2019s what you think,\u201d he says.", "paragraph_answer": "Instead, the film\u2019s emotional climax comes as Mr. Homsi himself reaches Istanbul , released from captivity and torture by the Islamic State. He and Mr. Saleh, ask themselves if their revolution is to blame for the Islamists\u2019 rise, and their country\u2019s destruction. Mr. Homsi tries to reassure Mr. Saleh that he was right to flee, saying an older man would break if arrested by jihadists or the secret police, especially a man so \u201cpure inside.\u201d Mr. Saleh covers his eyes; a muscle in his jaw twitches. \u201cThat\u2019s what you think,\u201d he says.", "sentence_answer": "Instead, the film\u2019s emotional climax comes as Mr. Homsi himself reaches Istanbul , released from captivity and torture by the Islamic State.", "paragraph_id": "5d704292c8e4820a9b66e653"} +{"question": "What type of art does Yazan Halwani combine?", "paragraph": "The exhibition looks at this evolution, and then the vital role that music played in the Arab Spring. On Nov. 7, 2010, Hamada Ben-Amor, a young rapper in Tunisia known as \u201cEl G\u00e9n\u00e9ral,\u201d released a song criticizing the government of President Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali. The biting rhymes of the song, \u201cRais Lebled\u201d (President, Your Country), led to the rapper's arrest on Jan. 6. But despite the government\u2019s attempt to make his music disappear, El G\u00e9n\u00e9ral\u2019s song quickly became the anthem of the Arab Spring. Toward the end of \u201cHip-Hop, From the Bronx to the Arab Street,\u201d visitors get a chance to view an exclusive sampling of art works made by international graffiti artists. The unique work of the Lebanese artist Yazan Halwani, who combines Arabic calligraphy and graffiti, finds echoes in the slogans of the Tunisian graffiti artist Meen-one. It\u2019s another reminder of hip-hop as a cultural form and its role as a platform for artists to spread political and social messages.", "answer": "Arabic calligraphy and graffiti", "sentence": "The unique work of the Lebanese artist Yazan Halwani, who combines Arabic calligraphy and graffiti , finds echoes in the slogans of the Tunisian graffiti artist Meen-one.", "paragraph_sentence": "The exhibition looks at this evolution, and then the vital role that music played in the Arab Spring. On Nov. 7, 2010, Hamada Ben-Amor, a young rapper in Tunisia known as \u201cEl G\u00e9n\u00e9ral,\u201d released a song criticizing the government of President Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali. The biting rhymes of the song, \u201cRais Lebled\u201d (President, Your Country), led to the rapper's arrest on Jan. 6. But despite the government\u2019s attempt to make his music disappear, El G\u00e9n\u00e9ral\u2019s song quickly became the anthem of the Arab Spring. Toward the end of \u201cHip-Hop, From the Bronx to the Arab Street,\u201d visitors get a chance to view an exclusive sampling of art works made by international graffiti artists. The unique work of the Lebanese artist Yazan Halwani, who combines Arabic calligraphy and graffiti , finds echoes in the slogans of the Tunisian graffiti artist Meen-one. It\u2019s another reminder of hip-hop as a cultural form and its role as a platform for artists to spread political and social messages.", "paragraph_answer": "The exhibition looks at this evolution, and then the vital role that music played in the Arab Spring. On Nov. 7, 2010, Hamada Ben-Amor, a young rapper in Tunisia known as \u201cEl G\u00e9n\u00e9ral,\u201d released a song criticizing the government of President Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali. The biting rhymes of the song, \u201cRais Lebled\u201d (President, Your Country), led to the rapper's arrest on Jan. 6. But despite the government\u2019s attempt to make his music disappear, El G\u00e9n\u00e9ral\u2019s song quickly became the anthem of the Arab Spring. Toward the end of \u201cHip-Hop, From the Bronx to the Arab Street,\u201d visitors get a chance to view an exclusive sampling of art works made by international graffiti artists. The unique work of the Lebanese artist Yazan Halwani, who combines Arabic calligraphy and graffiti , finds echoes in the slogans of the Tunisian graffiti artist Meen-one. It\u2019s another reminder of hip-hop as a cultural form and its role as a platform for artists to spread political and social messages.", "sentence_answer": "The unique work of the Lebanese artist Yazan Halwani, who combines Arabic calligraphy and graffiti , finds echoes in the slogans of the Tunisian graffiti artist Meen-one.", "paragraph_id": "5d700799c8e4820a9b66ae3d"} +{"question": "What can't Greeks get proper care of?", "paragraph": "Rosina Sfyridou, a German of Greek descent who lives in Frankfurt and was among a small group carrying a Syriza flag near the Main River at midday, said she wanted to fight for democracy and social justice, and not only in Greece. \u201cThe troika is making life difficult,\u201d she said. \u201cSchools are closing. Greeks can\u2019t get proper health care. I have family there; we\u2019re closer to the problem.\u201d Panagiotis Tsianakas, another German of Greek descent, headed to a central square to hear a speech by a Syriza representative, Giorgos Chondros. \u201cThe European finance ministers are brushing democracy to the side,\u201d Mr. Tsianakas said.", "answer": "health", "sentence": "Greeks can\u2019t get proper health care.", "paragraph_sentence": "Rosina Sfyridou, a German of Greek descent who lives in Frankfurt and was among a small group carrying a Syriza flag near the Main River at midday, said she wanted to fight for democracy and social justice, and not only in Greece. \u201cThe troika is making life difficult,\u201d she said. \u201cSchools are closing. Greeks can\u2019t get proper health care. I have family there; we\u2019re closer to the problem.\u201d Panagiotis Tsianakas, another German of Greek descent, headed to a central square to hear a speech by a Syriza representative, Giorgos Chondros. \u201cThe European finance ministers are brushing democracy to the side,\u201d Mr. Tsianakas said.", "paragraph_answer": "Rosina Sfyridou, a German of Greek descent who lives in Frankfurt and was among a small group carrying a Syriza flag near the Main River at midday, said she wanted to fight for democracy and social justice, and not only in Greece. \u201cThe troika is making life difficult,\u201d she said. \u201cSchools are closing. Greeks can\u2019t get proper health care. I have family there; we\u2019re closer to the problem.\u201d Panagiotis Tsianakas, another German of Greek descent, headed to a central square to hear a speech by a Syriza representative, Giorgos Chondros. \u201cThe European finance ministers are brushing democracy to the side,\u201d Mr. Tsianakas said.", "sentence_answer": "Greeks can\u2019t get proper health care.", "paragraph_id": "5d704945c8e4820a9b66e933"} +{"question": "Who was Tziano having a familiar chat with?", "paragraph": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "answer": "his guests", "sentence": "Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests : how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed.", "paragraph_sentence": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests : how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "paragraph_answer": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests : how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "sentence_answer": "Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests : how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed.", "paragraph_id": "5d70285cc8e4820a9b66d61a"} +{"question": "What did Mr. Kohlberg, Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts form in 1976?", "paragraph": "Mr. Kohlberg rose through the ranks of the investment bank Bear Stearns, where he started working in 1955. But he and two younger men whom he had mentored, Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts, eventually left in 1976 to form a new investment firm bearing their names. Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company became a major force that set the tone for the buyout industry, particularly after it took over the tobacco and food conglomerate R.J.R. Nabisco \u2014 the deal made famous in the book \u201cBarbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco,\u201d by Bryan Burrough and John Helyar, although Mr. Kohlberg left the firm a year before the deal was completed.", "answer": "a new investment firm", "sentence": "But he and two younger men whom he had mentored, Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts, eventually left in 1976 to form a new investment firm bearing their names.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Kohlberg rose through the ranks of the investment bank Bear Stearns, where he started working in 1955. But he and two younger men whom he had mentored, Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts, eventually left in 1976 to form a new investment firm bearing their names. Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company became a major force that set the tone for the buyout industry, particularly after it took over the tobacco and food conglomerate R.J.R. Nabisco \u2014 the deal made famous in the book \u201cBarbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco,\u201d by Bryan Burrough and John Helyar, although Mr. Kohlberg left the firm a year before the deal was completed.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Kohlberg rose through the ranks of the investment bank Bear Stearns, where he started working in 1955. But he and two younger men whom he had mentored, Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts, eventually left in 1976 to form a new investment firm bearing their names. Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company became a major force that set the tone for the buyout industry, particularly after it took over the tobacco and food conglomerate R.J.R. Nabisco \u2014 the deal made famous in the book \u201cBarbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco,\u201d by Bryan Burrough and John Helyar, although Mr. Kohlberg left the firm a year before the deal was completed.", "sentence_answer": "But he and two younger men whom he had mentored, Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts, eventually left in 1976 to form a new investment firm bearing their names.", "paragraph_id": "5d704858c8e4820a9b66e8d8"} +{"question": "when did Princeton begin admitting women?", "paragraph": "\u201cSo my grades were not great,\u201d she said. One day she was summoned to the dean\u2019s office. \u201cGeorgie,\u201d she remembered the dean saying, \u201cyou have not made a hit socially or academically. How would you like to transfer to Princeton?\u201d (The Ivy League school started accepting women in 1969.) \u201cI said, \u2018How would I get in?\u2019 She told me not to worry, that it had been arranged, to just go. Being stubborn, I refused.\u201d In the next three years, she worked hard, was elected president of the student government as well as the Glamour magazine representative for the school. She accepted that honor, she said, \u201cwearing my usual uniform, the bluejeans, army jacket and boots.\u201d", "answer": "1969", "sentence": "(The Ivy League school started accepting women in 1969 .)", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cSo my grades were not great,\u201d she said. One day she was summoned to the dean\u2019s office. \u201cGeorgie,\u201d she remembered the dean saying, \u201cyou have not made a hit socially or academically. How would you like to transfer to Princeton?\u201d (The Ivy League school started accepting women in 1969 .) \u201cI said, \u2018How would I get in?\u2019 She told me not to worry, that it had been arranged, to just go. Being stubborn, I refused.\u201d In the next three years, she worked hard, was elected president of the student government as well as the Glamour magazine representative for the school. She accepted that honor, she said, \u201cwearing my usual uniform, the bluejeans, army jacket and boots.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cSo my grades were not great,\u201d she said. One day she was summoned to the dean\u2019s office. \u201cGeorgie,\u201d she remembered the dean saying, \u201cyou have not made a hit socially or academically. How would you like to transfer to Princeton?\u201d (The Ivy League school started accepting women in 1969 .) \u201cI said, \u2018How would I get in?\u2019 She told me not to worry, that it had been arranged, to just go. Being stubborn, I refused.\u201d In the next three years, she worked hard, was elected president of the student government as well as the Glamour magazine representative for the school. She accepted that honor, she said, \u201cwearing my usual uniform, the bluejeans, army jacket and boots.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "(The Ivy League school started accepting women in 1969 .)", "paragraph_id": "5d703280c8e4820a9b66ddcf"} +{"question": "What does Raylan Givens do for a living?", "paragraph": "10 P.M. (FX) JUSTIFIED Timothy Olyphant plays Raylan Givens, the fictional United States marshal created by Elmore Leonard in his novel \u201cPronto.\u201d In this episode Boyd Crowder (Walton Goggins) tries to take money from Avery Markham (Sam Elliott). 10 P.M. (CBS) PERSON OF INTEREST John Reese (Jim Caviezel) has to protect a reckless bounty hunter. Harold Finch (Michael Emerson) follows through on the plot he hatched in Hong Kong. 10:30 (HGTV) HOUSE HUNTERS INTERNATIONAL Prospective buyers set a budget and work with a real estate agent to find a home abroad. In this episode a couple with a $240,000 budget looks for places in the Turks and Caicos. Conflict sets in when it is revealed that they have different motives for the purchase. What\u2019s Streaming Now MAD MEN This AMC series\u2019s final episodes will be broadcast starting on April 5. The first half of Season 7 is available for streaming now on Netflix. (netflix.com)", "answer": "United States marshal", "sentence": "10 P.M. (FX) JUSTIFIED Timothy Olyphant plays Raylan Givens, the fictional United States marshal created by Elmore Leonard in his novel \u201cPronto.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " 10 P.M. (FX) JUSTIFIED Timothy Olyphant plays Raylan Givens, the fictional United States marshal created by Elmore Leonard in his novel \u201cPronto.\u201d In this episode Boyd Crowder (Walton Goggins) tries to take money from Avery Markham (Sam Elliott). 10 P.M. (CBS) PERSON OF INTEREST John Reese (Jim Caviezel) has to protect a reckless bounty hunter. Harold Finch (Michael Emerson) follows through on the plot he hatched in Hong Kong. 10:30 (HGTV) HOUSE HUNTERS INTERNATIONAL Prospective buyers set a budget and work with a real estate agent to find a home abroad. In this episode a couple with a $240,000 budget looks for places in the Turks and Caicos. Conflict sets in when it is revealed that they have different motives for the purchase. What\u2019s Streaming Now MAD MEN This AMC series\u2019s final episodes will be broadcast starting on April 5. The first half of Season 7 is available for streaming now on Netflix. (netflix.com)", "paragraph_answer": "10 P.M. (FX) JUSTIFIED Timothy Olyphant plays Raylan Givens, the fictional United States marshal created by Elmore Leonard in his novel \u201cPronto.\u201d In this episode Boyd Crowder (Walton Goggins) tries to take money from Avery Markham (Sam Elliott). 10 P.M. (CBS) PERSON OF INTEREST John Reese (Jim Caviezel) has to protect a reckless bounty hunter. Harold Finch (Michael Emerson) follows through on the plot he hatched in Hong Kong. 10:30 (HGTV) HOUSE HUNTERS INTERNATIONAL Prospective buyers set a budget and work with a real estate agent to find a home abroad. In this episode a couple with a $240,000 budget looks for places in the Turks and Caicos. Conflict sets in when it is revealed that they have different motives for the purchase. What\u2019s Streaming Now MAD MEN This AMC series\u2019s final episodes will be broadcast starting on April 5. The first half of Season 7 is available for streaming now on Netflix. (netflix.com)", "sentence_answer": "10 P.M. (FX) JUSTIFIED Timothy Olyphant plays Raylan Givens, the fictional United States marshal created by Elmore Leonard in his novel \u201cPronto.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d701fb3c8e4820a9b66cb5f"} +{"question": "Who is Ed Rendell?", "paragraph": "The remarks bore little resemblance to Mrs. Clinton\u2019s previous dismissals of Mr. Trump. She had portrayed him as a reality television sideshow who voiced more extreme beliefs that, she contended, his more serious Republican rivals shared. But since Mr. Trump\u2019s response to the Dec. 2 terrorist attack in San Bernardino, Calif., Mrs. Clinton and her campaign, confounded by his continued strength in the polls, have had to rethink how they handle Mr. Trump and what his candidacy, and the anger in the electorate that has fueled it, means for her chances in 2016. Some of her own voters are giving her reason to. Bennie Stickley, a 75-year-old in Gilbertville, Iowa, who retired from a John Deere factory, said he was supporting Mrs. Clinton but agrees with Mr. Trump\u2019s proposal to bar Muslims. \u201cI\u2019m for him on that,\u201d he said. \u201cWe shouldn\u2019t be letting those people into the country,\u201d he added. \u201cShe\u2019s as amazed as everyone else is\u201d by his staying power, said Edward G. Rendell, a former governor of Pennsylvania, who recently spoke to Mrs. Clinton about Mr. Trump. That befuddlement played out in the 24 hours after Mr. Trump released his proposal on Monday. The Clinton campaign, caught off guard, seemed to grapple publicly with how to respond.", "answer": "former governor of Pennsylvania", "sentence": "\u201cShe\u2019s as amazed as everyone else is\u201d by his staying power, said Edward G. Rendell, a former governor of Pennsylvania , who recently spoke to Mrs. Clinton about Mr. Trump.", "paragraph_sentence": "The remarks bore little resemblance to Mrs. Clinton\u2019s previous dismissals of Mr. Trump. She had portrayed him as a reality television sideshow who voiced more extreme beliefs that, she contended, his more serious Republican rivals shared. But since Mr. Trump\u2019s response to the Dec. 2 terrorist attack in San Bernardino, Calif., Mrs. Clinton and her campaign, confounded by his continued strength in the polls, have had to rethink how they handle Mr. Trump and what his candidacy, and the anger in the electorate that has fueled it, means for her chances in 2016. Some of her own voters are giving her reason to. Bennie Stickley, a 75-year-old in Gilbertville, Iowa, who retired from a John Deere factory, said he was supporting Mrs. Clinton but agrees with Mr. Trump\u2019s proposal to bar Muslims. \u201cI\u2019m for him on that,\u201d he said. \u201cWe shouldn\u2019t be letting those people into the country,\u201d he added. \u201cShe\u2019s as amazed as everyone else is\u201d by his staying power, said Edward G. Rendell, a former governor of Pennsylvania , who recently spoke to Mrs. Clinton about Mr. Trump. That befuddlement played out in the 24 hours after Mr. Trump released his proposal on Monday. The Clinton campaign, caught off guard, seemed to grapple publicly with how to respond.", "paragraph_answer": "The remarks bore little resemblance to Mrs. Clinton\u2019s previous dismissals of Mr. Trump. She had portrayed him as a reality television sideshow who voiced more extreme beliefs that, she contended, his more serious Republican rivals shared. But since Mr. Trump\u2019s response to the Dec. 2 terrorist attack in San Bernardino, Calif., Mrs. Clinton and her campaign, confounded by his continued strength in the polls, have had to rethink how they handle Mr. Trump and what his candidacy, and the anger in the electorate that has fueled it, means for her chances in 2016. Some of her own voters are giving her reason to. Bennie Stickley, a 75-year-old in Gilbertville, Iowa, who retired from a John Deere factory, said he was supporting Mrs. Clinton but agrees with Mr. Trump\u2019s proposal to bar Muslims. \u201cI\u2019m for him on that,\u201d he said. \u201cWe shouldn\u2019t be letting those people into the country,\u201d he added. \u201cShe\u2019s as amazed as everyone else is\u201d by his staying power, said Edward G. Rendell, a former governor of Pennsylvania , who recently spoke to Mrs. Clinton about Mr. Trump. That befuddlement played out in the 24 hours after Mr. Trump released his proposal on Monday. The Clinton campaign, caught off guard, seemed to grapple publicly with how to respond.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cShe\u2019s as amazed as everyone else is\u201d by his staying power, said Edward G. Rendell, a former governor of Pennsylvania , who recently spoke to Mrs. Clinton about Mr. Trump.", "paragraph_id": "5d700e36c8e4820a9b66ba0e"} +{"question": "What is the name of the article that was written in the Journal of Poetry Therapy?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt seemed that going over poetry with her and singing songs with her was a tremendous way to interact with her,\u201d he recalled. \u201cWhen we did that, she acted decades younger than she was otherwise.\u201d Convinced that poetry could be therapeutic, he asked the Sarah Neuman Center, the Westchester County campus of a sprawling nonprofit, Jewish Home Lifecare, based near his home in New Rochelle, to let him give readings, and the administration agreed. This year, he felt confident enough about his experience to write about it in The Journal of Poetry Therapy, in an article titled \u201cA Poetry Program for the Very Elderly \u2014 Narrative Perspective on One Therapeutic Model.\u201d In it, he argues that without intending to do so, he has developed a curriculum for others to follow.", "answer": "\u201cA Poetry Program for the Very Elderly \u2014 Narrative Perspective on One Therapeutic Model.\u201d", "sentence": "This year, he felt confident enough about his experience to write about it in The Journal of Poetry Therapy, in an article titled \u201cA Poetry Program for the Very Elderly \u2014 Narrative Perspective on One Therapeutic Model.\u201d In it, he argues that without intending to do so, he has developed a curriculum for others to follow.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt seemed that going over poetry with her and singing songs with her was a tremendous way to interact with her,\u201d he recalled. \u201cWhen we did that, she acted decades younger than she was otherwise.\u201d Convinced that poetry could be therapeutic, he asked the Sarah Neuman Center, the Westchester County campus of a sprawling nonprofit, Jewish Home Lifecare, based near his home in New Rochelle, to let him give readings, and the administration agreed. This year, he felt confident enough about his experience to write about it in The Journal of Poetry Therapy, in an article titled \u201cA Poetry Program for the Very Elderly \u2014 Narrative Perspective on One Therapeutic Model.\u201d In it, he argues that without intending to do so, he has developed a curriculum for others to follow. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt seemed that going over poetry with her and singing songs with her was a tremendous way to interact with her,\u201d he recalled. \u201cWhen we did that, she acted decades younger than she was otherwise.\u201d Convinced that poetry could be therapeutic, he asked the Sarah Neuman Center, the Westchester County campus of a sprawling nonprofit, Jewish Home Lifecare, based near his home in New Rochelle, to let him give readings, and the administration agreed. This year, he felt confident enough about his experience to write about it in The Journal of Poetry Therapy, in an article titled \u201cA Poetry Program for the Very Elderly \u2014 Narrative Perspective on One Therapeutic Model.\u201d In it, he argues that without intending to do so, he has developed a curriculum for others to follow.", "sentence_answer": "This year, he felt confident enough about his experience to write about it in The Journal of Poetry Therapy, in an article titled \u201cA Poetry Program for the Very Elderly \u2014 Narrative Perspective on One Therapeutic Model.\u201d In it, he argues that without intending to do so, he has developed a curriculum for others to follow.", "paragraph_id": "5d6fc0f9c8e4820a9b66a7c8"} +{"question": "Gottfried Ludewig is apart of which parliment?", "paragraph": "The Flussbad speaks to a tradition here; there are other urban Flussbads in this part of the world, so the idea has local resonance. Gottfried Ludewig is a young member of the Berlin City Parliament from the center-right Christian Democratic Union, Angela Merkel\u2019s party. He has become one of the project\u2019s most vocal champions, enlisting political allies across the aisle, corralling money for a feasibility study and promoting a grass-roots, community-based campaign. Neither he nor Tim Edler would divulge the project\u2019s projected cost, which must be many, many millions of dollars. But both said the major hurdle would not be money. The real struggle is over civic identity.", "answer": "Berlin City", "sentence": "Gottfried Ludewig is a young member of the Berlin City Parliament from the center-right Christian Democratic Union, Angela Merkel\u2019s party.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Flussbad speaks to a tradition here; there are other urban Flussbads in this part of the world, so the idea has local resonance. Gottfried Ludewig is a young member of the Berlin City Parliament from the center-right Christian Democratic Union, Angela Merkel\u2019s party. He has become one of the project\u2019s most vocal champions, enlisting political allies across the aisle, corralling money for a feasibility study and promoting a grass-roots, community-based campaign. Neither he nor Tim Edler would divulge the project\u2019s projected cost, which must be many, many millions of dollars. But both said the major hurdle would not be money. The real struggle is over civic identity.", "paragraph_answer": "The Flussbad speaks to a tradition here; there are other urban Flussbads in this part of the world, so the idea has local resonance. Gottfried Ludewig is a young member of the Berlin City Parliament from the center-right Christian Democratic Union, Angela Merkel\u2019s party. He has become one of the project\u2019s most vocal champions, enlisting political allies across the aisle, corralling money for a feasibility study and promoting a grass-roots, community-based campaign. Neither he nor Tim Edler would divulge the project\u2019s projected cost, which must be many, many millions of dollars. But both said the major hurdle would not be money. The real struggle is over civic identity.", "sentence_answer": "Gottfried Ludewig is a young member of the Berlin City Parliament from the center-right Christian Democratic Union, Angela Merkel\u2019s party.", "paragraph_id": "5d703f1cc8e4820a9b66e449"} +{"question": "What happened after they changed one of her antibiotics?", "paragraph": "After three days in the hospital, Natalie got better. A new chest X-ray showed that there was much less fluid in her chest. Her fever resolved. They changed one of the antibiotics and the nausea she had had all but disappeared. They told her she could go home. They prescribed antibiotics for her to take at home, and removed her IV catheter. Natalie went back to school, and the next day was interviewed by a TV reporter because she was one of the few who survived her kind of pneumonia in Nebraska. She talked about her disappointment over missing swim meets.", "answer": "nausea she had had all but disappeared", "sentence": "They changed one of the antibiotics and the nausea she had had all but disappeared .", "paragraph_sentence": "After three days in the hospital, Natalie got better. A new chest X-ray showed that there was much less fluid in her chest. Her fever resolved. They changed one of the antibiotics and the nausea she had had all but disappeared . They told her she could go home. They prescribed antibiotics for her to take at home, and removed her IV catheter. Natalie went back to school, and the next day was interviewed by a TV reporter because she was one of the few who survived her kind of pneumonia in Nebraska. She talked about her disappointment over missing swim meets.", "paragraph_answer": "After three days in the hospital, Natalie got better. A new chest X-ray showed that there was much less fluid in her chest. Her fever resolved. They changed one of the antibiotics and the nausea she had had all but disappeared . They told her she could go home. They prescribed antibiotics for her to take at home, and removed her IV catheter. Natalie went back to school, and the next day was interviewed by a TV reporter because she was one of the few who survived her kind of pneumonia in Nebraska. She talked about her disappointment over missing swim meets.", "sentence_answer": "They changed one of the antibiotics and the nausea she had had all but disappeared .", "paragraph_id": "5d700703c8e4820a9b66acb1"} +{"question": "What did Mr. Rylance say was the difficult was with his character?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt\u2019s an extraordinary job for me,\u201d Mr. Rylance said after shooting multiple takes of a confrontation with an ailing Catherine of Aragon (Joanne Whalley). \u201cThere are about 70 or 80 scenes per episode, and I\u2019m in most of them. The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking. So you can\u2019t compromise his expressionlessness, but you have to convey what might be going on for him.\u201d Although the series has arrived after the plays, Colin Callender, a former president of HBO films whose production company Playground produced the series (with Company Pictures, \u201cMasterpiece\u201d and BBC Two), began negotiations to secure the rights in 2012. Mr. Callender said that as soon as he read the books, he envisaged a television production.", "answer": "The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking", "sentence": "The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s an extraordinary job for me,\u201d Mr. Rylance said after shooting multiple takes of a confrontation with an ailing Catherine of Aragon (Joanne Whalley). \u201cThere are about 70 or 80 scenes per episode, and I\u2019m in most of them. The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking . So you can\u2019t compromise his expressionlessness, but you have to convey what might be going on for him.\u201d Although the series has arrived after the plays, Colin Callender, a former president of HBO films whose production company Playground produced the series (with Company Pictures, \u201cMasterpiece\u201d and BBC Two), began negotiations to secure the rights in 2012. Mr. Callender said that as soon as he read the books, he envisaged a television production.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s an extraordinary job for me,\u201d Mr. Rylance said after shooting multiple takes of a confrontation with an ailing Catherine of Aragon (Joanne Whalley). \u201cThere are about 70 or 80 scenes per episode, and I\u2019m in most of them. The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking . So you can\u2019t compromise his expressionlessness, but you have to convey what might be going on for him.\u201d Although the series has arrived after the plays, Colin Callender, a former president of HBO films whose production company Playground produced the series (with Company Pictures, \u201cMasterpiece\u201d and BBC Two), began negotiations to secure the rights in 2012. Mr. Callender said that as soon as he read the books, he envisaged a television production.", "sentence_answer": " The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking .", "paragraph_id": "5d70734ec8e4820a9b66f20c"} +{"question": "What service does Hicklin want to provide in hotels in the future?", "paragraph": "Hicklin said he will eventually launch projects such as in-room book selections at hotels, or perhaps book-concierge services on flights. But for now, he\u2019s happy to keep the project small and localized. \u201cI\u2019m running this store out of completely selfish motivation,\u201d he said. \u201cI get the benefit from being surrounded by books in this beautiful location, engaging with people in an environment that I create and that reflects my sensibility.\u201d Below, Hicklin shared his own list \u2014 the 10 books he\u2019d want with him on a desert island. \u201cTess of the D\u2019Urbervilles,\u201d by Thomas Hardy; \u201cAnother Country,\u201d by James Baldwin; \u201cIf This Is a Man,\u201d by Primo Levi; \u201cWatership Down,\u201d by Richard Adams; \u201cA Collection of Essays,\u201d by George Orwell; \u201cThe Long-Winded Lady: Notes from The New Yorker,\u201d by Maeve Brennan; \u201cA Handful of Dust,\u201d by Evelyn Waugh; \u201cEastern Approaches,\u201d by Fitzroy Maclean; \u201cThe Line of Beauty,\u201d by Alan Hollinghurst; \u201cThe Secret History,\u201d by Donna Tartt.", "answer": "in-room book selections", "sentence": "Hicklin said he will eventually launch projects such as in-room book selections at hotels, or perhaps book-concierge services on flights.", "paragraph_sentence": " Hicklin said he will eventually launch projects such as in-room book selections at hotels, or perhaps book-concierge services on flights. But for now, he\u2019s happy to keep the project small and localized. \u201cI\u2019m running this store out of completely selfish motivation,\u201d he said. \u201cI get the benefit from being surrounded by books in this beautiful location, engaging with people in an environment that I create and that reflects my sensibility.\u201d Below, Hicklin shared his own list \u2014 the 10 books he\u2019d want with him on a desert island. \u201cTess of the D\u2019Urbervilles,\u201d by Thomas Hardy; \u201cAnother Country,\u201d by James Baldwin; \u201cIf This Is a Man,\u201d by Primo Levi; \u201cWatership Down,\u201d by Richard Adams; \u201cA Collection of Essays,\u201d by George Orwell; \u201cThe Long-Winded Lady: Notes from The New Yorker,\u201d by Maeve Brennan; \u201cA Handful of Dust,\u201d by Evelyn Waugh; \u201cEastern Approaches,\u201d by Fitzroy Maclean; \u201cThe Line of Beauty,\u201d by Alan Hollinghurst; \u201cThe Secret History,\u201d by Donna Tartt.", "paragraph_answer": "Hicklin said he will eventually launch projects such as in-room book selections at hotels, or perhaps book-concierge services on flights. But for now, he\u2019s happy to keep the project small and localized. \u201cI\u2019m running this store out of completely selfish motivation,\u201d he said. \u201cI get the benefit from being surrounded by books in this beautiful location, engaging with people in an environment that I create and that reflects my sensibility.\u201d Below, Hicklin shared his own list \u2014 the 10 books he\u2019d want with him on a desert island. \u201cTess of the D\u2019Urbervilles,\u201d by Thomas Hardy; \u201cAnother Country,\u201d by James Baldwin; \u201cIf This Is a Man,\u201d by Primo Levi; \u201cWatership Down,\u201d by Richard Adams; \u201cA Collection of Essays,\u201d by George Orwell; \u201cThe Long-Winded Lady: Notes from The New Yorker,\u201d by Maeve Brennan; \u201cA Handful of Dust,\u201d by Evelyn Waugh; \u201cEastern Approaches,\u201d by Fitzroy Maclean; \u201cThe Line of Beauty,\u201d by Alan Hollinghurst; \u201cThe Secret History,\u201d by Donna Tartt.", "sentence_answer": "Hicklin said he will eventually launch projects such as in-room book selections at hotels, or perhaps book-concierge services on flights.", "paragraph_id": "5d701d56c8e4820a9b66c8e9"} +{"question": "How much money did Huckabee ask of families?", "paragraph": "On Tuesday, he deployed his affability in making a series of jabs at rivals that, in the mouth of another politician, could have seemed angry. He criticized candidates who deceive taxpayers and \u201clive off the government payroll\u201d while running for higher office \u2014 an elbow aimed at most of the current Republican field. \u201cHave the integrity and decency to resign,\u201d Mr. Huckabee said. One problem for his candidacy is likely to be money. Mr. Huckabee raised just over $16 million in 2008, and despite victories in eight nominating contests saw his campaign expire for lack of funds to advertise in major states like Florida. The rules of campaign finance have changed in the new \u201csuper PAC\u201d era, when as few as one or two super-wealthy supporters can fund an outside, parallel campaign. But it is unclear whether Mr. Huckabee has yet attracted such support. Unusual for an announcement speech, Mr. Huckabee\u2019s address on Tuesday included a plea for money, specifically donations of $15 or $25 a month. \u201cI will ask you to give something in the name of your children and grandchildren,\u201d he said.", "answer": "$15 or $25 a month", "sentence": "Unusual for an announcement speech, Mr. Huckabee\u2019s address on Tuesday included a plea for money, specifically donations of $15 or $25 a month .", "paragraph_sentence": "On Tuesday, he deployed his affability in making a series of jabs at rivals that, in the mouth of another politician, could have seemed angry. He criticized candidates who deceive taxpayers and \u201clive off the government payroll\u201d while running for higher office \u2014 an elbow aimed at most of the current Republican field. \u201cHave the integrity and decency to resign,\u201d Mr. Huckabee said. One problem for his candidacy is likely to be money. Mr. Huckabee raised just over $16 million in 2008, and despite victories in eight nominating contests saw his campaign expire for lack of funds to advertise in major states like Florida. The rules of campaign finance have changed in the new \u201csuper PAC\u201d era, when as few as one or two super-wealthy supporters can fund an outside, parallel campaign. But it is unclear whether Mr. Huckabee has yet attracted such support. Unusual for an announcement speech, Mr. Huckabee\u2019s address on Tuesday included a plea for money, specifically donations of $15 or $25 a month . \u201cI will ask you to give something in the name of your children and grandchildren,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "On Tuesday, he deployed his affability in making a series of jabs at rivals that, in the mouth of another politician, could have seemed angry. He criticized candidates who deceive taxpayers and \u201clive off the government payroll\u201d while running for higher office \u2014 an elbow aimed at most of the current Republican field. \u201cHave the integrity and decency to resign,\u201d Mr. Huckabee said. One problem for his candidacy is likely to be money. Mr. Huckabee raised just over $16 million in 2008, and despite victories in eight nominating contests saw his campaign expire for lack of funds to advertise in major states like Florida. The rules of campaign finance have changed in the new \u201csuper PAC\u201d era, when as few as one or two super-wealthy supporters can fund an outside, parallel campaign. But it is unclear whether Mr. Huckabee has yet attracted such support. Unusual for an announcement speech, Mr. Huckabee\u2019s address on Tuesday included a plea for money, specifically donations of $15 or $25 a month . \u201cI will ask you to give something in the name of your children and grandchildren,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "Unusual for an announcement speech, Mr. Huckabee\u2019s address on Tuesday included a plea for money, specifically donations of $15 or $25 a month .", "paragraph_id": "5d704804c8e4820a9b66e8d0"} +{"question": "What was hard to imagine?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to imagine a better training drill,\u201d he said of the bombing in Syria. Since Turkey shot down a Russian warplane that it said had violated its airspace, Mr. Putin has engaged in a war of words with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and ordered a number of retaliatory measures. On Thursday, he made clear that Russia has made Syria a no-fly zone for Turkish airplanes. \u201cTurkey used to violate Syrian airspace all the time,\u201d Mr. Putin said. \u201cLet them try and fly there now,\u201d he said, noting that Russia\u2019s most advanced air defense system, the S-400, can hit any target in Syria.", "answer": "better training drill", "sentence": "a better training drill ,\u201d he said of the bombing in Syria.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to imagine a better training drill ,\u201d he said of the bombing in Syria. Since Turkey shot down a Russian warplane that it said had violated its airspace, Mr. Putin has engaged in a war of words with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and ordered a number of retaliatory measures. On Thursday, he made clear that Russia has made Syria a no-fly zone for Turkish airplanes. \u201cTurkey used to violate Syrian airspace all the time,\u201d Mr. Putin said. \u201cLet them try and fly there now,\u201d he said, noting that Russia\u2019s most advanced air defense system, the S-400, can hit any target in Syria.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to imagine a better training drill ,\u201d he said of the bombing in Syria. Since Turkey shot down a Russian warplane that it said had violated its airspace, Mr. Putin has engaged in a war of words with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and ordered a number of retaliatory measures. On Thursday, he made clear that Russia has made Syria a no-fly zone for Turkish airplanes. \u201cTurkey used to violate Syrian airspace all the time,\u201d Mr. Putin said. \u201cLet them try and fly there now,\u201d he said, noting that Russia\u2019s most advanced air defense system, the S-400, can hit any target in Syria.", "sentence_answer": "a better training drill ,\u201d he said of the bombing in Syria.", "paragraph_id": "5d7012efc8e4820a9b66bf67"} +{"question": "What has Leive defiantly seen?", "paragraph": "I also like asking, \u201cWhat would you be doing if you weren\u2019t in this business at all?\u201d I\u2019m always curious about who people are outside of work, and I think you want to hire people who have something going on in their lives besides work. I have definitely seen that people who have full lives are not just happier but also tend to be better at their jobs. They don\u2019t take everything so personally. People who can come up with a great idea and execute it, soup to nuts, are really valuable. We are never at a shortage for great ideas. But then there are people who have the project management piece of it, and that\u2019s not something that I think people were hired for in magazines 25 years ago. Now it\u2019s indispensable. The people on my team who can come up with an idea, put together a plan and presentation for getting it done, pick up the phone and find partners, are gold.", "answer": "that people who have full lives are not just happier but also tend to be better at their jobs", "sentence": "I have definitely seen that people who have full lives are not just happier but also tend to be better at their jobs .", "paragraph_sentence": "I also like asking, \u201cWhat would you be doing if you weren\u2019t in this business at all?\u201d I\u2019m always curious about who people are outside of work, and I think you want to hire people who have something going on in their lives besides work. I have definitely seen that people who have full lives are not just happier but also tend to be better at their jobs . They don\u2019t take everything so personally. People who can come up with a great idea and execute it, soup to nuts, are really valuable. We are never at a shortage for great ideas. But then there are people who have the project management piece of it, and that\u2019s not something that I think people were hired for in magazines 25 years ago. Now it\u2019s indispensable. The people on my team who can come up with an idea, put together a plan and presentation for getting it done, pick up the phone and find partners, are gold.", "paragraph_answer": "I also like asking, \u201cWhat would you be doing if you weren\u2019t in this business at all?\u201d I\u2019m always curious about who people are outside of work, and I think you want to hire people who have something going on in their lives besides work. I have definitely seen that people who have full lives are not just happier but also tend to be better at their jobs . They don\u2019t take everything so personally. People who can come up with a great idea and execute it, soup to nuts, are really valuable. We are never at a shortage for great ideas. But then there are people who have the project management piece of it, and that\u2019s not something that I think people were hired for in magazines 25 years ago. Now it\u2019s indispensable. The people on my team who can come up with an idea, put together a plan and presentation for getting it done, pick up the phone and find partners, are gold.", "sentence_answer": "I have definitely seen that people who have full lives are not just happier but also tend to be better at their jobs .", "paragraph_id": "5d701759c8e4820a9b66c335"} +{"question": "What did Shin Dong-Hyuk's lie about having to witness his mother and brother's execution lead to?", "paragraph": "Shin Dong-hyuk, a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags, confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate. His dramatic story, which included being forced to watch the execution of his mother and brother, led to a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities. He now says that instead of growing up in the notorious Camp 14, where most prisoners go to die, he spent most of his time in the less draconian Camp 18.", "answer": "a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities", "sentence": "His dramatic story, which included being forced to watch the execution of his mother and brother, led to a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities .", "paragraph_sentence": "Shin Dong-hyuk, a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags, confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate. His dramatic story, which included being forced to watch the execution of his mother and brother, led to a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities . He now says that instead of growing up in the notorious Camp 14, where most prisoners go to die, he spent most of his time in the less draconian Camp 18.", "paragraph_answer": "Shin Dong-hyuk, a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags, confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate. His dramatic story, which included being forced to watch the execution of his mother and brother, led to a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities . He now says that instead of growing up in the notorious Camp 14, where most prisoners go to die, he spent most of his time in the less draconian Camp 18.", "sentence_answer": "His dramatic story, which included being forced to watch the execution of his mother and brother, led to a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities .", "paragraph_id": "5d70ab9dc8e4820a9b66f6d0"} +{"question": "Who noted that the board \"never said\" that two casinos in the Southern Tier could not work?", "paragraph": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "answer": "Mr. Law", "sentence": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work.", "paragraph_sentence": " At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "paragraph_answer": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "sentence_answer": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work.", "paragraph_id": "5d7012f1c8e4820a9b66bf73"} +{"question": "What's the name of the song the show ended with?", "paragraph": "Most Likely Thing That Could Come of This ShowThe Chanels were sentenced not to prison but to the Palmer Asylum for the Insane. If \u201cScream Queens\u201d does get a renewal, we could be looking at a subtitle: \u201cScream Queens: Asylum.\u201d What\u2019s that you say? It\u2019s already been done? Anyway, goodbye for now to this brash, sometimes offensive, sometimes funny, reference-heavy series. Which ended, of course, with a reference: \u201cDon\u2019t You (Forget About Me),\u201d the Simple Minds song identified with \u201cThe Breakfast Club.\u201d Reference-dropping, apparently, is the new originality.", "answer": "Don\u2019t You (Forget About Me)", "sentence": "Which ended, of course, with a reference: \u201c Don\u2019t You (Forget About Me) ,\u201d the Simple Minds song identified with \u201cThe Breakfast Club.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Most Likely Thing That Could Come of This ShowThe Chanels were sentenced not to prison but to the Palmer Asylum for the Insane. If \u201cScream Queens\u201d does get a renewal, we could be looking at a subtitle: \u201cScream Queens: Asylum.\u201d What\u2019s that you say? It\u2019s already been done? Anyway, goodbye for now to this brash, sometimes offensive, sometimes funny, reference-heavy series. Which ended, of course, with a reference: \u201c Don\u2019t You (Forget About Me) ,\u201d the Simple Minds song identified with \u201cThe Breakfast Club.\u201d Reference-dropping, apparently, is the new originality.", "paragraph_answer": "Most Likely Thing That Could Come of This ShowThe Chanels were sentenced not to prison but to the Palmer Asylum for the Insane. If \u201cScream Queens\u201d does get a renewal, we could be looking at a subtitle: \u201cScream Queens: Asylum.\u201d What\u2019s that you say? It\u2019s already been done? Anyway, goodbye for now to this brash, sometimes offensive, sometimes funny, reference-heavy series. Which ended, of course, with a reference: \u201c Don\u2019t You (Forget About Me) ,\u201d the Simple Minds song identified with \u201cThe Breakfast Club.\u201d Reference-dropping, apparently, is the new originality.", "sentence_answer": "Which ended, of course, with a reference: \u201c Don\u2019t You (Forget About Me) ,\u201d the Simple Minds song identified with \u201cThe Breakfast Club.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d7052c0c8e4820a9b66ebf5"} +{"question": "What is the name of the person who will become a free agent if the Giants proceeds to withdraw their offer?", "paragraph": "The Giants could still withdraw their franchise tag offer, which would make Pierre-Paul an unrestricted free agent, but Mara said that was not in the team\u2019s immediate plans.", "answer": "Pierre-Paul", "sentence": "The Giants could still withdraw their franchise tag offer, which would make Pierre-Paul an unrestricted free agent, but Mara said that was not in the team\u2019s immediate plans.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Giants could still withdraw their franchise tag offer, which would make Pierre-Paul an unrestricted free agent, but Mara said that was not in the team\u2019s immediate plans. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Giants could still withdraw their franchise tag offer, which would make Pierre-Paul an unrestricted free agent, but Mara said that was not in the team\u2019s immediate plans.", "sentence_answer": "The Giants could still withdraw their franchise tag offer, which would make Pierre-Paul an unrestricted free agent, but Mara said that was not in the team\u2019s immediate plans.", "paragraph_id": "5d702476c8e4820a9b66d0aa"} +{"question": "What was the status of the Ad on New York Times", "paragraph": "Oh cruel fate. You make a musical about two struggling playwrights who are always outshined by Shakespeare; the musical is nominated for 10 Tony Awards, and the only one it wins is for the guy who plays Shakespeare. The cheeky creators of \u201cSomething Rotten!\u201d had been hoping for a different outcome. But licking their wounds was not going to help them bounce back, so, instead, they have embraced an unorthodox post-Tonys marketing strategy: calling attention to their plight. On Facebook, Twitter and in a full-page ad in The New York Times on Sunday, the show is trumpeting its status as \u201cLoser!\u201d in the best-musical race. The campaign notes that the show is not alone: a string of successful shows, from \u201cWest Side Story\u201d to \u201cWicked,\u201d had in previous years been passed over for best musical. \u201cYou\u2019re always hoping that you\u2019re going to win, but if you don\u2019t, you have to think about how to position your show,\u201d said Kevin McCollum, the lead producer of \u201cRotten!\u201d \u201cVery few shows have the confidence to go with the headline \u2018Loser!,\u2019 but it illustrates that we\u2019re confident enough to acknowledge our loss and celebrate those that came before us.\u201d", "answer": "\u201cLoser!\u201d", "sentence": "On Facebook, Twitter and in a full-page ad in The New York Times on Sunday, the show is trumpeting its status as \u201cLoser!\u201d in the best-musical race.", "paragraph_sentence": "Oh cruel fate. You make a musical about two struggling playwrights who are always outshined by Shakespeare; the musical is nominated for 10 Tony Awards, and the only one it wins is for the guy who plays Shakespeare. The cheeky creators of \u201cSomething Rotten!\u201d had been hoping for a different outcome. But licking their wounds was not going to help them bounce back, so, instead, they have embraced an unorthodox post-Tonys marketing strategy: calling attention to their plight. On Facebook, Twitter and in a full-page ad in The New York Times on Sunday, the show is trumpeting its status as \u201cLoser!\u201d in the best-musical race. The campaign notes that the show is not alone: a string of successful shows, from \u201cWest Side Story\u201d to \u201cWicked,\u201d had in previous years been passed over for best musical. \u201cYou\u2019re always hoping that you\u2019re going to win, but if you don\u2019t, you have to think about how to position your show,\u201d said Kevin McCollum, the lead producer of \u201cRotten!\u201d \u201cVery few shows have the confidence to go with the headline \u2018Loser!,\u2019 but it illustrates that we\u2019re confident enough to acknowledge our loss and celebrate those that came before us.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Oh cruel fate. You make a musical about two struggling playwrights who are always outshined by Shakespeare; the musical is nominated for 10 Tony Awards, and the only one it wins is for the guy who plays Shakespeare. The cheeky creators of \u201cSomething Rotten!\u201d had been hoping for a different outcome. But licking their wounds was not going to help them bounce back, so, instead, they have embraced an unorthodox post-Tonys marketing strategy: calling attention to their plight. On Facebook, Twitter and in a full-page ad in The New York Times on Sunday, the show is trumpeting its status as \u201cLoser!\u201d in the best-musical race. The campaign notes that the show is not alone: a string of successful shows, from \u201cWest Side Story\u201d to \u201cWicked,\u201d had in previous years been passed over for best musical. \u201cYou\u2019re always hoping that you\u2019re going to win, but if you don\u2019t, you have to think about how to position your show,\u201d said Kevin McCollum, the lead producer of \u201cRotten!\u201d \u201cVery few shows have the confidence to go with the headline \u2018Loser!,\u2019 but it illustrates that we\u2019re confident enough to acknowledge our loss and celebrate those that came before us.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "On Facebook, Twitter and in a full-page ad in The New York Times on Sunday, the show is trumpeting its status as \u201cLoser!\u201d in the best-musical race.", "paragraph_id": "5d7007c4c8e4820a9b66ae8e"} +{"question": "What record label does Joan Shelley work for?", "paragraph": "Stars shine overhead, and rivers flow nearby in songs by Joan Shelley, who performed on Thursday night at Union Pool in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Her music is folky and pastoral, with a sense of scale that makes her humble about her place in mankind and the universe, and her songs are serene but never complacent. In \u201cElectric Ursa,\u201d the title song of her current album (No Quarter Records), Ms. Shelley sang, \u201cUnder your stars, your earthless movement/We are only feeble humans.\u201d", "answer": "No Quarter Records", "sentence": "In \u201cElectric Ursa,\u201d the title song of her current album ( No Quarter Records ), Ms. Shelley sang, \u201cUnder your stars, your earthless movement/We are only feeble humans.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Stars shine overhead, and rivers flow nearby in songs by Joan Shelley, who performed on Thursday night at Union Pool in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Her music is folky and pastoral, with a sense of scale that makes her humble about her place in mankind and the universe, and her songs are serene but never complacent. In \u201cElectric Ursa,\u201d the title song of her current album ( No Quarter Records ), Ms. Shelley sang, \u201cUnder your stars, your earthless movement/We are only feeble humans.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Stars shine overhead, and rivers flow nearby in songs by Joan Shelley, who performed on Thursday night at Union Pool in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Her music is folky and pastoral, with a sense of scale that makes her humble about her place in mankind and the universe, and her songs are serene but never complacent. In \u201cElectric Ursa,\u201d the title song of her current album ( No Quarter Records ), Ms. Shelley sang, \u201cUnder your stars, your earthless movement/We are only feeble humans.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In \u201cElectric Ursa,\u201d the title song of her current album ( No Quarter Records ), Ms. Shelley sang, \u201cUnder your stars, your earthless movement/We are only feeble humans.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d70441fc8e4820a9b66e759"} +{"question": "About how many scenes did Mr. Rylance say there were per episode?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt\u2019s an extraordinary job for me,\u201d Mr. Rylance said after shooting multiple takes of a confrontation with an ailing Catherine of Aragon (Joanne Whalley). \u201cThere are about 70 or 80 scenes per episode, and I\u2019m in most of them. The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking. So you can\u2019t compromise his expressionlessness, but you have to convey what might be going on for him.\u201d Although the series has arrived after the plays, Colin Callender, a former president of HBO films whose production company Playground produced the series (with Company Pictures, \u201cMasterpiece\u201d and BBC Two), began negotiations to secure the rights in 2012. Mr. Callender said that as soon as he read the books, he envisaged a television production.", "answer": "about 70 or 80 scenes", "sentence": "\u201cThere are about 70 or 80 scenes per episode, and I\u2019m in most of them.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s an extraordinary job for me,\u201d Mr. Rylance said after shooting multiple takes of a confrontation with an ailing Catherine of Aragon (Joanne Whalley). \u201cThere are about 70 or 80 scenes per episode, and I\u2019m in most of them. The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking. So you can\u2019t compromise his expressionlessness, but you have to convey what might be going on for him.\u201d Although the series has arrived after the plays, Colin Callender, a former president of HBO films whose production company Playground produced the series (with Company Pictures, \u201cMasterpiece\u201d and BBC Two), began negotiations to secure the rights in 2012. Mr. Callender said that as soon as he read the books, he envisaged a television production.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s an extraordinary job for me,\u201d Mr. Rylance said after shooting multiple takes of a confrontation with an ailing Catherine of Aragon (Joanne Whalley). \u201cThere are about 70 or 80 scenes per episode, and I\u2019m in most of them. The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking. So you can\u2019t compromise his expressionlessness, but you have to convey what might be going on for him.\u201d Although the series has arrived after the plays, Colin Callender, a former president of HBO films whose production company Playground produced the series (with Company Pictures, \u201cMasterpiece\u201d and BBC Two), began negotiations to secure the rights in 2012. Mr. Callender said that as soon as he read the books, he envisaged a television production.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThere are about 70 or 80 scenes per episode, and I\u2019m in most of them.", "paragraph_id": "5d70734ec8e4820a9b66f20b"} +{"question": "What did case law state regarding newly discovered witnesses?", "paragraph": "The judge also rejected the prosecution\u2019s argument that Mr. Hincapie could have called the witnesses at his first trial and chose not to. The judge noted Ms. Santana had come forward only this year after reading news accounts of the hearing, while Mr. Montero and Mr. Anderson had legal reasons in 1990 for not making themselves available to testify. He said the case law regarding setting aside a verdict did not require all of the witnesses to be newly discovered, only that their statements be discovered after the trial.", "answer": "that their statements be discovered after the trial", "sentence": "He said the case law regarding setting aside a verdict did not require all of the witnesses to be newly discovered, only that their statements be discovered after the trial .", "paragraph_sentence": "The judge also rejected the prosecution\u2019s argument that Mr. Hincapie could have called the witnesses at his first trial and chose not to. The judge noted Ms. Santana had come forward only this year after reading news accounts of the hearing, while Mr. Montero and Mr. Anderson had legal reasons in 1990 for not making themselves available to testify. He said the case law regarding setting aside a verdict did not require all of the witnesses to be newly discovered, only that their statements be discovered after the trial . ", "paragraph_answer": "The judge also rejected the prosecution\u2019s argument that Mr. Hincapie could have called the witnesses at his first trial and chose not to. The judge noted Ms. Santana had come forward only this year after reading news accounts of the hearing, while Mr. Montero and Mr. Anderson had legal reasons in 1990 for not making themselves available to testify. He said the case law regarding setting aside a verdict did not require all of the witnesses to be newly discovered, only that their statements be discovered after the trial .", "sentence_answer": "He said the case law regarding setting aside a verdict did not require all of the witnesses to be newly discovered, only that their statements be discovered after the trial .", "paragraph_id": "5d702797c8e4820a9b66d567"} +{"question": "What percentage was the 3700 estates that were expected to owe tax?", "paragraph": "An amendment by Senator Tim Kaine, Democrat of Virginia, called for a lifting of the spending limits, paid for by changes to entitlement programs other than Social Security, a re-examination of other programs and the ending of some tax loopholes. It passed, 50 to 48. Senate Republicans did set some policy stakes in the ground, some of them surprising. The Senate voted, 54 to 46, to fully repeal the estate tax, even though next year, the value of estates subject to it will have to exceed $5.43 million, or nearly $11 million for a couple. Only about 3,700 estates, or 0.12 percent of the total, were expected to owe any federal estate tax last year.", "answer": "0.12", "sentence": "Only about 3,700 estates, or 0.12 percent of the total, were expected to owe any federal estate tax last year.", "paragraph_sentence": "An amendment by Senator Tim Kaine, Democrat of Virginia, called for a lifting of the spending limits, paid for by changes to entitlement programs other than Social Security, a re-examination of other programs and the ending of some tax loopholes. It passed, 50 to 48. Senate Republicans did set some policy stakes in the ground, some of them surprising. The Senate voted, 54 to 46, to fully repeal the estate tax, even though next year, the value of estates subject to it will have to exceed $5.43 million, or nearly $11 million for a couple. Only about 3,700 estates, or 0.12 percent of the total, were expected to owe any federal estate tax last year. ", "paragraph_answer": "An amendment by Senator Tim Kaine, Democrat of Virginia, called for a lifting of the spending limits, paid for by changes to entitlement programs other than Social Security, a re-examination of other programs and the ending of some tax loopholes. It passed, 50 to 48. Senate Republicans did set some policy stakes in the ground, some of them surprising. The Senate voted, 54 to 46, to fully repeal the estate tax, even though next year, the value of estates subject to it will have to exceed $5.43 million, or nearly $11 million for a couple. Only about 3,700 estates, or 0.12 percent of the total, were expected to owe any federal estate tax last year.", "sentence_answer": "Only about 3,700 estates, or 0.12 percent of the total, were expected to owe any federal estate tax last year.", "paragraph_id": "5d7028d8c8e4820a9b66d69b"} +{"question": "If you don't know the harmony, you cannot what?", "paragraph": "SALONEN He always said that the form and the expression of most Western art music come from the harmony. If you don\u2019t know the harmony well, you cannot understand, let alone convey, the sense of the form to anybody. On a practical level it means you have to go through every chord when you go through a score. It sounds obvious and trivial, but if you study, say, \u201cG\u00f6tterd\u00e4mmerung\u201d or \u201cElektra,\u201d to get a clear idea of the harmonic structure takes a lot of time. There are no shortcuts. You have to learn what the principles of the harmony are, and then you can plan your so-called interpretation.", "answer": "understand", "sentence": "If you don\u2019t know the harmony well, you cannot understand , let alone convey, the sense of the form to anybody.", "paragraph_sentence": "SALONEN He always said that the form and the expression of most Western art music come from the harmony. If you don\u2019t know the harmony well, you cannot understand , let alone convey, the sense of the form to anybody. On a practical level it means you have to go through every chord when you go through a score. It sounds obvious and trivial, but if you study, say, \u201cG\u00f6tterd\u00e4mmerung\u201d or \u201cElektra,\u201d to get a clear idea of the harmonic structure takes a lot of time. There are no shortcuts. You have to learn what the principles of the harmony are, and then you can plan your so-called interpretation.", "paragraph_answer": "SALONEN He always said that the form and the expression of most Western art music come from the harmony. If you don\u2019t know the harmony well, you cannot understand , let alone convey, the sense of the form to anybody. On a practical level it means you have to go through every chord when you go through a score. It sounds obvious and trivial, but if you study, say, \u201cG\u00f6tterd\u00e4mmerung\u201d or \u201cElektra,\u201d to get a clear idea of the harmonic structure takes a lot of time. There are no shortcuts. You have to learn what the principles of the harmony are, and then you can plan your so-called interpretation.", "sentence_answer": "If you don\u2019t know the harmony well, you cannot understand , let alone convey, the sense of the form to anybody.", "paragraph_id": "5d705d54c8e4820a9b66ef66"} +{"question": "On which network does \"Scream Queens\" currently air?", "paragraph": "Best Thing That Could Come of This ShowFox has yet to decide whether \u201cScream Queens\u201d will be renewed \u2014 the social media following has been great, but the ratings have been soft. Throw your own opinion in the comment section, but I\u2019ve seen enough; what was occasionally cute and witty once would be hard-pressed to be either a second time. I do, however, want to see a spinoff show, \u201cThe Radwells Plus Eight.\u201d In the second hour Tuesday we saw the overprivileged Chad and the daffy Denise, who had become lovers, decide to break up. These two were the best thing about this show; give them eight kids and put them in a sitcom.", "answer": "Fox", "sentence": "Best Thing That Could Come of This Show Fox has yet to decide whether \u201cScream Queens\u201d will be renewed \u2014 the social media following has been great, but the ratings have been soft.", "paragraph_sentence": " Best Thing That Could Come of This Show Fox has yet to decide whether \u201cScream Queens\u201d will be renewed \u2014 the social media following has been great, but the ratings have been soft. Throw your own opinion in the comment section, but I\u2019ve seen enough; what was occasionally cute and witty once would be hard-pressed to be either a second time. I do, however, want to see a spinoff show, \u201cThe Radwells Plus Eight.\u201d In the second hour Tuesday we saw the overprivileged Chad and the daffy Denise, who had become lovers, decide to break up. These two were the best thing about this show; give them eight kids and put them in a sitcom.", "paragraph_answer": "Best Thing That Could Come of This Show Fox has yet to decide whether \u201cScream Queens\u201d will be renewed \u2014 the social media following has been great, but the ratings have been soft. Throw your own opinion in the comment section, but I\u2019ve seen enough; what was occasionally cute and witty once would be hard-pressed to be either a second time. I do, however, want to see a spinoff show, \u201cThe Radwells Plus Eight.\u201d In the second hour Tuesday we saw the overprivileged Chad and the daffy Denise, who had become lovers, decide to break up. These two were the best thing about this show; give them eight kids and put them in a sitcom.", "sentence_answer": "Best Thing That Could Come of This Show Fox has yet to decide whether \u201cScream Queens\u201d will be renewed \u2014 the social media following has been great, but the ratings have been soft.", "paragraph_id": "5d700b3dc8e4820a9b66b5ae"} +{"question": "What organization what the perpetrator a member of?", "paragraph": "Four more attacks were reported on Thursday. A Palestinian gunman drove up to an Israeli military checkpoint in the West Bank and opened fire on the soldiers there, according to the military. The assailant was shot and killed, and one soldier and one bystander were wounded. Palestinian news outlets identified the gunman as an officer in the Palestinian Authority\u2019s intelligence service. Hours later, in Jerusalem, an Israeli police officer was stabbed by a Palestinian resident of the West Bank, the authorities said. A Palestinian doctor from a nearby clinic gave first aid. Police officers at the scene fatally shot the assailant. At night, a gunman fired at an Israeli vehicle near a West Bank settlement, causing no injuries. And two Palestinians stabbed a soldier in Hebron and were subsequently killed.", "answer": "Palestinian Authority\u2019s intelligence service", "sentence": "Palestinian news outlets identified the gunman as an officer in the Palestinian Authority\u2019s intelligence service .", "paragraph_sentence": "Four more attacks were reported on Thursday. A Palestinian gunman drove up to an Israeli military checkpoint in the West Bank and opened fire on the soldiers there, according to the military. The assailant was shot and killed, and one soldier and one bystander were wounded. Palestinian news outlets identified the gunman as an officer in the Palestinian Authority\u2019s intelligence service . Hours later, in Jerusalem, an Israeli police officer was stabbed by a Palestinian resident of the West Bank, the authorities said. A Palestinian doctor from a nearby clinic gave first aid. Police officers at the scene fatally shot the assailant. At night, a gunman fired at an Israeli vehicle near a West Bank settlement, causing no injuries. And two Palestinians stabbed a soldier in Hebron and were subsequently killed.", "paragraph_answer": "Four more attacks were reported on Thursday. A Palestinian gunman drove up to an Israeli military checkpoint in the West Bank and opened fire on the soldiers there, according to the military. The assailant was shot and killed, and one soldier and one bystander were wounded. Palestinian news outlets identified the gunman as an officer in the Palestinian Authority\u2019s intelligence service . Hours later, in Jerusalem, an Israeli police officer was stabbed by a Palestinian resident of the West Bank, the authorities said. A Palestinian doctor from a nearby clinic gave first aid. Police officers at the scene fatally shot the assailant. At night, a gunman fired at an Israeli vehicle near a West Bank settlement, causing no injuries. And two Palestinians stabbed a soldier in Hebron and were subsequently killed.", "sentence_answer": "Palestinian news outlets identified the gunman as an officer in the Palestinian Authority\u2019s intelligence service .", "paragraph_id": "5d701c7bc8e4820a9b66c7db"} +{"question": "What team was Syndergaard pitching against?", "paragraph": "Syndergaard then gave the type of performance that defines a player\u2019s season, the kind that can instill confidence in a rookie and propel him to new heights. He suffocated the Dodgers, holding them to two hits and one run in six innings. He pitched even with Kershaw, perhaps even better, and gave the Mets\u2019 porous offense the chance to squeak out a 2-1 win. Syndergaard pitched so well that, afterward, a reporter asked him if this start had stamped him as one of the best young pitchers in baseball, and he did not scoff at the question. \u201cI hope so,\u201d Syndergaard said. \u201cBut, I mean, I certainly don\u2019t think I\u2019m there yet to carry the name as Clayton Kershaw does. But hopefully I\u2019ll get there.\u201d", "answer": "Dodgers", "sentence": "He suffocated the Dodgers , holding them to two hits and one run in six innings.", "paragraph_sentence": "Syndergaard then gave the type of performance that defines a player\u2019s season, the kind that can instill confidence in a rookie and propel him to new heights. He suffocated the Dodgers , holding them to two hits and one run in six innings. He pitched even with Kershaw, perhaps even better, and gave the Mets\u2019 porous offense the chance to squeak out a 2-1 win. Syndergaard pitched so well that, afterward, a reporter asked him if this start had stamped him as one of the best young pitchers in baseball, and he did not scoff at the question. \u201cI hope so,\u201d Syndergaard said. \u201cBut, I mean, I certainly don\u2019t think I\u2019m there yet to carry the name as Clayton Kershaw does. But hopefully I\u2019ll get there.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Syndergaard then gave the type of performance that defines a player\u2019s season, the kind that can instill confidence in a rookie and propel him to new heights. He suffocated the Dodgers , holding them to two hits and one run in six innings. He pitched even with Kershaw, perhaps even better, and gave the Mets\u2019 porous offense the chance to squeak out a 2-1 win. Syndergaard pitched so well that, afterward, a reporter asked him if this start had stamped him as one of the best young pitchers in baseball, and he did not scoff at the question. \u201cI hope so,\u201d Syndergaard said. \u201cBut, I mean, I certainly don\u2019t think I\u2019m there yet to carry the name as Clayton Kershaw does. But hopefully I\u2019ll get there.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "He suffocated the Dodgers , holding them to two hits and one run in six innings.", "paragraph_id": "5d705471c8e4820a9b66ec79"} +{"question": "If you decide to go on vacation, what may be the biggest factor?", "paragraph": "Perhaps the smartest decision-making app I\u2019ve used is ChoiceMap, because it\u2019s both really easy to use and it makes it feel as if your decision has been intelligently considered by the app\u2019s algorithms. ChoiceMap, which is free for iOS, tries to make the process as smooth as possible. To start, you describe a choice to make or use one of the app\u2019s many templates on diverse topics, like choosing baby names or which phone carrier to use. Once you have described the decision to be made, and typed in all the outcomes that could result, the app lets you explain all the factors that influence your thinking. If you\u2019re trying to decide where to go for a vacation, for example, cost may be the biggest factor.", "answer": "cost", "sentence": "If you\u2019re trying to decide where to go for a vacation, for example, cost may be the biggest factor.", "paragraph_sentence": "Perhaps the smartest decision-making app I\u2019ve used is ChoiceMap, because it\u2019s both really easy to use and it makes it feel as if your decision has been intelligently considered by the app\u2019s algorithms. ChoiceMap, which is free for iOS, tries to make the process as smooth as possible. To start, you describe a choice to make or use one of the app\u2019s many templates on diverse topics, like choosing baby names or which phone carrier to use. Once you have described the decision to be made, and typed in all the outcomes that could result, the app lets you explain all the factors that influence your thinking. If you\u2019re trying to decide where to go for a vacation, for example, cost may be the biggest factor. ", "paragraph_answer": "Perhaps the smartest decision-making app I\u2019ve used is ChoiceMap, because it\u2019s both really easy to use and it makes it feel as if your decision has been intelligently considered by the app\u2019s algorithms. ChoiceMap, which is free for iOS, tries to make the process as smooth as possible. To start, you describe a choice to make or use one of the app\u2019s many templates on diverse topics, like choosing baby names or which phone carrier to use. Once you have described the decision to be made, and typed in all the outcomes that could result, the app lets you explain all the factors that influence your thinking. If you\u2019re trying to decide where to go for a vacation, for example, cost may be the biggest factor.", "sentence_answer": "If you\u2019re trying to decide where to go for a vacation, for example, cost may be the biggest factor.", "paragraph_id": "5d705a4dc8e4820a9b66ee47"} +{"question": "What type of art does Sally look to for her imagery?", "paragraph": "Like an essayist collecting quotations, Mann ransacks the history of photography for her imagery. \u201cI\u2019m a shameless borrower,\u201d she says. The influence of Norman Sieff, her photography teacher at Bennington and best known for his sepia-tinted album cover for the Band, can still be felt. At Hollins, she reprinted the glass plates of Michael Miley, Robert E. Lee\u2019s main portrait photographer, and further immersed herself in the technology of the 19th century. A feeling of nostalgia as well as hidden danger has marked Mann\u2019s work for years.", "answer": "photography", "sentence": "Like an essayist collecting quotations, Mann ransacks the history of photography for her imagery.", "paragraph_sentence": " Like an essayist collecting quotations, Mann ransacks the history of photography for her imagery. \u201cI\u2019m a shameless borrower,\u201d she says. The influence of Norman Sieff, her photography teacher at Bennington and best known for his sepia-tinted album cover for the Band, can still be felt. At Hollins, she reprinted the glass plates of Michael Miley, Robert E. Lee\u2019s main portrait photographer, and further immersed herself in the technology of the 19th century. A feeling of nostalgia as well as hidden danger has marked Mann\u2019s work for years.", "paragraph_answer": "Like an essayist collecting quotations, Mann ransacks the history of photography for her imagery. \u201cI\u2019m a shameless borrower,\u201d she says. The influence of Norman Sieff, her photography teacher at Bennington and best known for his sepia-tinted album cover for the Band, can still be felt. At Hollins, she reprinted the glass plates of Michael Miley, Robert E. Lee\u2019s main portrait photographer, and further immersed herself in the technology of the 19th century. A feeling of nostalgia as well as hidden danger has marked Mann\u2019s work for years.", "sentence_answer": "Like an essayist collecting quotations, Mann ransacks the history of photography for her imagery.", "paragraph_id": "5d70068dc8e4820a9b66abb5"} +{"question": "What sport does Kyrgios play?", "paragraph": "\u201cThese kids, they\u2019ve got to get under control,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cThey\u2019re going to get hurt.\u201d Harrison added that he believed Kokkinakis and Kyrgios were hiding behind tennis\u2019s genteel code of conduct. \u201cIf he wants to get into it, I will bury him,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cWawrinka should\u2019ve decked Kyrgios, and I should deck that kid.\u201d Kokkinakis, however, distanced himself from Kyrgios, and said it was unfair to conflate the two. \u201cI let him know \u2014 I made it pretty clear that he can\u2019t be doing that,\u201d Kokkinakis said of Kyrgios\u2019s insult. \u201cIf he\u2019s got a problem, he\u2019s got to say it in private. The way he went about it definitely wasn\u2019t the right thing.\u201d The elder statesmen of the tour have been similarly indignant. \u201cObviously it\u2019s the talk of the locker room, and everybody has their opinion,\u201d Roger Federer said. \u201cBut I think that we all agree that he definitely crossed the line by a long shot. We\u2019re not used to that kind of talk in tennis.\u201d Federer suggested he might support further punishment for Kyrgios. \u201cA fine is one thing; we\u2019ll see if there\u2019s going to be more coming,\u201d Federer said. \u201cI haven\u2019t heard anything, but clearly it was very disappointing and not great for the sport, one that I think many players have tried to build up and make it a good image. We want kids to be wanting to get into this sport, I guess, because it\u2019s a nice sport, it\u2019s clean, it\u2019s fair, and all these things. I don\u2019t think there should be any room for that kind of talk.\u201d", "answer": "tennis", "sentence": "Harrison added that he believed Kokkinakis and Kyrgios were hiding behind tennis \u2019s genteel code of conduct.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThese kids, they\u2019ve got to get under control,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cThey\u2019re going to get hurt.\u201d Harrison added that he believed Kokkinakis and Kyrgios were hiding behind tennis \u2019s genteel code of conduct. \u201cIf he wants to get into it, I will bury him,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cWawrinka should\u2019ve decked Kyrgios, and I should deck that kid.\u201d Kokkinakis, however, distanced himself from Kyrgios, and said it was unfair to conflate the two. \u201cI let him know \u2014 I made it pretty clear that he can\u2019t be doing that,\u201d Kokkinakis said of Kyrgios\u2019s insult. \u201cIf he\u2019s got a problem, he\u2019s got to say it in private. The way he went about it definitely wasn\u2019t the right thing.\u201d The elder statesmen of the tour have been similarly indignant. \u201cObviously it\u2019s the talk of the locker room, and everybody has their opinion,\u201d Roger Federer said. \u201cBut I think that we all agree that he definitely crossed the line by a long shot. We\u2019re not used to that kind of talk in tennis.\u201d Federer suggested he might support further punishment for Kyrgios. \u201cA fine is one thing; we\u2019ll see if there\u2019s going to be more coming,\u201d Federer said. \u201cI haven\u2019t heard anything, but clearly it was very disappointing and not great for the sport, one that I think many players have tried to build up and make it a good image. We want kids to be wanting to get into this sport, I guess, because it\u2019s a nice sport, it\u2019s clean, it\u2019s fair, and all these things. I don\u2019t think there should be any room for that kind of talk.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThese kids, they\u2019ve got to get under control,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cThey\u2019re going to get hurt.\u201d Harrison added that he believed Kokkinakis and Kyrgios were hiding behind tennis \u2019s genteel code of conduct. \u201cIf he wants to get into it, I will bury him,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cWawrinka should\u2019ve decked Kyrgios, and I should deck that kid.\u201d Kokkinakis, however, distanced himself from Kyrgios, and said it was unfair to conflate the two. \u201cI let him know \u2014 I made it pretty clear that he can\u2019t be doing that,\u201d Kokkinakis said of Kyrgios\u2019s insult. \u201cIf he\u2019s got a problem, he\u2019s got to say it in private. The way he went about it definitely wasn\u2019t the right thing.\u201d The elder statesmen of the tour have been similarly indignant. \u201cObviously it\u2019s the talk of the locker room, and everybody has their opinion,\u201d Roger Federer said. \u201cBut I think that we all agree that he definitely crossed the line by a long shot. We\u2019re not used to that kind of talk in tennis.\u201d Federer suggested he might support further punishment for Kyrgios. \u201cA fine is one thing; we\u2019ll see if there\u2019s going to be more coming,\u201d Federer said. \u201cI haven\u2019t heard anything, but clearly it was very disappointing and not great for the sport, one that I think many players have tried to build up and make it a good image. We want kids to be wanting to get into this sport, I guess, because it\u2019s a nice sport, it\u2019s clean, it\u2019s fair, and all these things. I don\u2019t think there should be any room for that kind of talk.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Harrison added that he believed Kokkinakis and Kyrgios were hiding behind tennis \u2019s genteel code of conduct.", "paragraph_id": "5d708954c8e4820a9b66f499"} +{"question": "What does McConnell say he stands on?", "paragraph": "Democrats also say that Mr. McConnell benefited from the pent-up demand he helped create by bottling up so much legislation as the leader of the minority. Undaunted, he points to the list of bills and the much more frequent votes on amendments \u2014 more than 200 this year, compared with 15 in 2014 \u2014 as irrefutable evidence of his success. \u201cI stand on the facts,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on, rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found.", "answer": "the facts", "sentence": "\u201cI stand on the facts ,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on, rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found.", "paragraph_sentence": "Democrats also say that Mr. McConnell benefited from the pent-up demand he helped create by bottling up so much legislation as the leader of the minority. Undaunted, he points to the list of bills and the much more frequent votes on amendments \u2014 more than 200 this year, compared with 15 in 2014 \u2014 as irrefutable evidence of his success. \u201cI stand on the facts ,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on, rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found. ", "paragraph_answer": "Democrats also say that Mr. McConnell benefited from the pent-up demand he helped create by bottling up so much legislation as the leader of the minority. Undaunted, he points to the list of bills and the much more frequent votes on amendments \u2014 more than 200 this year, compared with 15 in 2014 \u2014 as irrefutable evidence of his success. \u201cI stand on the facts ,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on, rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI stand on the facts ,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on, rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found.", "paragraph_id": "5d70112bc8e4820a9b66bdb5"} +{"question": "What did people express about equality for women?", "paragraph": "PG: How did people respond when you first raised concerns about equality for women? GS: They were either disinterested or said it was impossible. My classic experience was an editor who said, \u201cO.K., you can publish an article saying women are equal.\u201d But right next to it, he would publish an article that said that they weren\u2019t \u2014 to be objective. RBG: The concern was that if a woman was doing gender equality, her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished. It was considered frivolous.", "answer": "disinterested or said it was impossible", "sentence": "They were either disinterested or said it was impossible .", "paragraph_sentence": "PG: How did people respond when you first raised concerns about equality for women? GS: They were either disinterested or said it was impossible . My classic experience was an editor who said, \u201cO.K., you can publish an article saying women are equal.\u201d But right next to it, he would publish an article that said that they weren\u2019t \u2014 to be objective. RBG: The concern was that if a woman was doing gender equality, her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished. It was considered frivolous.", "paragraph_answer": "PG: How did people respond when you first raised concerns about equality for women? GS: They were either disinterested or said it was impossible . My classic experience was an editor who said, \u201cO.K., you can publish an article saying women are equal.\u201d But right next to it, he would publish an article that said that they weren\u2019t \u2014 to be objective. RBG: The concern was that if a woman was doing gender equality, her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished. It was considered frivolous.", "sentence_answer": "They were either disinterested or said it was impossible .", "paragraph_id": "5d705f17c8e4820a9b66eff3"} +{"question": "When was opening of the show suppose to be taking place?", "paragraph": "So \u201cSomething Rotten!\u201d has two canons from which to pull fodder: the complete works of you-know-who and the Broadway musical. The show\u2019s appeal, such as it is, lies in its anachronistic mismatch. This is clear from its opening number, \u201cWelcome to the Renaissance,\u201d in which a chorus attired in doublets and farthingales \u2014 seen against Scott Pask\u2019s deliberately kitschy Merrie Olde London set \u2014 extol the glories of being utterly up-to-date in the 1590s, while singing and dancing like a road company of a generic song-and-dance blockbuster from the late 20th century. Got it?", "answer": "1590s", "sentence": "This is clear from its opening number, \u201cWelcome to the Renaissance,\u201d in which a chorus attired in doublets and farthingales \u2014 seen against Scott Pask\u2019s deliberately kitschy Merrie Olde London set \u2014 extol the glories of being utterly up-to-date in the 1590s , while singing and dancing like a road company of a generic song-and-dance blockbuster from the late 20th century.", "paragraph_sentence": "So \u201cSomething Rotten!\u201d has two canons from which to pull fodder: the complete works of you-know-who and the Broadway musical. The show\u2019s appeal, such as it is, lies in its anachronistic mismatch. This is clear from its opening number, \u201cWelcome to the Renaissance,\u201d in which a chorus attired in doublets and farthingales \u2014 seen against Scott Pask\u2019s deliberately kitschy Merrie Olde London set \u2014 extol the glories of being utterly up-to-date in the 1590s , while singing and dancing like a road company of a generic song-and-dance blockbuster from the late 20th century. Got it?", "paragraph_answer": "So \u201cSomething Rotten!\u201d has two canons from which to pull fodder: the complete works of you-know-who and the Broadway musical. The show\u2019s appeal, such as it is, lies in its anachronistic mismatch. This is clear from its opening number, \u201cWelcome to the Renaissance,\u201d in which a chorus attired in doublets and farthingales \u2014 seen against Scott Pask\u2019s deliberately kitschy Merrie Olde London set \u2014 extol the glories of being utterly up-to-date in the 1590s , while singing and dancing like a road company of a generic song-and-dance blockbuster from the late 20th century. Got it?", "sentence_answer": "This is clear from its opening number, \u201cWelcome to the Renaissance,\u201d in which a chorus attired in doublets and farthingales \u2014 seen against Scott Pask\u2019s deliberately kitschy Merrie Olde London set \u2014 extol the glories of being utterly up-to-date in the 1590s , while singing and dancing like a road company of a generic song-and-dance blockbuster from the late 20th century.", "paragraph_id": "5d702a2ac8e4820a9b66d7ac"} +{"question": "Who is the Rangers Goalie coach", "paragraph": "During the final few drills, Benoit Allaire, the Rangers\u2019 goalie coach, watched carefully as Lundqvist was pelted with more shots. Allaire has been Lundqvist\u2019s coach for his entire N.H.L. career. If anyone could notice anything wrong with Lundqvist, his positioning or his technique, it would be Allaire. Near the end of practice, Lundqvist crouched and began stretching again as Allaire chatted with him. Then Lundqvist left the ice, 62 minutes after he had arrived. As he undressed at his locker, a horde of news media members huddled around him. Lundqvist is the Rangers\u2019 star, and Wednesday\u2019s game rests more on him than on anyone else. He was asked if he was ever nervous before games like this.", "answer": "Benoit Allaire", "sentence": "During the final few drills, Benoit Allaire , the Rangers\u2019 goalie coach, watched carefully as Lundqvist was pelted with more shots.", "paragraph_sentence": " During the final few drills, Benoit Allaire , the Rangers\u2019 goalie coach, watched carefully as Lundqvist was pelted with more shots. Allaire has been Lundqvist\u2019s coach for his entire N.H.L. career. If anyone could notice anything wrong with Lundqvist, his positioning or his technique, it would be Allaire. Near the end of practice, Lundqvist crouched and began stretching again as Allaire chatted with him. Then Lundqvist left the ice, 62 minutes after he had arrived. As he undressed at his locker, a horde of news media members huddled around him. Lundqvist is the Rangers\u2019 star, and Wednesday\u2019s game rests more on him than on anyone else. He was asked if he was ever nervous before games like this.", "paragraph_answer": "During the final few drills, Benoit Allaire , the Rangers\u2019 goalie coach, watched carefully as Lundqvist was pelted with more shots. Allaire has been Lundqvist\u2019s coach for his entire N.H.L. career. If anyone could notice anything wrong with Lundqvist, his positioning or his technique, it would be Allaire. Near the end of practice, Lundqvist crouched and began stretching again as Allaire chatted with him. Then Lundqvist left the ice, 62 minutes after he had arrived. As he undressed at his locker, a horde of news media members huddled around him. Lundqvist is the Rangers\u2019 star, and Wednesday\u2019s game rests more on him than on anyone else. He was asked if he was ever nervous before games like this.", "sentence_answer": "During the final few drills, Benoit Allaire , the Rangers\u2019 goalie coach, watched carefully as Lundqvist was pelted with more shots.", "paragraph_id": "5d707d92c8e4820a9b66f368"} +{"question": "Who was Bugun TV a main platform for over recent months?", "paragraph": "In the end, both channels disappeared from the airwaves during a shared live broadcast on Wednesday afternoon, which Bugun\u2019s Suna Vidinli reported on Twitter. By Wednesday night, reports from both Bugun and KanalTurk were blocked from viewers in the United States on YouTube. Mustafa Kilic, a journalist for one of the group\u2019s newspapers, Millet, shared an image of blood on his press card, an apparent result of resisting the police during the raid. As Cihan reported, Bugun TV had \u201cemerged as a main platform for opposition politicians over recent months.\u201d", "answer": "opposition politicians", "sentence": "As Cihan reported, Bugun TV had \u201cemerged as a main platform for opposition politicians over recent months.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "In the end, both channels disappeared from the airwaves during a shared live broadcast on Wednesday afternoon, which Bugun\u2019s Suna Vidinli reported on Twitter. By Wednesday night, reports from both Bugun and KanalTurk were blocked from viewers in the United States on YouTube. Mustafa Kilic, a journalist for one of the group\u2019s newspapers, Millet, shared an image of blood on his press card, an apparent result of resisting the police during the raid. As Cihan reported, Bugun TV had \u201cemerged as a main platform for opposition politicians over recent months.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "In the end, both channels disappeared from the airwaves during a shared live broadcast on Wednesday afternoon, which Bugun\u2019s Suna Vidinli reported on Twitter. By Wednesday night, reports from both Bugun and KanalTurk were blocked from viewers in the United States on YouTube. Mustafa Kilic, a journalist for one of the group\u2019s newspapers, Millet, shared an image of blood on his press card, an apparent result of resisting the police during the raid. As Cihan reported, Bugun TV had \u201cemerged as a main platform for opposition politicians over recent months.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "As Cihan reported, Bugun TV had \u201cemerged as a main platform for opposition politicians over recent months.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d700cc7c8e4820a9b66b81b"} +{"question": "In what year is the \"jobs gap\" predicted to close?", "paragraph": "Moreover, the economy is still 2.8 million jobs short of where it would have to be to match pre-recession employment levels while also absorbing new entrants into the work force, according to the Hamilton Project, a research group associated with the Brookings Institution in Washington. Even if the current trend continues, that so-called \u201cjobs gap\u201d will not be closed until mid-2017. In addition to the tempo of hiring and the unemployment rate, Fed policy makers have been paying close attention to the pace of wage increases. In November, the government said wages rose by 0.2 percent, leaving the 12-month change in average hourly earnings 2.3 percent higher. Despite steady hiring gains and a falling unemployment rate, wage growth in recent years has barely advanced faster than inflation. In October, that trend seemed to improve, with an unexpectedly strong 0.4 percentage point increase in average hourly earnings that pushed the 12-month gain to 2.5 percent even as the pace of inflation fell, mostly because of lower energy prices. But with November\u2019s figures reverting to the earlier trend, Mr. Clemons said, \u201cI don\u2019t think there\u2019s a lot of wage pressure yet.\u201d", "answer": "2017", "sentence": "Even if the current trend continues, that so-called \u201cjobs gap\u201d will not be closed until mid- 2017 .", "paragraph_sentence": "Moreover, the economy is still 2.8 million jobs short of where it would have to be to match pre-recession employment levels while also absorbing new entrants into the work force, according to the Hamilton Project, a research group associated with the Brookings Institution in Washington. Even if the current trend continues, that so-called \u201cjobs gap\u201d will not be closed until mid- 2017 . In addition to the tempo of hiring and the unemployment rate, Fed policy makers have been paying close attention to the pace of wage increases. In November, the government said wages rose by 0.2 percent, leaving the 12-month change in average hourly earnings 2.3 percent higher. Despite steady hiring gains and a falling unemployment rate, wage growth in recent years has barely advanced faster than inflation. In October, that trend seemed to improve, with an unexpectedly strong 0.4 percentage point increase in average hourly earnings that pushed the 12-month gain to 2.5 percent even as the pace of inflation fell, mostly because of lower energy prices. But with November\u2019s figures reverting to the earlier trend, Mr. Clemons said, \u201cI don\u2019t think there\u2019s a lot of wage pressure yet.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Moreover, the economy is still 2.8 million jobs short of where it would have to be to match pre-recession employment levels while also absorbing new entrants into the work force, according to the Hamilton Project, a research group associated with the Brookings Institution in Washington. Even if the current trend continues, that so-called \u201cjobs gap\u201d will not be closed until mid- 2017 . In addition to the tempo of hiring and the unemployment rate, Fed policy makers have been paying close attention to the pace of wage increases. In November, the government said wages rose by 0.2 percent, leaving the 12-month change in average hourly earnings 2.3 percent higher. Despite steady hiring gains and a falling unemployment rate, wage growth in recent years has barely advanced faster than inflation. In October, that trend seemed to improve, with an unexpectedly strong 0.4 percentage point increase in average hourly earnings that pushed the 12-month gain to 2.5 percent even as the pace of inflation fell, mostly because of lower energy prices. But with November\u2019s figures reverting to the earlier trend, Mr. Clemons said, \u201cI don\u2019t think there\u2019s a lot of wage pressure yet.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Even if the current trend continues, that so-called \u201cjobs gap\u201d will not be closed until mid- 2017 .", "paragraph_id": "5d702ce9c8e4820a9b66da60"} +{"question": "Who started at a theater in Harlem?", "paragraph": "That seemingly small step led to an increased turnout for the school\u2019s free community auditions, which has dramatically shifted the minority presence in the children division. \u201cIt\u2019s gone Technicolor fast,\u201d said Silas Farley, a 21-year-old member of City Ballet whose mother is black and father is white. (He refers to himself as \u201ca cultural gumbo.\u201d) Peter Martins, the ballet master in chief of City Ballet as well as the artistic director and chairman of faculty at the School of American Ballet, says that substantial change may take time, but it will happen. \u201cWe are not a white company,\u201d he said. \u201cWe don\u2019t seek to be a black company. We don\u2019t seek to be half and half. I just want to be American.\u201d While it\u2019s still too soon to tell if the children discovered through recent community auditions will make it into City Ballet, since 2008-9, the school has graduated 36 minority dancers who have gone on to join professional companies. Eleven of those joined City Ballet. India Bradley, a 17-year-old advanced student at the school said her ambition \u2014 obsession really \u2014 is to become one of them. \u201cMore than anything in life,\u201d she said. \u201cI have actual dreams.\u201d Ms. Bradley, a Detroit native, found her way to the School of American Ballet through the Dance Theater of Harlem. One of her teachers, Andrea Long-Naidu \u2014 a former City Ballet dancer \u2014 encouraged her to audition for the school.", "answer": "India Bradley", "sentence": "India Bradley , a 17-year-old advanced student at the school said her ambition \u2014 obsession really \u2014 is to become one of them.", "paragraph_sentence": "That seemingly small step led to an increased turnout for the school\u2019s free community auditions, which has dramatically shifted the minority presence in the children division. \u201cIt\u2019s gone Technicolor fast,\u201d said Silas Farley, a 21-year-old member of City Ballet whose mother is black and father is white. (He refers to himself as \u201ca cultural gumbo.\u201d) Peter Martins, the ballet master in chief of City Ballet as well as the artistic director and chairman of faculty at the School of American Ballet, says that substantial change may take time, but it will happen. \u201cWe are not a white company,\u201d he said. \u201cWe don\u2019t seek to be a black company. We don\u2019t seek to be half and half. I just want to be American.\u201d While it\u2019s still too soon to tell if the children discovered through recent community auditions will make it into City Ballet, since 2008-9, the school has graduated 36 minority dancers who have gone on to join professional companies. Eleven of those joined City Ballet. India Bradley , a 17-year-old advanced student at the school said her ambition \u2014 obsession really \u2014 is to become one of them. \u201cMore than anything in life,\u201d she said. \u201cI have actual dreams.\u201d Ms. Bradley, a Detroit native, found her way to the School of American Ballet through the Dance Theater of Harlem. One of her teachers, Andrea Long-Naidu \u2014 a former City Ballet dancer \u2014 encouraged her to audition for the school.", "paragraph_answer": "That seemingly small step led to an increased turnout for the school\u2019s free community auditions, which has dramatically shifted the minority presence in the children division. \u201cIt\u2019s gone Technicolor fast,\u201d said Silas Farley, a 21-year-old member of City Ballet whose mother is black and father is white. (He refers to himself as \u201ca cultural gumbo.\u201d) Peter Martins, the ballet master in chief of City Ballet as well as the artistic director and chairman of faculty at the School of American Ballet, says that substantial change may take time, but it will happen. \u201cWe are not a white company,\u201d he said. \u201cWe don\u2019t seek to be a black company. We don\u2019t seek to be half and half. I just want to be American.\u201d While it\u2019s still too soon to tell if the children discovered through recent community auditions will make it into City Ballet, since 2008-9, the school has graduated 36 minority dancers who have gone on to join professional companies. Eleven of those joined City Ballet. India Bradley , a 17-year-old advanced student at the school said her ambition \u2014 obsession really \u2014 is to become one of them. \u201cMore than anything in life,\u201d she said. \u201cI have actual dreams.\u201d Ms. Bradley, a Detroit native, found her way to the School of American Ballet through the Dance Theater of Harlem. One of her teachers, Andrea Long-Naidu \u2014 a former City Ballet dancer \u2014 encouraged her to audition for the school.", "sentence_answer": " India Bradley , a 17-year-old advanced student at the school said her ambition \u2014 obsession really \u2014 is to become one of them.", "paragraph_id": "5d70a592c8e4820a9b66f6a7"} +{"question": "Who is Alexi Lalas?", "paragraph": "A reporting credit last Friday for an article about the reaction of soccer officials to the arrest of members of FIFA on the eve of its vote for president was omitted. Dan Bilefsky contributed from London, Simon Romero from Rio de Janeiro, and Merna Thomas from Cairo. \u2022 The Sports Business column on Wednesday, about the reaction of sponsors to the resignation of FIFA\u2019s president, Sepp Blatter, misspelled, in some editions, the name that a Women\u2019s World Cup commentator goes by. He is Alexi Lalas, not Alexei. OBITUARIES", "answer": "a Women\u2019s World Cup commentator", "sentence": "The Sports Business column on Wednesday, about the reaction of sponsors to the resignation of FIFA\u2019s president, Sepp Blatter, misspelled, in some editions, the name that a Women\u2019s World Cup commentator goes by.", "paragraph_sentence": "A reporting credit last Friday for an article about the reaction of soccer officials to the arrest of members of FIFA on the eve of its vote for president was omitted. Dan Bilefsky contributed from London, Simon Romero from Rio de Janeiro, and Merna Thomas from Cairo. \u2022 The Sports Business column on Wednesday, about the reaction of sponsors to the resignation of FIFA\u2019s president, Sepp Blatter, misspelled, in some editions, the name that a Women\u2019s World Cup commentator goes by. He is Alexi Lalas, not Alexei. OBITUARIES", "paragraph_answer": "A reporting credit last Friday for an article about the reaction of soccer officials to the arrest of members of FIFA on the eve of its vote for president was omitted. Dan Bilefsky contributed from London, Simon Romero from Rio de Janeiro, and Merna Thomas from Cairo. \u2022 The Sports Business column on Wednesday, about the reaction of sponsors to the resignation of FIFA\u2019s president, Sepp Blatter, misspelled, in some editions, the name that a Women\u2019s World Cup commentator goes by. He is Alexi Lalas, not Alexei. OBITUARIES", "sentence_answer": "The Sports Business column on Wednesday, about the reaction of sponsors to the resignation of FIFA\u2019s president, Sepp Blatter, misspelled, in some editions, the name that a Women\u2019s World Cup commentator goes by.", "paragraph_id": "5d7013f4c8e4820a9b66c05a"} +{"question": "What year did the parks department hold a meeting for ideas about the Dome Playground?", "paragraph": "\u201cWhen we are unable to get a successful bid on a contract, that can delay a project six months to a year,\u201d Mr. Silver said. Such was the case in Councilman Brad Lander\u2019s district, in Brooklyn, where a dog run near DiMattina Playground limped along for years. Mr. Lander allotted $225,000 toward the project in 2010. When it went out to bid, however, there were no takers the first time around. The dog run, in Carroll Gardens, finally opened last summer, with new benches, fountains with spouts and a bone-shape dog pool. \u201cIt\u2019s beautiful,\u201d Mr. Lander said. Now he has his eye on another park project: the $2.75 million renovation of Dome Playground, on the border of Kensington and Borough Park. The parks department held a meeting to solicit ideas in early 2011; construction began last week \u2014 four years later. \u201cThis is another long saga,\u201d said Mr. Lander, who allocated money from his discretionary fund toward the renovation. \u201cBut it has picked up pace as of late.\u201d", "answer": "2011", "sentence": "The parks department held a meeting to solicit ideas in early 2011 ; construction began last week \u2014 four years later.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWhen we are unable to get a successful bid on a contract, that can delay a project six months to a year,\u201d Mr. Silver said. Such was the case in Councilman Brad Lander\u2019s district, in Brooklyn, where a dog run near DiMattina Playground limped along for years. Mr. Lander allotted $225,000 toward the project in 2010. When it went out to bid, however, there were no takers the first time around. The dog run, in Carroll Gardens, finally opened last summer, with new benches, fountains with spouts and a bone-shape dog pool. \u201cIt\u2019s beautiful,\u201d Mr. Lander said. Now he has his eye on another park project: the $2.75 million renovation of Dome Playground, on the border of Kensington and Borough Park. The parks department held a meeting to solicit ideas in early 2011 ; construction began last week \u2014 four years later. \u201cThis is another long saga,\u201d said Mr. Lander, who allocated money from his discretionary fund toward the renovation. \u201cBut it has picked up pace as of late.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWhen we are unable to get a successful bid on a contract, that can delay a project six months to a year,\u201d Mr. Silver said. Such was the case in Councilman Brad Lander\u2019s district, in Brooklyn, where a dog run near DiMattina Playground limped along for years. Mr. Lander allotted $225,000 toward the project in 2010. When it went out to bid, however, there were no takers the first time around. The dog run, in Carroll Gardens, finally opened last summer, with new benches, fountains with spouts and a bone-shape dog pool. \u201cIt\u2019s beautiful,\u201d Mr. Lander said. Now he has his eye on another park project: the $2.75 million renovation of Dome Playground, on the border of Kensington and Borough Park. The parks department held a meeting to solicit ideas in early 2011 ; construction began last week \u2014 four years later. \u201cThis is another long saga,\u201d said Mr. Lander, who allocated money from his discretionary fund toward the renovation. \u201cBut it has picked up pace as of late.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The parks department held a meeting to solicit ideas in early 2011 ; construction began last week \u2014 four years later.", "paragraph_id": "5d704e40c8e4820a9b66ea85"} +{"question": "In which year did the Brazilian federal police conduct the money laundering investigation, as mentioned in the article?", "paragraph": "\u201cYou needed a lot of improbable factors aligned for this case to begin,\u201d Mr. Dallagnol said, sitting at a conference table one afternoon. \u201cIt was like the gods giving us a window of opportunity.\u201d In 2012, the federal police were conducting a money-laundering investigation, which included surveillance of the owner of the Tower Gas Station. (This undistinguished institution once housed a carwash, since closed, which gave the investigation its name.) An officer on a wiretapped conversation realized that he was listening to Alberto Youssef. \u201cYoussef had been a pilot for many years, and the cop was once an air traffic controller,\u201d said Mr. Reinaldet, Mr. Youssef\u2019s lawyer. \u201cAnd the cop, he said to himself, \u2018I know this guy.\u2019 Pretty soon, they were tapping Youssef\u2019s cellphone.\u201d", "answer": "2012", "sentence": "In 2012 , the federal police were conducting a money-laundering investigation, which included surveillance of the owner of the Tower Gas Station.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cYou needed a lot of improbable factors aligned for this case to begin,\u201d Mr. Dallagnol said, sitting at a conference table one afternoon. \u201cIt was like the gods giving us a window of opportunity.\u201d In 2012 , the federal police were conducting a money-laundering investigation, which included surveillance of the owner of the Tower Gas Station. (This undistinguished institution once housed a carwash, since closed, which gave the investigation its name.) An officer on a wiretapped conversation realized that he was listening to Alberto Youssef. \u201cYoussef had been a pilot for many years, and the cop was once an air traffic controller,\u201d said Mr. Reinaldet, Mr. Youssef\u2019s lawyer. \u201cAnd the cop, he said to himself, \u2018I know this guy.\u2019 Pretty soon, they were tapping Youssef\u2019s cellphone.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cYou needed a lot of improbable factors aligned for this case to begin,\u201d Mr. Dallagnol said, sitting at a conference table one afternoon. \u201cIt was like the gods giving us a window of opportunity.\u201d In 2012 , the federal police were conducting a money-laundering investigation, which included surveillance of the owner of the Tower Gas Station. (This undistinguished institution once housed a carwash, since closed, which gave the investigation its name.) An officer on a wiretapped conversation realized that he was listening to Alberto Youssef. \u201cYoussef had been a pilot for many years, and the cop was once an air traffic controller,\u201d said Mr. Reinaldet, Mr. Youssef\u2019s lawyer. \u201cAnd the cop, he said to himself, \u2018I know this guy.\u2019 Pretty soon, they were tapping Youssef\u2019s cellphone.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In 2012 , the federal police were conducting a money-laundering investigation, which included surveillance of the owner of the Tower Gas Station.", "paragraph_id": "5d701b13c8e4820a9b66c690"} +{"question": "What absurd humor infiltrates the piece?", "paragraph": "\u201cSongs From the Second Floor\u201d (released here in 2002) remains Mr. Andersson\u2019s comic masterpiece. It\u2019s a pure and bizarre piece of millennial art, set amid perpetual traffic jams at some apocalyptic turning point. It loosely tracks a businessman who has burned down his own shop, but it also looks in on his insane son and others. The end of days looms \u2014 Mr. Andersson makes jokes about get-rich-quick crucifix salesmen \u2014 and over-the-top doomsday sights appear, like self-flagellating crowds, the dead rising and even a sacrificial rite. The \u201chyperreality,\u201d as Mr. Andersson called it, makes for a forceful visual effect that is unforgettable. The same can be said of \u201cYou, the Living,\u201d where the overarching conceit involves dreams being recounted for the camera and then dramatized. The filmmaker\u2019s signature style is in effect, but occasional songs are added as in a musical. \u201cPigeon\u201d takes another step away from reality with bewildering jumps between periods in Swedish history: One episode has the country\u2019s 18th-century king riding into a modern bar to find a toilet.", "answer": "jokes about get-rich-quick crucifix salesmen", "sentence": "The end of days looms \u2014 Mr. Andersson makes jokes about get-rich-quick crucifix salesmen \u2014 and over-the-top doomsday sights appear, like self-flagellating crowds, the dead rising and even a sacrificial rite.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cSongs From the Second Floor\u201d (released here in 2002) remains Mr. Andersson\u2019s comic masterpiece. It\u2019s a pure and bizarre piece of millennial art, set amid perpetual traffic jams at some apocalyptic turning point. It loosely tracks a businessman who has burned down his own shop, but it also looks in on his insane son and others. The end of days looms \u2014 Mr. Andersson makes jokes about get-rich-quick crucifix salesmen \u2014 and over-the-top doomsday sights appear, like self-flagellating crowds, the dead rising and even a sacrificial rite. The \u201chyperreality,\u201d as Mr. Andersson called it, makes for a forceful visual effect that is unforgettable. The same can be said of \u201cYou, the Living,\u201d where the overarching conceit involves dreams being recounted for the camera and then dramatized. The filmmaker\u2019s signature style is in effect, but occasional songs are added as in a musical. \u201cPigeon\u201d takes another step away from reality with bewildering jumps between periods in Swedish history: One episode has the country\u2019s 18th-century king riding into a modern bar to find a toilet.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cSongs From the Second Floor\u201d (released here in 2002) remains Mr. Andersson\u2019s comic masterpiece. It\u2019s a pure and bizarre piece of millennial art, set amid perpetual traffic jams at some apocalyptic turning point. It loosely tracks a businessman who has burned down his own shop, but it also looks in on his insane son and others. The end of days looms \u2014 Mr. Andersson makes jokes about get-rich-quick crucifix salesmen \u2014 and over-the-top doomsday sights appear, like self-flagellating crowds, the dead rising and even a sacrificial rite. The \u201chyperreality,\u201d as Mr. Andersson called it, makes for a forceful visual effect that is unforgettable. The same can be said of \u201cYou, the Living,\u201d where the overarching conceit involves dreams being recounted for the camera and then dramatized. The filmmaker\u2019s signature style is in effect, but occasional songs are added as in a musical. \u201cPigeon\u201d takes another step away from reality with bewildering jumps between periods in Swedish history: One episode has the country\u2019s 18th-century king riding into a modern bar to find a toilet.", "sentence_answer": "The end of days looms \u2014 Mr. Andersson makes jokes about get-rich-quick crucifix salesmen \u2014 and over-the-top doomsday sights appear, like self-flagellating crowds, the dead rising and even a sacrificial rite.", "paragraph_id": "5d700670c8e4820a9b66ab60"} +{"question": "Which inmates were most likely to be the victims of retribution?", "paragraph": "For days after the June prison break, corrections officers carried out what seemed like a campaign of retribution against dozens of Clinton inmates, particularly those on the honor block, an investigation by The New York Times found. In letters reviewed by The Times, as well as prison interviews, inmates described a strikingly similar catalog of abuses, including being beaten while handcuffed, choked and slammed against cell bars and walls. They were also subjected to harsh policies ordered by the State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision: Dozens of inmates, many of whom had won the right to live on the honor block after years of good behavior, were transferred out of Clinton to other prisons. Many were placed in solitary confinement, and stripped of privileges they had accrued over the years \u2014 even though no prisoners have yet been linked to Mr. Matt\u2019s and Mr. Sweat\u2019s actions.", "answer": "those on the honor block", "sentence": "For days after the June prison break, corrections officers carried out what seemed like a campaign of retribution against dozens of Clinton inmates, particularly those on the honor block , an investigation by The New York Times found.", "paragraph_sentence": " For days after the June prison break, corrections officers carried out what seemed like a campaign of retribution against dozens of Clinton inmates, particularly those on the honor block , an investigation by The New York Times found. In letters reviewed by The Times, as well as prison interviews, inmates described a strikingly similar catalog of abuses, including being beaten while handcuffed, choked and slammed against cell bars and walls. They were also subjected to harsh policies ordered by the State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision: Dozens of inmates, many of whom had won the right to live on the honor block after years of good behavior, were transferred out of Clinton to other prisons. Many were placed in solitary confinement, and stripped of privileges they had accrued over the years \u2014 even though no prisoners have yet been linked to Mr. Matt\u2019s and Mr. Sweat\u2019s actions.", "paragraph_answer": "For days after the June prison break, corrections officers carried out what seemed like a campaign of retribution against dozens of Clinton inmates, particularly those on the honor block , an investigation by The New York Times found. In letters reviewed by The Times, as well as prison interviews, inmates described a strikingly similar catalog of abuses, including being beaten while handcuffed, choked and slammed against cell bars and walls. They were also subjected to harsh policies ordered by the State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision: Dozens of inmates, many of whom had won the right to live on the honor block after years of good behavior, were transferred out of Clinton to other prisons. Many were placed in solitary confinement, and stripped of privileges they had accrued over the years \u2014 even though no prisoners have yet been linked to Mr. Matt\u2019s and Mr. Sweat\u2019s actions.", "sentence_answer": "For days after the June prison break, corrections officers carried out what seemed like a campaign of retribution against dozens of Clinton inmates, particularly those on the honor block , an investigation by The New York Times found.", "paragraph_id": "5d707874c8e4820a9b66f2cc"} +{"question": "What does meditation help reduce?", "paragraph": "Change \u201cis\u201d to \u201ccould be,\u201d and you become more mindful. The same is true when you look for an answer rather than the answer. Meditation isn\u2019t snake oil. For some people, meditation might be the most efficient way to reduce stress and cultivate mindfulness. But it isn\u2019t a panacea. If you don\u2019t meditate, there\u2019s no need to stress out about it. In fact, in some situations, meditation may be harmful: Willoughby Britton, a Brown University Medical School professor, has discovered numerous cases of traumatic meditation experiences that intensify anxiety, reduce focus and drive, and leave people feeling incapacitated. Evangelists, it\u2019s time to stop judging. The next time you meet people who choose not to meditate, take a deep breath and let us relax in peace.", "answer": "stress", "sentence": "For some people, meditation might be the most efficient way to reduce stress and cultivate mindfulness.", "paragraph_sentence": "Change \u201cis\u201d to \u201ccould be,\u201d and you become more mindful. The same is true when you look for an answer rather than the answer. Meditation isn\u2019t snake oil. For some people, meditation might be the most efficient way to reduce stress and cultivate mindfulness. But it isn\u2019t a panacea. If you don\u2019t meditate, there\u2019s no need to stress out about it. In fact, in some situations, meditation may be harmful: Willoughby Britton, a Brown University Medical School professor, has discovered numerous cases of traumatic meditation experiences that intensify anxiety, reduce focus and drive, and leave people feeling incapacitated. Evangelists, it\u2019s time to stop judging. The next time you meet people who choose not to meditate, take a deep breath and let us relax in peace.", "paragraph_answer": "Change \u201cis\u201d to \u201ccould be,\u201d and you become more mindful. The same is true when you look for an answer rather than the answer. Meditation isn\u2019t snake oil. For some people, meditation might be the most efficient way to reduce stress and cultivate mindfulness. But it isn\u2019t a panacea. If you don\u2019t meditate, there\u2019s no need to stress out about it. In fact, in some situations, meditation may be harmful: Willoughby Britton, a Brown University Medical School professor, has discovered numerous cases of traumatic meditation experiences that intensify anxiety, reduce focus and drive, and leave people feeling incapacitated. Evangelists, it\u2019s time to stop judging. The next time you meet people who choose not to meditate, take a deep breath and let us relax in peace.", "sentence_answer": "For some people, meditation might be the most efficient way to reduce stress and cultivate mindfulness.", "paragraph_id": "5d7024bac8e4820a9b66d117"} +{"question": "Who was Steven Pifer?", "paragraph": "\u201cMinsk II raises tough questions and leaves difficult issues for later,\u201d said Steven Pifer, a former American ambassador to Ukraine. \u201cIt is a fragile arrangement, requiring good faith and follow-through from parties that have shown little of that in the past.\u201d The Obama administration, which has indicated that it would send antitank missiles, surveillance drones and other far more serious battlefield weapons to Ukraine, said those plans would be shelved, for now, but would be revived if the parties failed to honor the agreement.", "answer": "Steven Pifer, a former American ambassador", "sentence": "\u201cMinsk II raises tough questions and leaves difficult issues for later,\u201d said Steven Pifer, a former American ambassador to Ukraine.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cMinsk II raises tough questions and leaves difficult issues for later,\u201d said Steven Pifer, a former American ambassador to Ukraine. \u201cIt is a fragile arrangement, requiring good faith and follow-through from parties that have shown little of that in the past.\u201d The Obama administration, which has indicated that it would send antitank missiles, surveillance drones and other far more serious battlefield weapons to Ukraine, said those plans would be shelved, for now, but would be revived if the parties failed to honor the agreement.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cMinsk II raises tough questions and leaves difficult issues for later,\u201d said Steven Pifer, a former American ambassador to Ukraine. \u201cIt is a fragile arrangement, requiring good faith and follow-through from parties that have shown little of that in the past.\u201d The Obama administration, which has indicated that it would send antitank missiles, surveillance drones and other far more serious battlefield weapons to Ukraine, said those plans would be shelved, for now, but would be revived if the parties failed to honor the agreement.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cMinsk II raises tough questions and leaves difficult issues for later,\u201d said Steven Pifer, a former American ambassador to Ukraine.", "paragraph_id": "5d701ecec8e4820a9b66ca65"} +{"question": "What did Mr. Carpenter say was the only way out of the precinct?", "paragraph": "Mr. Carpenter, who also spells his surname Charpentier, also said he did not see Mr. Hincapie among the teenagers who attacked the Watkins family. He said the strong-arm tactics the police had used to persuade him and the other defendants to confess were to blame for Mr. Hincapie\u2019s conviction. \u201cYou became concerned that your only way out of this precinct was to give the cops a story that they could use and give to the prosecutor,\u201d he said. For his part, Mr. Hincapie said his first order of business was to go to a restaurant and have a seafood dinner. He said during his long incarceration he had at times nursed \u201ca desire for full reprisal and revenge.\u201d \u201cI believed in the biblical imperative on an eye for an eye, that was my reality,\u201d he added. \u201cBut I came to realize once I put my bitterness and angriness behind me that compassion was even more powerful. Shame on those individuals who did this to me, and shame on all those individuals who had knowledge of what happened to me. But I forgive them.\u201d", "answer": "give the cops a story", "sentence": "\u201cYou became concerned that your only way out of this precinct was to give the cops a story that they could use and give to the prosecutor,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Carpenter, who also spells his surname Charpentier, also said he did not see Mr. Hincapie among the teenagers who attacked the Watkins family. He said the strong-arm tactics the police had used to persuade him and the other defendants to confess were to blame for Mr. Hincapie\u2019s conviction. \u201cYou became concerned that your only way out of this precinct was to give the cops a story that they could use and give to the prosecutor,\u201d he said. For his part, Mr. Hincapie said his first order of business was to go to a restaurant and have a seafood dinner. He said during his long incarceration he had at times nursed \u201ca desire for full reprisal and revenge.\u201d \u201cI believed in the biblical imperative on an eye for an eye, that was my reality,\u201d he added. \u201cBut I came to realize once I put my bitterness and angriness behind me that compassion was even more powerful. Shame on those individuals who did this to me, and shame on all those individuals who had knowledge of what happened to me. But I forgive them.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Carpenter, who also spells his surname Charpentier, also said he did not see Mr. Hincapie among the teenagers who attacked the Watkins family. He said the strong-arm tactics the police had used to persuade him and the other defendants to confess were to blame for Mr. Hincapie\u2019s conviction. \u201cYou became concerned that your only way out of this precinct was to give the cops a story that they could use and give to the prosecutor,\u201d he said. For his part, Mr. Hincapie said his first order of business was to go to a restaurant and have a seafood dinner. He said during his long incarceration he had at times nursed \u201ca desire for full reprisal and revenge.\u201d \u201cI believed in the biblical imperative on an eye for an eye, that was my reality,\u201d he added. \u201cBut I came to realize once I put my bitterness and angriness behind me that compassion was even more powerful. Shame on those individuals who did this to me, and shame on all those individuals who had knowledge of what happened to me. But I forgive them.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cYou became concerned that your only way out of this precinct was to give the cops a story that they could use and give to the prosecutor,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_id": "5d7028afc8e4820a9b66d64f"} +{"question": "The US dollar is at its highest amount since how long ago?", "paragraph": "The diverging paths of the two central banks prompted investors to put money into dollars, on the expectation that interest rates in the United States will rise and offer a better return than in Europe, where interest rates are falling. The euro fell to 1.20 against the dollar on Friday, its lowest since June 2010, while the yield, or market interest rate, on German two-year government bonds fell to a new low of minus 0.11 percent. The yield has been below zero since September; investors were willing to effectively pay the German government to keep their money safe. The larger picture is not merely that the dollar is gaining against the euro. Signs that the Fed is getting closer to raising its benchmark interest rate from zero have helped the United States currency to soar against its counterparts in Japan, Britain and in major emerging markets. Against a broad basket of currencies, the dollar has risen more than 13 percent since September to its highest level in almost six years.", "answer": "six years", "sentence": "Against a broad basket of currencies, the dollar has risen more than 13 percent since September to its highest level in almost six years .", "paragraph_sentence": "The diverging paths of the two central banks prompted investors to put money into dollars, on the expectation that interest rates in the United States will rise and offer a better return than in Europe, where interest rates are falling. The euro fell to 1.20 against the dollar on Friday, its lowest since June 2010, while the yield, or market interest rate, on German two-year government bonds fell to a new low of minus 0.11 percent. The yield has been below zero since September; investors were willing to effectively pay the German government to keep their money safe. The larger picture is not merely that the dollar is gaining against the euro. Signs that the Fed is getting closer to raising its benchmark interest rate from zero have helped the United States currency to soar against its counterparts in Japan, Britain and in major emerging markets. Against a broad basket of currencies, the dollar has risen more than 13 percent since September to its highest level in almost six years . ", "paragraph_answer": "The diverging paths of the two central banks prompted investors to put money into dollars, on the expectation that interest rates in the United States will rise and offer a better return than in Europe, where interest rates are falling. The euro fell to 1.20 against the dollar on Friday, its lowest since June 2010, while the yield, or market interest rate, on German two-year government bonds fell to a new low of minus 0.11 percent. The yield has been below zero since September; investors were willing to effectively pay the German government to keep their money safe. The larger picture is not merely that the dollar is gaining against the euro. Signs that the Fed is getting closer to raising its benchmark interest rate from zero have helped the United States currency to soar against its counterparts in Japan, Britain and in major emerging markets. Against a broad basket of currencies, the dollar has risen more than 13 percent since September to its highest level in almost six years .", "sentence_answer": "Against a broad basket of currencies, the dollar has risen more than 13 percent since September to its highest level in almost six years .", "paragraph_id": "5d70646bc8e4820a9b66f074"} +{"question": "What will not wanting to do a job reflect on?", "paragraph": "People inside Intel often come to me for advice, and they might say, \u201cI\u2019ve got these two job offers inside the company. I don\u2019t know which one to take.\u201d I\u2019ll say, \u201cWhich do you want to do?\u201d They\u2019ll say, \u201cI want to do this one, but the other one is the next step up.\u201d And I\u2019ll say: \u201cThe thing I learned is that if you\u2019re not doing the job you want to do, it will reflect on your performance. You\u2019re better off to take a job you\u2019re excited about than to do the one you think somebody wants you to do.\u201d People are successful when they\u2019re intellectually and emotionally engaged as opposed to when they\u2019re checking the box.", "answer": "your performance.", "sentence": "And I\u2019ll say: \u201cThe thing I learned is that if you\u2019re not doing the job you want to do, it will reflect on your performance. You\u2019re better off to take a job you\u2019re excited about than to do the one you think somebody wants you to do.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "People inside Intel often come to me for advice, and they might say, \u201cI\u2019ve got these two job offers inside the company. I don\u2019t know which one to take.\u201d I\u2019ll say, \u201cWhich do you want to do?\u201d They\u2019ll say, \u201cI want to do this one, but the other one is the next step up.\u201d And I\u2019ll say: \u201cThe thing I learned is that if you\u2019re not doing the job you want to do, it will reflect on your performance. You\u2019re better off to take a job you\u2019re excited about than to do the one you think somebody wants you to do.\u201d People are successful when they\u2019re intellectually and emotionally engaged as opposed to when they\u2019re checking the box.", "paragraph_answer": "People inside Intel often come to me for advice, and they might say, \u201cI\u2019ve got these two job offers inside the company. I don\u2019t know which one to take.\u201d I\u2019ll say, \u201cWhich do you want to do?\u201d They\u2019ll say, \u201cI want to do this one, but the other one is the next step up.\u201d And I\u2019ll say: \u201cThe thing I learned is that if you\u2019re not doing the job you want to do, it will reflect on your performance. You\u2019re better off to take a job you\u2019re excited about than to do the one you think somebody wants you to do.\u201d People are successful when they\u2019re intellectually and emotionally engaged as opposed to when they\u2019re checking the box.", "sentence_answer": "And I\u2019ll say: \u201cThe thing I learned is that if you\u2019re not doing the job you want to do, it will reflect on your performance. You\u2019re better off to take a job you\u2019re excited about than to do the one you think somebody wants you to do.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d705ba2c8e4820a9b66eef3"} +{"question": "What NBA player was brought back on a cheap contract?", "paragraph": "Persuade Tim Duncan not to retire? Check. Bring back Danny Green on a below-market contract? Check. Get the league\u2019s top free-agent prize in LaMarcus Aldridge? Check. Persuade David West to join the team practically as a volunteer? Check. Enter the season as one of the two or three teams most likely to win it all for roughly the 17th consecutive season? Check. The San Antonio Spurs have some sort of front-office cheat code. James Harden may have been robbed of a Most Valuable Player Award, regardless of how good Stephen Curry\u2019s team was, but the Houston Rockets were a bit of a mirage, offering little beyond the bearded bon vivant. Dwight Howard, once a league darling, has faded, but the team could play more well-rounded basketball this season after adding Ty Lawson.", "answer": "Danny Green", "sentence": "Bring back Danny Green on a below-market contract?", "paragraph_sentence": "Persuade Tim Duncan not to retire? Check. Bring back Danny Green on a below-market contract? Check. Get the league\u2019s top free-agent prize in LaMarcus Aldridge? Check. Persuade David West to join the team practically as a volunteer? Check. Enter the season as one of the two or three teams most likely to win it all for roughly the 17th consecutive season? Check. The San Antonio Spurs have some sort of front-office cheat code. James Harden may have been robbed of a Most Valuable Player Award, regardless of how good Stephen Curry\u2019s team was, but the Houston Rockets were a bit of a mirage, offering little beyond the bearded bon vivant. Dwight Howard, once a league darling, has faded, but the team could play more well-rounded basketball this season after adding Ty Lawson.", "paragraph_answer": "Persuade Tim Duncan not to retire? Check. Bring back Danny Green on a below-market contract? Check. Get the league\u2019s top free-agent prize in LaMarcus Aldridge? Check. Persuade David West to join the team practically as a volunteer? Check. Enter the season as one of the two or three teams most likely to win it all for roughly the 17th consecutive season? Check. The San Antonio Spurs have some sort of front-office cheat code. James Harden may have been robbed of a Most Valuable Player Award, regardless of how good Stephen Curry\u2019s team was, but the Houston Rockets were a bit of a mirage, offering little beyond the bearded bon vivant. Dwight Howard, once a league darling, has faded, but the team could play more well-rounded basketball this season after adding Ty Lawson.", "sentence_answer": "Bring back Danny Green on a below-market contract?", "paragraph_id": "5d7052aac8e4820a9b66ebea"} +{"question": "What do some soldiers forget on their first day of excercise", "paragraph": "In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians\u2019 soldierly skills lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction. \u201cI came into it expecting them not to know much of the basics,\u201d said Sgt. Michael Faranda, who is teaching maneuvers. He was correct. Things \u201cevery soldier should know,\u201d he said, they did not. Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises. Still, Sergeant Faranda said, the Ukrainians\u2019 willingness to go into combat was all the more notable for their lack of preparation for it.", "answer": "helmets", "sentence": "Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises.", "paragraph_sentence": "In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians\u2019 soldierly skills lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction. \u201cI came into it expecting them not to know much of the basics,\u201d said Sgt. Michael Faranda, who is teaching maneuvers. He was correct. Things \u201cevery soldier should know,\u201d he said, they did not. Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises. Still, Sergeant Faranda said, the Ukrainians\u2019 willingness to go into combat was all the more notable for their lack of preparation for it.", "paragraph_answer": "In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians\u2019 soldierly skills lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction. \u201cI came into it expecting them not to know much of the basics,\u201d said Sgt. Michael Faranda, who is teaching maneuvers. He was correct. Things \u201cevery soldier should know,\u201d he said, they did not. Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises. Still, Sergeant Faranda said, the Ukrainians\u2019 willingness to go into combat was all the more notable for their lack of preparation for it.", "sentence_answer": "Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026e6c8e4820a9b66d3e6"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700891c8e4820a9b66b03c"} +{"question": "Where did the Yankees meet their hopeful fans on Track 17?", "paragraph": "On Sept. 25 the lead was gone, after the Red Sox beat the Yankees, 4-1, at Fenway Park behind Ted Williams\u2019s 43rd home run and a four-hitter by Mel Parnell. Still hopeful Yankees fans thronged Grand Central Terminal to greet the team as it arrived that night from Boston on Track 17. \u201cSo aggressive were the fans in their efforts to reach the ball players,\u201d The New York Times wrote, \u201cthat the police and station guards had to escort several of the team to side exits to avoid accidental injury to the already crippled squad.\u201d The optimistic fans had their hopes dashed the next night at Yankee Stadium. The Sox took over first place with a 7-6 win, Johnny Pesky scoring on a squeeze by Bobby Doerr.", "answer": "Grand Central Terminal", "sentence": "Still hopeful Yankees fans thronged Grand Central Terminal to greet the team as it arrived that night from Boston on Track 17.", "paragraph_sentence": "On Sept. 25 the lead was gone, after the Red Sox beat the Yankees, 4-1, at Fenway Park behind Ted Williams\u2019s 43rd home run and a four-hitter by Mel Parnell. Still hopeful Yankees fans thronged Grand Central Terminal to greet the team as it arrived that night from Boston on Track 17. \u201cSo aggressive were the fans in their efforts to reach the ball players,\u201d The New York Times wrote, \u201cthat the police and station guards had to escort several of the team to side exits to avoid accidental injury to the already crippled squad.\u201d The optimistic fans had their hopes dashed the next night at Yankee Stadium. The Sox took over first place with a 7-6 win, Johnny Pesky scoring on a squeeze by Bobby Doerr.", "paragraph_answer": "On Sept. 25 the lead was gone, after the Red Sox beat the Yankees, 4-1, at Fenway Park behind Ted Williams\u2019s 43rd home run and a four-hitter by Mel Parnell. Still hopeful Yankees fans thronged Grand Central Terminal to greet the team as it arrived that night from Boston on Track 17. \u201cSo aggressive were the fans in their efforts to reach the ball players,\u201d The New York Times wrote, \u201cthat the police and station guards had to escort several of the team to side exits to avoid accidental injury to the already crippled squad.\u201d The optimistic fans had their hopes dashed the next night at Yankee Stadium. The Sox took over first place with a 7-6 win, Johnny Pesky scoring on a squeeze by Bobby Doerr.", "sentence_answer": "Still hopeful Yankees fans thronged Grand Central Terminal to greet the team as it arrived that night from Boston on Track 17.", "paragraph_id": "5d7017a5c8e4820a9b66c3af"} +{"question": "What decade was Al Qaeda considered a small, close group?", "paragraph": "Fourteen years after four men were convicted in a trial stemming from the deadly 1998 bombings of two United States Embassies in East Africa, a third trial in that attack began in Manhattan on Thursday. The defendant, Khaled al-Fawwaz, is one of the earliest and most senior alleged members of Al Qaeda to be tried in the United States. In an opening statement at the trial, a federal prosecutor, Nicholas J. Lewin, depicted Mr. Fawwaz as a loyal and trusted operative who had worked for Osama bin Laden in the 1990s when Al Qaeda was a small, tight-knit group.", "answer": "1990s", "sentence": "In an opening statement at the trial, a federal prosecutor, Nicholas J. Lewin, depicted Mr. Fawwaz as a loyal and trusted operative who had worked for Osama bin Laden in the 1990s when Al Qaeda was a small, tight-knit group.", "paragraph_sentence": "Fourteen years after four men were convicted in a trial stemming from the deadly 1998 bombings of two United States Embassies in East Africa, a third trial in that attack began in Manhattan on Thursday. The defendant, Khaled al-Fawwaz, is one of the earliest and most senior alleged members of Al Qaeda to be tried in the United States. In an opening statement at the trial, a federal prosecutor, Nicholas J. Lewin, depicted Mr. Fawwaz as a loyal and trusted operative who had worked for Osama bin Laden in the 1990s when Al Qaeda was a small, tight-knit group. ", "paragraph_answer": "Fourteen years after four men were convicted in a trial stemming from the deadly 1998 bombings of two United States Embassies in East Africa, a third trial in that attack began in Manhattan on Thursday. The defendant, Khaled al-Fawwaz, is one of the earliest and most senior alleged members of Al Qaeda to be tried in the United States. In an opening statement at the trial, a federal prosecutor, Nicholas J. Lewin, depicted Mr. Fawwaz as a loyal and trusted operative who had worked for Osama bin Laden in the 1990s when Al Qaeda was a small, tight-knit group.", "sentence_answer": "In an opening statement at the trial, a federal prosecutor, Nicholas J. Lewin, depicted Mr. Fawwaz as a loyal and trusted operative who had worked for Osama bin Laden in the 1990s when Al Qaeda was a small, tight-knit group.", "paragraph_id": "5d701e3fc8e4820a9b66c9b2"} +{"question": "Which country is Entang Wiharso from?", "paragraph": "One of Indonesia\u2019s most prominent contemporary artists, Entang Wiharso represented his country in the Venice Biennale of 2013. He has been included in other biennials and museum exhibitions from Tokyo to Rome. This gaudy, overstuffed exhibition reveals an artist of extraordinary industry and canny versatility. In near mural-scale paintings and in sculptures cast in aluminum, brass and resin, he mixes traditional Indonesian styles with Pop and Surrealism, creating allegories of psychic stress in a global economy. Mr. Wiharso\u2019s paintings exude moods of darkly comical hysteria, calling to mind the works of James Ensor. Painted with a dry, Expressionist touch, \u201cDouble Protection: Invisible Threat\u201d has a shirtless man with four eyes and a wide, clownish grin dominating the right half of the almost 10-foot-wide canvas. Other male and female figures fill the picture, kneeling or lying prone in a hellish laboratory where tubes, wires and cables circulate between machines and human bodies. Here and there, knife-wielding hands hint at potential murderous violence. With too many shiny, cast-metal reliefs representing intertwining, struggling figures, the exhibition gives the impression of an art fair booth. The show\u2019s most impressive sculpture, \u201cInheritance,\u201d should have a room to itself but must compete with a large relief and another big painting. It consists of a nuclear family \u2014 mother, father and two children \u2014 cast life-size in nearly black graphite and arrayed around a dinner table on which lies an enormous carp, whose silvery skin is accented by bright red splotches. It\u2019s a very postmodern tableau, but it has the mystery, too, of an old folk tale.", "answer": "Indonesia", "sentence": "One of Indonesia \u2019s most prominent contemporary artists, Entang Wiharso represented his country in the Venice Biennale of 2013.", "paragraph_sentence": " One of Indonesia \u2019s most prominent contemporary artists, Entang Wiharso represented his country in the Venice Biennale of 2013. He has been included in other biennials and museum exhibitions from Tokyo to Rome. This gaudy, overstuffed exhibition reveals an artist of extraordinary industry and canny versatility. In near mural-scale paintings and in sculptures cast in aluminum, brass and resin, he mixes traditional Indonesian styles with Pop and Surrealism, creating allegories of psychic stress in a global economy. Mr. Wiharso\u2019s paintings exude moods of darkly comical hysteria, calling to mind the works of James Ensor. Painted with a dry, Expressionist touch, \u201cDouble Protection: Invisible Threat\u201d has a shirtless man with four eyes and a wide, clownish grin dominating the right half of the almost 10-foot-wide canvas. Other male and female figures fill the picture, kneeling or lying prone in a hellish laboratory where tubes, wires and cables circulate between machines and human bodies. Here and there, knife-wielding hands hint at potential murderous violence. With too many shiny, cast-metal reliefs representing intertwining, struggling figures, the exhibition gives the impression of an art fair booth. The show\u2019s most impressive sculpture, \u201cInheritance,\u201d should have a room to itself but must compete with a large relief and another big painting. It consists of a nuclear family \u2014 mother, father and two children \u2014 cast life-size in nearly black graphite and arrayed around a dinner table on which lies an enormous carp, whose silvery skin is accented by bright red splotches. It\u2019s a very postmodern tableau, but it has the mystery, too, of an old folk tale.", "paragraph_answer": "One of Indonesia \u2019s most prominent contemporary artists, Entang Wiharso represented his country in the Venice Biennale of 2013. He has been included in other biennials and museum exhibitions from Tokyo to Rome. This gaudy, overstuffed exhibition reveals an artist of extraordinary industry and canny versatility. In near mural-scale paintings and in sculptures cast in aluminum, brass and resin, he mixes traditional Indonesian styles with Pop and Surrealism, creating allegories of psychic stress in a global economy. Mr. Wiharso\u2019s paintings exude moods of darkly comical hysteria, calling to mind the works of James Ensor. Painted with a dry, Expressionist touch, \u201cDouble Protection: Invisible Threat\u201d has a shirtless man with four eyes and a wide, clownish grin dominating the right half of the almost 10-foot-wide canvas. Other male and female figures fill the picture, kneeling or lying prone in a hellish laboratory where tubes, wires and cables circulate between machines and human bodies. Here and there, knife-wielding hands hint at potential murderous violence. With too many shiny, cast-metal reliefs representing intertwining, struggling figures, the exhibition gives the impression of an art fair booth. The show\u2019s most impressive sculpture, \u201cInheritance,\u201d should have a room to itself but must compete with a large relief and another big painting. It consists of a nuclear family \u2014 mother, father and two children \u2014 cast life-size in nearly black graphite and arrayed around a dinner table on which lies an enormous carp, whose silvery skin is accented by bright red splotches. It\u2019s a very postmodern tableau, but it has the mystery, too, of an old folk tale.", "sentence_answer": "One of Indonesia \u2019s most prominent contemporary artists, Entang Wiharso represented his country in the Venice Biennale of 2013.", "paragraph_id": "5d701c8fc8e4820a9b66c813"} +{"question": "Who missed the exposed reef and what was his role?", "paragraph": "It took a month for Vestas, the sponsor, to commit to rejoining the race. The decision was made to painstakingly remove the mangled boat from the reef and rebuild it in half the original build time at Persico Marine in Genoa, Italy. \u201cWe knew that our story could not end on that reef,\u201d Morten Kamp Jorgensen, the team\u2019s communications director, said in an interview this week. \u201cWe reshuffled our budgets and organization. This was a race to ensure that Vestas will be remembered as a team that overcame challenges.\u201d An inquiry into the accident revealed that the navigator, Wouter Verbraak, had not zoomed in enough on the boat\u2019s navigation system to see the exposed reef. Investigators found that \u201cat different times the navigator zoomed in on the electronic chart and came to the same incorrect conclusion.\u201d Since the inquiry, small changes have been made to the race\u2019s rules. Officials have said there will be more.", "answer": "the navigator, Wouter Verbraak", "sentence": "An inquiry into the accident revealed that the navigator, Wouter Verbraak , had not zoomed in enough on the boat\u2019s navigation system to see the exposed reef.", "paragraph_sentence": "It took a month for Vestas, the sponsor, to commit to rejoining the race. The decision was made to painstakingly remove the mangled boat from the reef and rebuild it in half the original build time at Persico Marine in Genoa, Italy. \u201cWe knew that our story could not end on that reef,\u201d Morten Kamp Jorgensen, the team\u2019s communications director, said in an interview this week. \u201cWe reshuffled our budgets and organization. This was a race to ensure that Vestas will be remembered as a team that overcame challenges.\u201d An inquiry into the accident revealed that the navigator, Wouter Verbraak , had not zoomed in enough on the boat\u2019s navigation system to see the exposed reef. Investigators found that \u201cat different times the navigator zoomed in on the electronic chart and came to the same incorrect conclusion.\u201d Since the inquiry, small changes have been made to the race\u2019s rules. Officials have said there will be more.", "paragraph_answer": "It took a month for Vestas, the sponsor, to commit to rejoining the race. The decision was made to painstakingly remove the mangled boat from the reef and rebuild it in half the original build time at Persico Marine in Genoa, Italy. \u201cWe knew that our story could not end on that reef,\u201d Morten Kamp Jorgensen, the team\u2019s communications director, said in an interview this week. \u201cWe reshuffled our budgets and organization. This was a race to ensure that Vestas will be remembered as a team that overcame challenges.\u201d An inquiry into the accident revealed that the navigator, Wouter Verbraak , had not zoomed in enough on the boat\u2019s navigation system to see the exposed reef. Investigators found that \u201cat different times the navigator zoomed in on the electronic chart and came to the same incorrect conclusion.\u201d Since the inquiry, small changes have been made to the race\u2019s rules. Officials have said there will be more.", "sentence_answer": "An inquiry into the accident revealed that the navigator, Wouter Verbraak , had not zoomed in enough on the boat\u2019s navigation system to see the exposed reef.", "paragraph_id": "5d700d56c8e4820a9b66b8ed"} +{"question": "What street did the railroad tracks cross?", "paragraph": "At the briefing, Mr. Sumwalt said that investigators reviewing the workings of the rail crossing found that the warning lights, the alarm and the gate arms were all functioning at the time of the crash. In an interview with investigators on Thursday, the engineer operating the train said he saw the S.U.V. moving onto the tracks as the northbound train approached the crossing at Commerce Street. The engineer\u2019s account of the car\u2019s moving into the path of the train was consistent with the account of a man who said he was in the car behind Ms. Brody\u2019s, and who was interviewed by reporters after the crash and by investigators for the federal safety board on Thursday.", "answer": "Commerce Street", "sentence": "In an interview with investigators on Thursday, the engineer operating the train said he saw the S.U.V. moving onto the tracks as the northbound train approached the crossing at Commerce Street .", "paragraph_sentence": "At the briefing, Mr. Sumwalt said that investigators reviewing the workings of the rail crossing found that the warning lights, the alarm and the gate arms were all functioning at the time of the crash. In an interview with investigators on Thursday, the engineer operating the train said he saw the S.U.V. moving onto the tracks as the northbound train approached the crossing at Commerce Street . The engineer\u2019s account of the car\u2019s moving into the path of the train was consistent with the account of a man who said he was in the car behind Ms. Brody\u2019s, and who was interviewed by reporters after the crash and by investigators for the federal safety board on Thursday.", "paragraph_answer": "At the briefing, Mr. Sumwalt said that investigators reviewing the workings of the rail crossing found that the warning lights, the alarm and the gate arms were all functioning at the time of the crash. In an interview with investigators on Thursday, the engineer operating the train said he saw the S.U.V. moving onto the tracks as the northbound train approached the crossing at Commerce Street . The engineer\u2019s account of the car\u2019s moving into the path of the train was consistent with the account of a man who said he was in the car behind Ms. Brody\u2019s, and who was interviewed by reporters after the crash and by investigators for the federal safety board on Thursday.", "sentence_answer": "In an interview with investigators on Thursday, the engineer operating the train said he saw the S.U.V. moving onto the tracks as the northbound train approached the crossing at Commerce Street .", "paragraph_id": "5d706862c8e4820a9b66f103"} +{"question": "Who might be cheered by McConnell's Acknowledgement of Obama as president?", "paragraph": "Mr. McConnell\u2019s acknowledgment that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats. But it doesn\u2019t mean he intends to be too cooperative with Mr. Obama during the president\u2019s final months in office. A die-hard protector of his state\u2019s coal industry, Mr. McConnell immediately dismissed the new Paris climate change accord as nothing more than a \u201clong-term planning document.\u201d He told The Washington Post that the White House shouldn\u2019t push the new Pacific trade pact until a lame-duck session next year \u2014 if at all \u2014 before the president leaves office.", "answer": "some Democrats", "sentence": "Mr. McConnell\u2019s acknowledgment that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats .", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. McConnell\u2019s acknowledgment that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats . But it doesn\u2019t mean he intends to be too cooperative with Mr. Obama during the president\u2019s final months in office. A die-hard protector of his state\u2019s coal industry, Mr. McConnell immediately dismissed the new Paris climate change accord as nothing more than a \u201clong-term planning document.\u201d He told The Washington Post that the White House shouldn\u2019t push the new Pacific trade pact until a lame-duck session next year \u2014 if at all \u2014 before the president leaves office.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. McConnell\u2019s acknowledgment that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats . But it doesn\u2019t mean he intends to be too cooperative with Mr. Obama during the president\u2019s final months in office. A die-hard protector of his state\u2019s coal industry, Mr. McConnell immediately dismissed the new Paris climate change accord as nothing more than a \u201clong-term planning document.\u201d He told The Washington Post that the White House shouldn\u2019t push the new Pacific trade pact until a lame-duck session next year \u2014 if at all \u2014 before the president leaves office.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. McConnell\u2019s acknowledgment that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats .", "paragraph_id": "5d701242c8e4820a9b66bea3"} +{"question": "Who took financial responsibility for rebel region?", "paragraph": "Russia has been accused of trying to create a so-called frozen conflict that it could heat up in order to destabilize Ukraine any time it draws too close to the West. Critics of the new agreement said it would help Moscow achieve that over the long run, even while Ukraine took financial responsibility for the rebel regions. \u201cThe practical, realistic expectation is a frozen conflict with no effective control by Kiev over those areas, but no formal responsibility of Russia,\u201d said Fyodor Lukyanov, the editor of the journal Russia in Global Affairs.", "answer": "Ukraine", "sentence": "Russia has been accused of trying to create a so-called frozen conflict that it could heat up in order to destabilize Ukraine any time it draws too close to the West.", "paragraph_sentence": " Russia has been accused of trying to create a so-called frozen conflict that it could heat up in order to destabilize Ukraine any time it draws too close to the West. Critics of the new agreement said it would help Moscow achieve that over the long run, even while Ukraine took financial responsibility for the rebel regions. \u201cThe practical, realistic expectation is a frozen conflict with no effective control by Kiev over those areas, but no formal responsibility of Russia,\u201d said Fyodor Lukyanov, the editor of the journal Russia in Global Affairs.", "paragraph_answer": "Russia has been accused of trying to create a so-called frozen conflict that it could heat up in order to destabilize Ukraine any time it draws too close to the West. Critics of the new agreement said it would help Moscow achieve that over the long run, even while Ukraine took financial responsibility for the rebel regions. \u201cThe practical, realistic expectation is a frozen conflict with no effective control by Kiev over those areas, but no formal responsibility of Russia,\u201d said Fyodor Lukyanov, the editor of the journal Russia in Global Affairs.", "sentence_answer": "Russia has been accused of trying to create a so-called frozen conflict that it could heat up in order to destabilize Ukraine any time it draws too close to the West.", "paragraph_id": "5d7021c5c8e4820a9b66cdd4"} +{"question": "When has Woods started to fail?", "paragraph": "After his 27th hole, Woods was 19 strokes off the leader\u2019s pace. Talk about disheartening. Asked what he had been thinking when he made the turn in 44, tying his worst nine-hole score as a pro, Woods said: \u201cJust keep fighting. Just keep grinding each and every shot. That\u2019s all I can do. It was not a very good day from the very start until the end, but I fought all day.\u201d In official tour events, Woods has not bettered par in his last six competitive rounds, dating to August. He missed nearly six months to recover from back surgery and in recent weeks was slowed by influenza. Golfers are like stage actors. They cannot be sure how well they will deliver their lines until the curtain comes up and they are performing in front of an audience. \u201cHitting golf balls is one thing, and playing golf at home is another,\u201d Woods said. \u201cPlaying tournament golf is entirely another. I have to continue with the process.\u201d", "answer": "August", "sentence": "In official tour events, Woods has not bettered par in his last six competitive rounds, dating to August .", "paragraph_sentence": "After his 27th hole, Woods was 19 strokes off the leader\u2019s pace. Talk about disheartening. Asked what he had been thinking when he made the turn in 44, tying his worst nine-hole score as a pro, Woods said: \u201cJust keep fighting. Just keep grinding each and every shot. That\u2019s all I can do. It was not a very good day from the very start until the end, but I fought all day.\u201d In official tour events, Woods has not bettered par in his last six competitive rounds, dating to August . He missed nearly six months to recover from back surgery and in recent weeks was slowed by influenza. Golfers are like stage actors. They cannot be sure how well they will deliver their lines until the curtain comes up and they are performing in front of an audience. \u201cHitting golf balls is one thing, and playing golf at home is another,\u201d Woods said. \u201cPlaying tournament golf is entirely another. I have to continue with the process.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "After his 27th hole, Woods was 19 strokes off the leader\u2019s pace. Talk about disheartening. Asked what he had been thinking when he made the turn in 44, tying his worst nine-hole score as a pro, Woods said: \u201cJust keep fighting. Just keep grinding each and every shot. That\u2019s all I can do. It was not a very good day from the very start until the end, but I fought all day.\u201d In official tour events, Woods has not bettered par in his last six competitive rounds, dating to August . He missed nearly six months to recover from back surgery and in recent weeks was slowed by influenza. Golfers are like stage actors. They cannot be sure how well they will deliver their lines until the curtain comes up and they are performing in front of an audience. \u201cHitting golf balls is one thing, and playing golf at home is another,\u201d Woods said. \u201cPlaying tournament golf is entirely another. I have to continue with the process.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In official tour events, Woods has not bettered par in his last six competitive rounds, dating to August .", "paragraph_id": "5d702311c8e4820a9b66cf34"} +{"question": "How many coloring books for adults will Little Brown bear release this year?", "paragraph": "Major publishers are seizing on the trend. This year, Little, Brown will release four illustrated coloring books for adults, all subtitled \u201cColor Your Way to Calm.\u201d The books, \u201cSplendid Cities\u201d by the British artists Rosie Goodwin and Alice Chadwick and three titles by the French illustrator Zo\u00e9 de Las Cases, feature detailed cityscapes with famous landmarks, cafes and street life. Promotional materials for the books emphasize the health benefits of \u201cmindful coloring,\u201d noting that the activity \u201chas been shown to be a stress reliever for adults.\u201d", "answer": "four", "sentence": "This year, Little, Brown will release four illustrated coloring books for adults, all subtitled \u201cColor Your Way to Calm.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Major publishers are seizing on the trend. This year, Little, Brown will release four illustrated coloring books for adults, all subtitled \u201cColor Your Way to Calm.\u201d The books, \u201cSplendid Cities\u201d by the British artists Rosie Goodwin and Alice Chadwick and three titles by the French illustrator Zo\u00e9 de Las Cases, feature detailed cityscapes with famous landmarks, cafes and street life. Promotional materials for the books emphasize the health benefits of \u201cmindful coloring,\u201d noting that the activity \u201chas been shown to be a stress reliever for adults.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Major publishers are seizing on the trend. This year, Little, Brown will release four illustrated coloring books for adults, all subtitled \u201cColor Your Way to Calm.\u201d The books, \u201cSplendid Cities\u201d by the British artists Rosie Goodwin and Alice Chadwick and three titles by the French illustrator Zo\u00e9 de Las Cases, feature detailed cityscapes with famous landmarks, cafes and street life. Promotional materials for the books emphasize the health benefits of \u201cmindful coloring,\u201d noting that the activity \u201chas been shown to be a stress reliever for adults.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "This year, Little, Brown will release four illustrated coloring books for adults, all subtitled \u201cColor Your Way to Calm.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d7024b0c8e4820a9b66d106"} +{"question": "What is the Clay Art Center's website?", "paragraph": "PORT CHESTER Clay Art Center \u201cDivergent Currents: The Ripple Effect of Japan on American Ceramic Artists.\u201d Through May 9. Mondays through Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.; and by appointment. Clay Art Center, 40 Beech Street. clayartcenter.org; 914-937-2047. PORT EWEN Duck Pond Gallery, at Town of Esopus Library \u201cArt Play,\u201d group show. Through April 27. Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.; Wednesdays, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.; Fridays, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.; Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Duck Pond Gallery, at Town of Esopus Library, 128 Canal Street. esopuslibrary.org; 845-338-5580. POUGHKEEPSIE The Franklin Delano Roosevelt Mid-Hudson Bridge \u201cBridge Music,\u201d sound installation by Joseph Bertolozzi. Through Oct. 31. Dawn to dusk. The Franklin Delano Roosevelt Mid-Hudson Bridge. josephbertolozzi.com. POUGHKEEPSIE Vassar College, Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center \u201c Through the Looking Glass: Daguerreotype Masterworks From the Dawn of Photography.\u201d April 10 through June 14. Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Thursdays, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Sundays, 1 to 5 p.m. Vassar College, Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center, 124 Raymond Avenue. 845-437-5632; fllac.vassar.edu.", "answer": "clayartcenter.org", "sentence": "clayartcenter.org ; 914-937-2047.", "paragraph_sentence": "PORT CHESTER Clay Art Center \u201cDivergent Currents: The Ripple Effect of Japan on American Ceramic Artists.\u201d Through May 9. Mondays through Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.; and by appointment. Clay Art Center, 40 Beech Street. clayartcenter.org ; 914-937-2047. PORT EWEN Duck Pond Gallery, at Town of Esopus Library \u201cArt Play,\u201d group show. Through April 27. Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.; Wednesdays, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.; Fridays, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.; Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Duck Pond Gallery, at Town of Esopus Library, 128 Canal Street. esopuslibrary.org; 845-338-5580. POUGHKEEPSIE The Franklin Delano Roosevelt Mid-Hudson Bridge \u201cBridge Music,\u201d sound installation by Joseph Bertolozzi. Through Oct. 31. Dawn to dusk. The Franklin Delano Roosevelt Mid-Hudson Bridge. josephbertolozzi.com. POUGHKEEPSIE Vassar College, Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center \u201c Through the Looking Glass: Daguerreotype Masterworks From the Dawn of Photography.\u201d April 10 through June 14. Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Thursdays, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Sundays, 1 to 5 p.m. Vassar College, Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center, 124 Raymond Avenue. 845-437-5632; fllac.vassar.edu.", "paragraph_answer": "PORT CHESTER Clay Art Center \u201cDivergent Currents: The Ripple Effect of Japan on American Ceramic Artists.\u201d Through May 9. Mondays through Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.; and by appointment. Clay Art Center, 40 Beech Street. clayartcenter.org ; 914-937-2047. PORT EWEN Duck Pond Gallery, at Town of Esopus Library \u201cArt Play,\u201d group show. Through April 27. Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.; Wednesdays, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.; Fridays, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.; Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Duck Pond Gallery, at Town of Esopus Library, 128 Canal Street. esopuslibrary.org; 845-338-5580. POUGHKEEPSIE The Franklin Delano Roosevelt Mid-Hudson Bridge \u201cBridge Music,\u201d sound installation by Joseph Bertolozzi. Through Oct. 31. Dawn to dusk. The Franklin Delano Roosevelt Mid-Hudson Bridge. josephbertolozzi.com. POUGHKEEPSIE Vassar College, Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center \u201c Through the Looking Glass: Daguerreotype Masterworks From the Dawn of Photography.\u201d April 10 through June 14. Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Thursdays, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Sundays, 1 to 5 p.m. Vassar College, Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center, 124 Raymond Avenue. 845-437-5632; fllac.vassar.edu.", "sentence_answer": " clayartcenter.org ; 914-937-2047.", "paragraph_id": "5d706822c8e4820a9b66f0f7"} +{"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 .", "paragraph_id": "5d7007ecc8e4820a9b66aeec"} +{"question": "What is a good habit to have regarding throwing away personal documents?", "paragraph": "There\u2019s little individuals can do about information stolen in broad data breaches, like the one recently reported at the health insurer Anthem, Ms. Velasquez said. But you can take steps, like declining to provide your Social Security number unless it is a requirement; shredding documents with any personal information before disposing of them; and storing sensitive documents, like tax returns, in a locked file. It\u2019s also important to keep your computer\u2019s anti-malware and virus programs up to date.", "answer": "shredding documents with any personal information before disposing of them", "sentence": "But you can take steps, like declining to provide your Social Security number unless it is a requirement; shredding documents with any personal information before disposing of them ; and storing sensitive documents, like tax returns, in a locked file.", "paragraph_sentence": "There\u2019s little individuals can do about information stolen in broad data breaches, like the one recently reported at the health insurer Anthem, Ms. Velasquez said. But you can take steps, like declining to provide your Social Security number unless it is a requirement; shredding documents with any personal information before disposing of them ; and storing sensitive documents, like tax returns, in a locked file. It\u2019s also important to keep your computer\u2019s anti-malware and virus programs up to date.", "paragraph_answer": "There\u2019s little individuals can do about information stolen in broad data breaches, like the one recently reported at the health insurer Anthem, Ms. Velasquez said. But you can take steps, like declining to provide your Social Security number unless it is a requirement; shredding documents with any personal information before disposing of them ; and storing sensitive documents, like tax returns, in a locked file. It\u2019s also important to keep your computer\u2019s anti-malware and virus programs up to date.", "sentence_answer": "But you can take steps, like declining to provide your Social Security number unless it is a requirement; shredding documents with any personal information before disposing of them ; and storing sensitive documents, like tax returns, in a locked file.", "paragraph_id": "5d7041fdc8e4820a9b66e5f2"} +{"question": "What was the score of Pittsburgh's loss to Washington?", "paragraph": "Pittsburgh\u2019s 4-1 loss to Washington on Monday night in Sullivan\u2019s debut dropped the Penguins to 15-11-3. They were tied for ninth in the Eastern Conference going into Tuesday night\u2019s games and were 27th in goals per game despite ranking fifth in shots. Their power play, with a unit littered with All-Stars, is 28th, ahead of only Calgary and Arizona. Enter Sullivan, who spent a decade grinding out a career as a defensive-minded forward before getting into coaching. He now finds himself trying to get Pittsburgh\u2019s highly capable, occasionally high-strung players working in unison. Nowhere are Pittsburgh\u2019s struggles more evident than in Sidney Crosby\u2019s prolonged funk. Crosby, a two-time Hart Trophy winner, is on pace for career lows in goals and points, and his team appears destined for a four-month battle just to reach the postseason let alone make a serious run at Stanley Cup to bookend the one he and fellow superstar Evgeni Malkin won in 2009 back when a dynasty seemed almost inevitable.", "answer": "4-1", "sentence": "Pittsburgh\u2019s 4-1 loss to Washington on Monday night in Sullivan\u2019s debut dropped the Penguins to 15-11-3.", "paragraph_sentence": " Pittsburgh\u2019s 4-1 loss to Washington on Monday night in Sullivan\u2019s debut dropped the Penguins to 15-11-3. They were tied for ninth in the Eastern Conference going into Tuesday night\u2019s games and were 27th in goals per game despite ranking fifth in shots. Their power play, with a unit littered with All-Stars, is 28th, ahead of only Calgary and Arizona. Enter Sullivan, who spent a decade grinding out a career as a defensive-minded forward before getting into coaching. He now finds himself trying to get Pittsburgh\u2019s highly capable, occasionally high-strung players working in unison. Nowhere are Pittsburgh\u2019s struggles more evident than in Sidney Crosby\u2019s prolonged funk. Crosby, a two-time Hart Trophy winner, is on pace for career lows in goals and points, and his team appears destined for a four-month battle just to reach the postseason let alone make a serious run at Stanley Cup to bookend the one he and fellow superstar Evgeni Malkin won in 2009 back when a dynasty seemed almost inevitable.", "paragraph_answer": "Pittsburgh\u2019s 4-1 loss to Washington on Monday night in Sullivan\u2019s debut dropped the Penguins to 15-11-3. They were tied for ninth in the Eastern Conference going into Tuesday night\u2019s games and were 27th in goals per game despite ranking fifth in shots. Their power play, with a unit littered with All-Stars, is 28th, ahead of only Calgary and Arizona. Enter Sullivan, who spent a decade grinding out a career as a defensive-minded forward before getting into coaching. He now finds himself trying to get Pittsburgh\u2019s highly capable, occasionally high-strung players working in unison. Nowhere are Pittsburgh\u2019s struggles more evident than in Sidney Crosby\u2019s prolonged funk. Crosby, a two-time Hart Trophy winner, is on pace for career lows in goals and points, and his team appears destined for a four-month battle just to reach the postseason let alone make a serious run at Stanley Cup to bookend the one he and fellow superstar Evgeni Malkin won in 2009 back when a dynasty seemed almost inevitable.", "sentence_answer": "Pittsburgh\u2019s 4-1 loss to Washington on Monday night in Sullivan\u2019s debut dropped the Penguins to 15-11-3.", "paragraph_id": "5d70130ac8e4820a9b66bfa3"} +{"question": "What is Ms. Basfords coloring book called?", "paragraph": "Not that it matters. Ms. Basford\u2019s coloring book \u201cSecret Garden,\u201d a 96-page collection of elaborate black-and-white ink drawings of flowers, leaves, trees and birds, has become a global best-seller. Since its release in spring 2013, \u201cSecret Garden\u201d has sold more than 1.4 million copies in 22 languages. It shot to the top of Amazon\u2019s best-seller list this month, overtaking books by authors like Harper Lee, Anthony Doerr and Paula Hawkins. Her follow-up, \u201cEnchanted Forest,\u201d which came out in February, is briskly selling through its first print run of nearly 226,000 copies.", "answer": "Secret Garden", "sentence": "Ms. Basford\u2019s coloring book \u201c Secret Garden ,\u201d a 96-page collection of elaborate black-and-white ink drawings of flowers, leaves, trees and birds, has become a global best-seller.", "paragraph_sentence": "Not that it matters. Ms. Basford\u2019s coloring book \u201c Secret Garden ,\u201d a 96-page collection of elaborate black-and-white ink drawings of flowers, leaves, trees and birds, has become a global best-seller. Since its release in spring 2013, \u201cSecret Garden\u201d has sold more than 1.4 million copies in 22 languages. It shot to the top of Amazon\u2019s best-seller list this month, overtaking books by authors like Harper Lee, Anthony Doerr and Paula Hawkins. Her follow-up, \u201cEnchanted Forest,\u201d which came out in February, is briskly selling through its first print run of nearly 226,000 copies.", "paragraph_answer": "Not that it matters. Ms. Basford\u2019s coloring book \u201c Secret Garden ,\u201d a 96-page collection of elaborate black-and-white ink drawings of flowers, leaves, trees and birds, has become a global best-seller. Since its release in spring 2013, \u201cSecret Garden\u201d has sold more than 1.4 million copies in 22 languages. It shot to the top of Amazon\u2019s best-seller list this month, overtaking books by authors like Harper Lee, Anthony Doerr and Paula Hawkins. Her follow-up, \u201cEnchanted Forest,\u201d which came out in February, is briskly selling through its first print run of nearly 226,000 copies.", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Basford\u2019s coloring book \u201c Secret Garden ,\u201d a 96-page collection of elaborate black-and-white ink drawings of flowers, leaves, trees and birds, has become a global best-seller.", "paragraph_id": "5d70208bc8e4820a9b66cc5b"} +{"question": "Who does the newpaper, in the movie Spotlight, go after?", "paragraph": "\u2018Spectre\u2019 (PG-13, 2:28) Bond, James Bond, etc. (Dargis) \u2605 \u2018Spotlight\u2019 (R, 2:07) A team of Boston Globe investigative reporters \u2014 played by Michael Keaton, Brian d\u2019Arcy James, Rachel McAdams and Mark Ruffalo \u2014 takes on the local archdiocese in this powerful fact-based newspaper procedural, directed by Tom McCarthy. The movie, with a superb cast and a tightly constructed script, is an unflinching investigation of systemic moral rot and a rousing defense of the values of professional journalism. (Scott)", "answer": "local archdiocese", "sentence": "A team of Boston Globe investigative reporters \u2014 played by Michael Keaton, Brian d\u2019Arcy James, Rachel McAdams and Mark Ruffalo \u2014 takes on the local archdiocese in this powerful fact-based newspaper procedural, directed by Tom McCarthy.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Spectre\u2019 (PG-13, 2:28) Bond, James Bond, etc. (Dargis) \u2605 \u2018Spotlight\u2019 (R, 2:07) A team of Boston Globe investigative reporters \u2014 played by Michael Keaton, Brian d\u2019Arcy James, Rachel McAdams and Mark Ruffalo \u2014 takes on the local archdiocese in this powerful fact-based newspaper procedural, directed by Tom McCarthy. The movie, with a superb cast and a tightly constructed script, is an unflinching investigation of systemic moral rot and a rousing defense of the values of professional journalism. (Scott)", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Spectre\u2019 (PG-13, 2:28) Bond, James Bond, etc. (Dargis) \u2605 \u2018Spotlight\u2019 (R, 2:07) A team of Boston Globe investigative reporters \u2014 played by Michael Keaton, Brian d\u2019Arcy James, Rachel McAdams and Mark Ruffalo \u2014 takes on the local archdiocese in this powerful fact-based newspaper procedural, directed by Tom McCarthy. The movie, with a superb cast and a tightly constructed script, is an unflinching investigation of systemic moral rot and a rousing defense of the values of professional journalism. (Scott)", "sentence_answer": "A team of Boston Globe investigative reporters \u2014 played by Michael Keaton, Brian d\u2019Arcy James, Rachel McAdams and Mark Ruffalo \u2014 takes on the local archdiocese in this powerful fact-based newspaper procedural, directed by Tom McCarthy.", "paragraph_id": "5d702140c8e4820a9b66cd2e"} +{"question": "Which team is at the top seed in the Eastern Conference?", "paragraph": "\u201cI was just tired,\u201d Rose said. That scene was all too reminiscent of the night that everything changed for the Bulls and their star point guard, then 23. They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat. Late in Game 1 of their playoff opener against Philadelphia, as Rose drove, his knee gave out. The 76ers then dispatched the Bulls. What followed has been well chronicled, with Rose\u2019s career taking on the arc of a tragic novel. The A.C.L. injury cost him all of the next year; his teammates, many battling injuries themselves, fought valiantly in the playoffs, beating the Nets in seven games before succumbing to the Heat.", "answer": "Bulls", "sentence": "That scene was all too reminiscent of the night that everything changed for the Bulls and their star point guard, then 23.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI was just tired,\u201d Rose said. That scene was all too reminiscent of the night that everything changed for the Bulls and their star point guard, then 23. They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat. Late in Game 1 of their playoff opener against Philadelphia, as Rose drove, his knee gave out. The 76ers then dispatched the Bulls. What followed has been well chronicled, with Rose\u2019s career taking on the arc of a tragic novel. The A.C.L. injury cost him all of the next year; his teammates, many battling injuries themselves, fought valiantly in the playoffs, beating the Nets in seven games before succumbing to the Heat.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI was just tired,\u201d Rose said. That scene was all too reminiscent of the night that everything changed for the Bulls and their star point guard, then 23. They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat. Late in Game 1 of their playoff opener against Philadelphia, as Rose drove, his knee gave out. The 76ers then dispatched the Bulls. What followed has been well chronicled, with Rose\u2019s career taking on the arc of a tragic novel. The A.C.L. injury cost him all of the next year; his teammates, many battling injuries themselves, fought valiantly in the playoffs, beating the Nets in seven games before succumbing to the Heat.", "sentence_answer": "That scene was all too reminiscent of the night that everything changed for the Bulls and their star point guard, then 23.", "paragraph_id": "5d70d273c8e4820a9b66f730"} +{"question": "What position does Holger Badstuber play?", "paragraph": "That is not even half the question of what Bayern needs to know. The team against Barcelona was gutted by injuries, most importantly to its flying wingers, Arjen Robben and Franck Rib\u00e9ry. But it was also without the key defenders David Alaba and Holger Badstuber, and aches and fatigue also affected some who did play, like Xabi Alonso, Philipp Lahm and Bastian Schweinsteiger. The Germans among those players deny themselves the excuse that the Champions League semifinals they lost last year and this year sandwiched an event that was just as important to them, and arguably more so: the 2014 World Cup. Age is becoming a factor to the German club, too. Six from the Bavarian team \u2014 which peaked two years ago when it won the treble of the Champions League, the Bundesliga and the German Cup in the same season \u2014 are now over 30. That need not be a terminal age for a player today, thanks to improved medical and dietary care and rosters that are large enough to rotate star players. However, Rib\u00e9ry and Robben may never again reach the peak they did in 2013 under Jupp Heynckes\u2019s final season as coach. Rib\u00e9ry is 32 now and Robben is 31. Alonso is 33, Lahm 31, and dear old Schweinsteiger, though only just 30, looks what he is \u2014 a ferocious competitor who has pushed himself through countless knocks and strains while playing for both club and country.", "answer": "defenders", "sentence": "But it was also without the key defenders David Alaba and Holger Badstuber, and aches and fatigue also affected some who did play, like Xabi Alonso, Philipp Lahm and Bastian Schweinsteiger.", "paragraph_sentence": "That is not even half the question of what Bayern needs to know. The team against Barcelona was gutted by injuries, most importantly to its flying wingers, Arjen Robben and Franck Rib\u00e9ry. But it was also without the key defenders David Alaba and Holger Badstuber, and aches and fatigue also affected some who did play, like Xabi Alonso, Philipp Lahm and Bastian Schweinsteiger. The Germans among those players deny themselves the excuse that the Champions League semifinals they lost last year and this year sandwiched an event that was just as important to them, and arguably more so: the 2014 World Cup. Age is becoming a factor to the German club, too. Six from the Bavarian team \u2014 which peaked two years ago when it won the treble of the Champions League, the Bundesliga and the German Cup in the same season \u2014 are now over 30. That need not be a terminal age for a player today, thanks to improved medical and dietary care and rosters that are large enough to rotate star players. However, Rib\u00e9ry and Robben may never again reach the peak they did in 2013 under Jupp Heynckes\u2019s final season as coach. Rib\u00e9ry is 32 now and Robben is 31. Alonso is 33, Lahm 31, and dear old Schweinsteiger, though only just 30, looks what he is \u2014 a ferocious competitor who has pushed himself through countless knocks and strains while playing for both club and country.", "paragraph_answer": "That is not even half the question of what Bayern needs to know. The team against Barcelona was gutted by injuries, most importantly to its flying wingers, Arjen Robben and Franck Rib\u00e9ry. But it was also without the key defenders David Alaba and Holger Badstuber, and aches and fatigue also affected some who did play, like Xabi Alonso, Philipp Lahm and Bastian Schweinsteiger. The Germans among those players deny themselves the excuse that the Champions League semifinals they lost last year and this year sandwiched an event that was just as important to them, and arguably more so: the 2014 World Cup. Age is becoming a factor to the German club, too. Six from the Bavarian team \u2014 which peaked two years ago when it won the treble of the Champions League, the Bundesliga and the German Cup in the same season \u2014 are now over 30. That need not be a terminal age for a player today, thanks to improved medical and dietary care and rosters that are large enough to rotate star players. However, Rib\u00e9ry and Robben may never again reach the peak they did in 2013 under Jupp Heynckes\u2019s final season as coach. Rib\u00e9ry is 32 now and Robben is 31. Alonso is 33, Lahm 31, and dear old Schweinsteiger, though only just 30, looks what he is \u2014 a ferocious competitor who has pushed himself through countless knocks and strains while playing for both club and country.", "sentence_answer": "But it was also without the key defenders David Alaba and Holger Badstuber, and aches and fatigue also affected some who did play, like Xabi Alonso, Philipp Lahm and Bastian Schweinsteiger.", "paragraph_id": "5d701f3bc8e4820a9b66caf0"} +{"question": "The rape was supposed to represent what?", "paragraph": "Officials point to the case of Pakistani peacekeepers accused of raping a boy in Haiti a few years ago as a model of accountability. Pakistan sent military judges to conduct a trial in Haiti. One peacekeeper was convicted, and then, to the dismay of many Haitians, whisked back to Pakistan to serve a one-year jail sentence. \u201cPeople can always say punishment was too light or whatever, but the system worked as it should,\u201d Anthony Banbury, the United Nations assistant secretary general for field support, said of the case.", "answer": "a model of accountability", "sentence": "Officials point to the case of Pakistani peacekeepers accused of raping a boy in Haiti a few years ago as a model of accountability .", "paragraph_sentence": " Officials point to the case of Pakistani peacekeepers accused of raping a boy in Haiti a few years ago as a model of accountability . Pakistan sent military judges to conduct a trial in Haiti. One peacekeeper was convicted, and then, to the dismay of many Haitians, whisked back to Pakistan to serve a one-year jail sentence. \u201cPeople can always say punishment was too light or whatever, but the system worked as it should,\u201d Anthony Banbury, the United Nations assistant secretary general for field support, said of the case.", "paragraph_answer": "Officials point to the case of Pakistani peacekeepers accused of raping a boy in Haiti a few years ago as a model of accountability . Pakistan sent military judges to conduct a trial in Haiti. One peacekeeper was convicted, and then, to the dismay of many Haitians, whisked back to Pakistan to serve a one-year jail sentence. \u201cPeople can always say punishment was too light or whatever, but the system worked as it should,\u201d Anthony Banbury, the United Nations assistant secretary general for field support, said of the case.", "sentence_answer": "Officials point to the case of Pakistani peacekeepers accused of raping a boy in Haiti a few years ago as a model of accountability .", "paragraph_id": "5d700866c8e4820a9b66afe7"} +{"question": "Which party did Kevin Rudd belong to?", "paragraph": "But Mr. Turnbull will have to lead not only the lawmakers in his own party \u2014 44 of whom did not vote for him on Monday night, against 54 who did \u2014 but also a country where policy in recent years often seems to have been made on the run, and often in response to flagging opinion polls. Australia\u2019s current political turmoil dates from the Labor Party government of Kevin Rudd, who became prime minister in 2007.", "answer": "Labor Party", "sentence": "Australia\u2019s current political turmoil dates from the Labor Party government of Kevin Rudd, who became prime minister in 2007.", "paragraph_sentence": "But Mr. Turnbull will have to lead not only the lawmakers in his own party \u2014 44 of whom did not vote for him on Monday night, against 54 who did \u2014 but also a country where policy in recent years often seems to have been made on the run, and often in response to flagging opinion polls. Australia\u2019s current political turmoil dates from the Labor Party government of Kevin Rudd, who became prime minister in 2007. ", "paragraph_answer": "But Mr. Turnbull will have to lead not only the lawmakers in his own party \u2014 44 of whom did not vote for him on Monday night, against 54 who did \u2014 but also a country where policy in recent years often seems to have been made on the run, and often in response to flagging opinion polls. Australia\u2019s current political turmoil dates from the Labor Party government of Kevin Rudd, who became prime minister in 2007.", "sentence_answer": "Australia\u2019s current political turmoil dates from the Labor Party government of Kevin Rudd, who became prime minister in 2007.", "paragraph_id": "5d700cf7c8e4820a9b66b86e"} +{"question": "What was Deutsche Bank's former target for return on capital?", "paragraph": "For Deutsche Bank, the change will entail a reduction of hundreds of billions of euros in the bank\u2019s use of borrowed funds. It also means that the bank will earn a lower return on the money it invests than in the past. The bank will aim for a 10 percent return on capital, down from a previous target of 12 percent and a far cry from the 25 percent return that Deutsche Bank sought to achieve before the financial crisis. In addition, the bank said it aimed to cut costs by 3.5 billion euros, or about $3.8 billion, a year. The cuts would seem to suggest that Deutsche Bank will have little choice but to join other European banks like UBS or Barclays in scaling back its American operations.", "answer": "12 percent", "sentence": "The bank will aim for a 10 percent return on capital, down from a previous target of 12 percent and a far cry from the 25 percent return that Deutsche Bank sought to achieve before the financial crisis.", "paragraph_sentence": "For Deutsche Bank, the change will entail a reduction of hundreds of billions of euros in the bank\u2019s use of borrowed funds. It also means that the bank will earn a lower return on the money it invests than in the past. The bank will aim for a 10 percent return on capital, down from a previous target of 12 percent and a far cry from the 25 percent return that Deutsche Bank sought to achieve before the financial crisis. In addition, the bank said it aimed to cut costs by 3.5 billion euros, or about $3.8 billion, a year. The cuts would seem to suggest that Deutsche Bank will have little choice but to join other European banks like UBS or Barclays in scaling back its American operations.", "paragraph_answer": "For Deutsche Bank, the change will entail a reduction of hundreds of billions of euros in the bank\u2019s use of borrowed funds. It also means that the bank will earn a lower return on the money it invests than in the past. The bank will aim for a 10 percent return on capital, down from a previous target of 12 percent and a far cry from the 25 percent return that Deutsche Bank sought to achieve before the financial crisis. In addition, the bank said it aimed to cut costs by 3.5 billion euros, or about $3.8 billion, a year. The cuts would seem to suggest that Deutsche Bank will have little choice but to join other European banks like UBS or Barclays in scaling back its American operations.", "sentence_answer": "The bank will aim for a 10 percent return on capital, down from a previous target of 12 percent and a far cry from the 25 percent return that Deutsche Bank sought to achieve before the financial crisis.", "paragraph_id": "5d7012f6c8e4820a9b66bf79"} +{"question": "What is the phone number for Music Mountain?", "paragraph": "FALLS VILLAGE Music Mountain Calidore String Quartet, classical. June 21 at 3 p.m. $30. Kim Kashkashian, viola. June 26 at 7:30 p.m. $30. Cantata Profana, classical. June 27 at 6:30 p.m. $27. Juilliard String Quartet, classical. June 28 at 3 p.m. $60. Music Mountain, 225 Music Mountain Road. 860-824-7126; musicmountain.org. HARTFORD Infinity Hall Hartford The Seldom Scene, bluegrass. June 25 at 8 p.m. $35 to $50. Jeff Pevar and Mo\u2019 Pleasure Allstars, blues and pop. June 27 at 8 p.m. $24 to $39. Tom Rush, folk. June 28 at 7:30 p.m. $39 to $59. Infinity Hall Hartford, 32 Front Street. infinityhall.com; 860-560-7757.", "answer": "860-824-7126", "sentence": "860-824-7126 ; musicmountain.org.", "paragraph_sentence": "FALLS VILLAGE Music Mountain Calidore String Quartet, classical. June 21 at 3 p.m. $30. Kim Kashkashian, viola. June 26 at 7:30 p.m. $30. Cantata Profana, classical. June 27 at 6:30 p.m. $27. Juilliard String Quartet, classical. June 28 at 3 p.m. $60. Music Mountain, 225 Music Mountain Road. 860-824-7126 ; musicmountain.org. HARTFORD Infinity Hall Hartford The Seldom Scene, bluegrass. June 25 at 8 p.m. $35 to $50. Jeff Pevar and Mo\u2019 Pleasure Allstars, blues and pop. June 27 at 8 p.m. $24 to $39. Tom Rush, folk. June 28 at 7:30 p.m. $39 to $59. Infinity Hall Hartford, 32 Front Street. infinityhall.com; 860-560-7757.", "paragraph_answer": "FALLS VILLAGE Music Mountain Calidore String Quartet, classical. June 21 at 3 p.m. $30. Kim Kashkashian, viola. June 26 at 7:30 p.m. $30. Cantata Profana, classical. June 27 at 6:30 p.m. $27. Juilliard String Quartet, classical. June 28 at 3 p.m. $60. Music Mountain, 225 Music Mountain Road. 860-824-7126 ; musicmountain.org. HARTFORD Infinity Hall Hartford The Seldom Scene, bluegrass. June 25 at 8 p.m. $35 to $50. Jeff Pevar and Mo\u2019 Pleasure Allstars, blues and pop. June 27 at 8 p.m. $24 to $39. Tom Rush, folk. June 28 at 7:30 p.m. $39 to $59. Infinity Hall Hartford, 32 Front Street. infinityhall.com; 860-560-7757.", "sentence_answer": " 860-824-7126 ; musicmountain.org.", "paragraph_id": "5d708affc8e4820a9b66f4fa"} +{"question": "What did the experience change into?", "paragraph": "She continued: \u201cWhat started out as an invigorating, life-enhancing, joyous experience evolved into something quite crazy. A strange artistic process, but a sign of the time. We\u2019re all digital, we\u2019re all vulnerable and everything\u2019s instant \u2014 so instant. Instant success and instant failure. Instant discovery, instant destruction, instant construction. It\u2019s as splendid and wonderful as it is devastating. Honestly, to me it\u2019s the death of being an artist in many ways.\u201d We spoke in her sitting room, where a Fernand L\u00e9ger painting presides from above the fireplace. A large coffee table was neatly stacked with books and folders of photographs that Madonna has been using for research as she works on the screenplay for her next film project, based on the novel \u201cThe Impossible Lives of Greta Wells.\u201d Imposing cream-colored couches flanked the coffee table, but Madonna preferred sitting on the floor.", "answer": "something quite crazy", "sentence": "She continued: \u201cWhat started out as an invigorating, life-enhancing, joyous experience evolved into something quite crazy .", "paragraph_sentence": " She continued: \u201cWhat started out as an invigorating, life-enhancing, joyous experience evolved into something quite crazy . A strange artistic process, but a sign of the time. We\u2019re all digital, we\u2019re all vulnerable and everything\u2019s instant \u2014 so instant. Instant success and instant failure. Instant discovery, instant destruction, instant construction. It\u2019s as splendid and wonderful as it is devastating. Honestly, to me it\u2019s the death of being an artist in many ways.\u201d We spoke in her sitting room, where a Fernand L\u00e9ger painting presides from above the fireplace. A large coffee table was neatly stacked with books and folders of photographs that Madonna has been using for research as she works on the screenplay for her next film project, based on the novel \u201cThe Impossible Lives of Greta Wells.\u201d Imposing cream-colored couches flanked the coffee table, but Madonna preferred sitting on the floor.", "paragraph_answer": "She continued: \u201cWhat started out as an invigorating, life-enhancing, joyous experience evolved into something quite crazy . A strange artistic process, but a sign of the time. We\u2019re all digital, we\u2019re all vulnerable and everything\u2019s instant \u2014 so instant. Instant success and instant failure. Instant discovery, instant destruction, instant construction. It\u2019s as splendid and wonderful as it is devastating. Honestly, to me it\u2019s the death of being an artist in many ways.\u201d We spoke in her sitting room, where a Fernand L\u00e9ger painting presides from above the fireplace. A large coffee table was neatly stacked with books and folders of photographs that Madonna has been using for research as she works on the screenplay for her next film project, based on the novel \u201cThe Impossible Lives of Greta Wells.\u201d Imposing cream-colored couches flanked the coffee table, but Madonna preferred sitting on the floor.", "sentence_answer": "She continued: \u201cWhat started out as an invigorating, life-enhancing, joyous experience evolved into something quite crazy .", "paragraph_id": "5d705029c8e4820a9b66eb27"} +{"question": "What did Dr. Mapstone tell Sandy the amnestic M.C.I. would become within 10 years?", "paragraph": "The next month, Sandy\u2019s husband, Daryl, from whom she had been amicably separated for 15 years, drove her from Ithaca to the University of Rochester Medical Center for cognitive testing by a neuropsychologist named Mark Mapstone. Mapstone showed Sandy a line drawing and asked her to copy it, and then to draw it from memory 10 minutes later. He read her a list of words and had her recall as many as she could. He gave her two numbers and two letters and asked her to rearrange them in a particular order: low letter, high letter, low number, high number. Thank goodness that last one wasn\u2019t timed, she thought to herself, as she focused all her mental energy on the task. She felt as gleeful as a kid who had earned a gold star when Mapstone said, \u201cYes, that\u2019s right.\u201d After three hours, Mapstone gave a preliminary diagnosis: amnestic mild cognitive impairment. At first Sandy was relieved \u2014 he had said mild, hadn\u2019t he? \u2014 but then she caught the look on his face. This is not a good thing, Mapstone told her gently; most cases of amnestic M.C.I. progress to full-\u00adblown Alzheimer\u2019s disease within 10 years. When Sandy went back to the waiting room to meet Daryl, she was weeping uncontrollably. Between sobs, she explained the diagnosis and the inevitable decline on the horizon. She felt terror at the prospect of becoming a hollowed-\u00adout person with no memory, mind or sense of identity, as well as fury that she was powerless to do anything but endure it. With Alzheimer\u2019s disease, she would write, it is \u201cextraordinarily difficult for one\u2019s body to die in tandem with the death of one\u2019s self.\u201d That day at Mapstone\u2019s office, she vowed that she would figure out a way to take her own life before the disease took it from her. Later that month, Sandy sat down in her upstairs study \u2014 painted a rich burgundy, as the rest of the house was, to make the sprawling old place feel cozy \u2014 and looked at her Mac desktop computer screen. She had some trepidation about her plan to keep a journal of her own deterioration. But she opened a new document, gave it a file name \u2014 \u201cMemoir\u201d \u2014 and began to type. She tried to describe the maddening capriciousness of \u201ca mind that could be so alive one moment with thought and feeling building toward a next step and then someone erases the blackboard. It\u2019s all gone and I can\u2019t even reconstruct what the topic was. It\u2019s just gone. And I sit with the dark, the blank.\u201d", "answer": "full-\u00adblown Alzheimer\u2019s disease", "sentence": "This is not a good thing, Mapstone told her gently; most cases of amnestic M.C.I. progress to full-\u00adblown Alzheimer\u2019s disease within 10 years.", "paragraph_sentence": "The next month, Sandy\u2019s husband, Daryl, from whom she had been amicably separated for 15 years, drove her from Ithaca to the University of Rochester Medical Center for cognitive testing by a neuropsychologist named Mark Mapstone. Mapstone showed Sandy a line drawing and asked her to copy it, and then to draw it from memory 10 minutes later. He read her a list of words and had her recall as many as she could. He gave her two numbers and two letters and asked her to rearrange them in a particular order: low letter, high letter, low number, high number. Thank goodness that last one wasn\u2019t timed, she thought to herself, as she focused all her mental energy on the task. She felt as gleeful as a kid who had earned a gold star when Mapstone said, \u201cYes, that\u2019s right.\u201d After three hours, Mapstone gave a preliminary diagnosis: amnestic mild cognitive impairment. At first Sandy was relieved \u2014 he had said mild, hadn\u2019t he? \u2014 but then she caught the look on his face. This is not a good thing, Mapstone told her gently; most cases of amnestic M.C.I. progress to full-\u00adblown Alzheimer\u2019s disease within 10 years. When Sandy went back to the waiting room to meet Daryl, she was weeping uncontrollably. Between sobs, she explained the diagnosis and the inevitable decline on the horizon. She felt terror at the prospect of becoming a hollowed-\u00adout person with no memory, mind or sense of identity, as well as fury that she was powerless to do anything but endure it. With Alzheimer\u2019s disease, she would write, it is \u201cextraordinarily difficult for one\u2019s body to die in tandem with the death of one\u2019s self.\u201d That day at Mapstone\u2019s office, she vowed that she would figure out a way to take her own life before the disease took it from her. Later that month, Sandy sat down in her upstairs study \u2014 painted a rich burgundy, as the rest of the house was, to make the sprawling old place feel cozy \u2014 and looked at her Mac desktop computer screen. She had some trepidation about her plan to keep a journal of her own deterioration. But she opened a new document, gave it a file name \u2014 \u201cMemoir\u201d \u2014 and began to type. She tried to describe the maddening capriciousness of \u201ca mind that could be so alive one moment with thought and feeling building toward a next step and then someone erases the blackboard. It\u2019s all gone and I can\u2019t even reconstruct what the topic was. It\u2019s just gone. And I sit with the dark, the blank.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The next month, Sandy\u2019s husband, Daryl, from whom she had been amicably separated for 15 years, drove her from Ithaca to the University of Rochester Medical Center for cognitive testing by a neuropsychologist named Mark Mapstone. Mapstone showed Sandy a line drawing and asked her to copy it, and then to draw it from memory 10 minutes later. He read her a list of words and had her recall as many as she could. He gave her two numbers and two letters and asked her to rearrange them in a particular order: low letter, high letter, low number, high number. Thank goodness that last one wasn\u2019t timed, she thought to herself, as she focused all her mental energy on the task. She felt as gleeful as a kid who had earned a gold star when Mapstone said, \u201cYes, that\u2019s right.\u201d After three hours, Mapstone gave a preliminary diagnosis: amnestic mild cognitive impairment. At first Sandy was relieved \u2014 he had said mild, hadn\u2019t he? \u2014 but then she caught the look on his face. This is not a good thing, Mapstone told her gently; most cases of amnestic M.C.I. progress to full-\u00adblown Alzheimer\u2019s disease within 10 years. When Sandy went back to the waiting room to meet Daryl, she was weeping uncontrollably. Between sobs, she explained the diagnosis and the inevitable decline on the horizon. She felt terror at the prospect of becoming a hollowed-\u00adout person with no memory, mind or sense of identity, as well as fury that she was powerless to do anything but endure it. With Alzheimer\u2019s disease, she would write, it is \u201cextraordinarily difficult for one\u2019s body to die in tandem with the death of one\u2019s self.\u201d That day at Mapstone\u2019s office, she vowed that she would figure out a way to take her own life before the disease took it from her. Later that month, Sandy sat down in her upstairs study \u2014 painted a rich burgundy, as the rest of the house was, to make the sprawling old place feel cozy \u2014 and looked at her Mac desktop computer screen. She had some trepidation about her plan to keep a journal of her own deterioration. But she opened a new document, gave it a file name \u2014 \u201cMemoir\u201d \u2014 and began to type. She tried to describe the maddening capriciousness of \u201ca mind that could be so alive one moment with thought and feeling building toward a next step and then someone erases the blackboard. It\u2019s all gone and I can\u2019t even reconstruct what the topic was. It\u2019s just gone. And I sit with the dark, the blank.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "This is not a good thing, Mapstone told her gently; most cases of amnestic M.C.I. progress to full-\u00adblown Alzheimer\u2019s disease within 10 years.", "paragraph_id": "5d702901c8e4820a9b66d6cc"} +{"question": "What was the name of the largest vessel?", "paragraph": "But as flames engulfed a waterfront warehouse stuffed with old court papers and medical records in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, this weekend, there they were: two fireboats pouring frigid water from the East River onto the inferno. The larger of the vessels, a 140-foot boat known as the Firefighter II, also used its main cannon as a water-powered battering ram. The impact of 17,000 gallons of water a minute was used to collapse walls, exposing the flames inside the warehouse. \u201cWithout that force, we wouldn\u2019t have been able to hit any of the fire,\u201d said Rick Ferro, the chief who directed the waterborne response. It was the first time the state-of-the-art boat, added to the fleet about four years ago, had put water on an actual fire.", "answer": "Firefighter II", "sentence": "The larger of the vessels, a 140-foot boat known as the Firefighter II , also used its main cannon as a water-powered battering ram.", "paragraph_sentence": "But as flames engulfed a waterfront warehouse stuffed with old court papers and medical records in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, this weekend, there they were: two fireboats pouring frigid water from the East River onto the inferno. The larger of the vessels, a 140-foot boat known as the Firefighter II , also used its main cannon as a water-powered battering ram. The impact of 17,000 gallons of water a minute was used to collapse walls, exposing the flames inside the warehouse. \u201cWithout that force, we wouldn\u2019t have been able to hit any of the fire,\u201d said Rick Ferro, the chief who directed the waterborne response. It was the first time the state-of-the-art boat, added to the fleet about four years ago, had put water on an actual fire.", "paragraph_answer": "But as flames engulfed a waterfront warehouse stuffed with old court papers and medical records in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, this weekend, there they were: two fireboats pouring frigid water from the East River onto the inferno. The larger of the vessels, a 140-foot boat known as the Firefighter II , also used its main cannon as a water-powered battering ram. The impact of 17,000 gallons of water a minute was used to collapse walls, exposing the flames inside the warehouse. \u201cWithout that force, we wouldn\u2019t have been able to hit any of the fire,\u201d said Rick Ferro, the chief who directed the waterborne response. It was the first time the state-of-the-art boat, added to the fleet about four years ago, had put water on an actual fire.", "sentence_answer": "The larger of the vessels, a 140-foot boat known as the Firefighter II , also used its main cannon as a water-powered battering ram.", "paragraph_id": "5d701463c8e4820a9b66c092"} +{"question": "What is the name of the officer who suffered from a medical emergency?", "paragraph": "\u201cI saw the officers kicking him, jumping on his head multiple times and screaming, \u2018Stop resisting,\u2019 even though I didn\u2019t see him moving,\u201d wrote Mr. Pearson, who has since been released after serving two years on a weapons charge. None of the affidavits or letters mentioned Mr. Harrell\u2019s fighting back or speaking during the encounter. Several said that once he was on the floor, handcuffed, he stopped moving, and a few of the inmates speculated he may have already been dead by then. Indeed, Mr. Camara said inmates were surprised that Mr. Harrell, who was over six feet tall and weighed 235 pounds, did not try to defend himself. \u201cPeople was even mad, I was mad,\u201d he said. \u201cYou\u2019re a big guy and you let these people literally kill you.\u201d The inmates said that during the encounter, an officer they identified as Robert Michels appeared to have a medical emergency. Mr. Pearson, who later identified Officer Michels through a Facebook photo, said he saw the officer \u201crip open his shirt and he was gasping for air and grabbing his chest.\u201d Officers went to attend to Officer Michels, who was soon carried out on a stretcher, inmates said. Identifying the Guards While Mr. Harrell lay still on the floor, officers periodically walked by, kicking him and hitting him, Mr. Camara said.", "answer": "Robert Michels", "sentence": "The inmates said that during the encounter, an officer they identified as Robert Michels appeared to have a medical emergency.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI saw the officers kicking him, jumping on his head multiple times and screaming, \u2018Stop resisting,\u2019 even though I didn\u2019t see him moving,\u201d wrote Mr. Pearson, who has since been released after serving two years on a weapons charge. None of the affidavits or letters mentioned Mr. Harrell\u2019s fighting back or speaking during the encounter. Several said that once he was on the floor, handcuffed, he stopped moving, and a few of the inmates speculated he may have already been dead by then. Indeed, Mr. Camara said inmates were surprised that Mr. Harrell, who was over six feet tall and weighed 235 pounds, did not try to defend himself. \u201cPeople was even mad, I was mad,\u201d he said. \u201cYou\u2019re a big guy and you let these people literally kill you.\u201d The inmates said that during the encounter, an officer they identified as Robert Michels appeared to have a medical emergency. Mr. Pearson, who later identified Officer Michels through a Facebook photo, said he saw the officer \u201crip open his shirt and he was gasping for air and grabbing his chest.\u201d Officers went to attend to Officer Michels, who was soon carried out on a stretcher, inmates said. Identifying the Guards While Mr. Harrell lay still on the floor, officers periodically walked by, kicking him and hitting him, Mr. Camara said.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI saw the officers kicking him, jumping on his head multiple times and screaming, \u2018Stop resisting,\u2019 even though I didn\u2019t see him moving,\u201d wrote Mr. Pearson, who has since been released after serving two years on a weapons charge. None of the affidavits or letters mentioned Mr. Harrell\u2019s fighting back or speaking during the encounter. Several said that once he was on the floor, handcuffed, he stopped moving, and a few of the inmates speculated he may have already been dead by then. Indeed, Mr. Camara said inmates were surprised that Mr. Harrell, who was over six feet tall and weighed 235 pounds, did not try to defend himself. \u201cPeople was even mad, I was mad,\u201d he said. \u201cYou\u2019re a big guy and you let these people literally kill you.\u201d The inmates said that during the encounter, an officer they identified as Robert Michels appeared to have a medical emergency. Mr. Pearson, who later identified Officer Michels through a Facebook photo, said he saw the officer \u201crip open his shirt and he was gasping for air and grabbing his chest.\u201d Officers went to attend to Officer Michels, who was soon carried out on a stretcher, inmates said. Identifying the Guards While Mr. Harrell lay still on the floor, officers periodically walked by, kicking him and hitting him, Mr. Camara said.", "sentence_answer": "The inmates said that during the encounter, an officer they identified as Robert Michels appeared to have a medical emergency.", "paragraph_id": "5d7020b2c8e4820a9b66cca9"} +{"question": "How many US military trained the Ukrainian in remedial military instructions?", "paragraph": "For a moment, he twirled the rope in his hands like a lasso, then threw the hook over the wire, and tugged hard, testing for explosives. When nothing happened he signaled two comrades, who ran up and started snipping the wire with cutters. Although this was a typical training exercise for raw recruits in an elemental soldierly skill, there was nothing typical about the scene. Far from enlistees, these soldiers were regulars in the Ukrainian National Guard, presumably battle-hardened after months on the front lines in eastern Ukraine. And the trainer was an American military instructor, drilling troops for battle with the United States\u2019 former Cold War foe, Russia, and Russian-backed separatists. \u201cIt\u2019s been a long time since I heard a target called an Ivan,\u201d First Sgt. David Dzwik, one of the trainers, said in an interview out in the sunny forest, while observing the Ukrainians run through drills. \u201cNow, I\u2019m hearing it again.\u201d The course on cutting wire is one of 63 classes of remedial military instruction being provided by 300 United States Army trainers in three consecutive two-month courses. Here in western Ukraine, they are far from the fighting, and their job is to instill some basic military know-how in Ukrainian soldiers, who the trainers have discovered are woefully unprepared. The largely unschooled troops are learning such basic skills as how to use an encrypted walkie-talkie; how to break open a door with a sledgehammer and a crowbar; and how to drag a wounded colleague across a field while holding a rifle at the ready. When the war began a year ago, the Ukrainian Army was all but worthless \u2014 rife with corruption and Russian spies, and made up largely of \u201cskeleton\u201d battalions of officers with just a few men. About 1 percent of the equipment was manufactured in the past decade.", "answer": "300", "sentence": "The course on cutting wire is one of 63 classes of remedial military instruction being provided by 300 United States Army trainers in three consecutive two-month courses.", "paragraph_sentence": "For a moment, he twirled the rope in his hands like a lasso, then threw the hook over the wire, and tugged hard, testing for explosives. When nothing happened he signaled two comrades, who ran up and started snipping the wire with cutters. Although this was a typical training exercise for raw recruits in an elemental soldierly skill, there was nothing typical about the scene. Far from enlistees, these soldiers were regulars in the Ukrainian National Guard, presumably battle-hardened after months on the front lines in eastern Ukraine. And the trainer was an American military instructor, drilling troops for battle with the United States\u2019 former Cold War foe, Russia, and Russian-backed separatists. \u201cIt\u2019s been a long time since I heard a target called an Ivan,\u201d First Sgt. David Dzwik, one of the trainers, said in an interview out in the sunny forest, while observing the Ukrainians run through drills. \u201cNow, I\u2019m hearing it again.\u201d The course on cutting wire is one of 63 classes of remedial military instruction being provided by 300 United States Army trainers in three consecutive two-month courses. Here in western Ukraine, they are far from the fighting, and their job is to instill some basic military know-how in Ukrainian soldiers, who the trainers have discovered are woefully unprepared. The largely unschooled troops are learning such basic skills as how to use an encrypted walkie-talkie; how to break open a door with a sledgehammer and a crowbar; and how to drag a wounded colleague across a field while holding a rifle at the ready. When the war began a year ago, the Ukrainian Army was all but worthless \u2014 rife with corruption and Russian spies, and made up largely of \u201cskeleton\u201d battalions of officers with just a few men. About 1 percent of the equipment was manufactured in the past decade.", "paragraph_answer": "For a moment, he twirled the rope in his hands like a lasso, then threw the hook over the wire, and tugged hard, testing for explosives. When nothing happened he signaled two comrades, who ran up and started snipping the wire with cutters. Although this was a typical training exercise for raw recruits in an elemental soldierly skill, there was nothing typical about the scene. Far from enlistees, these soldiers were regulars in the Ukrainian National Guard, presumably battle-hardened after months on the front lines in eastern Ukraine. And the trainer was an American military instructor, drilling troops for battle with the United States\u2019 former Cold War foe, Russia, and Russian-backed separatists. \u201cIt\u2019s been a long time since I heard a target called an Ivan,\u201d First Sgt. David Dzwik, one of the trainers, said in an interview out in the sunny forest, while observing the Ukrainians run through drills. \u201cNow, I\u2019m hearing it again.\u201d The course on cutting wire is one of 63 classes of remedial military instruction being provided by 300 United States Army trainers in three consecutive two-month courses. Here in western Ukraine, they are far from the fighting, and their job is to instill some basic military know-how in Ukrainian soldiers, who the trainers have discovered are woefully unprepared. The largely unschooled troops are learning such basic skills as how to use an encrypted walkie-talkie; how to break open a door with a sledgehammer and a crowbar; and how to drag a wounded colleague across a field while holding a rifle at the ready. When the war began a year ago, the Ukrainian Army was all but worthless \u2014 rife with corruption and Russian spies, and made up largely of \u201cskeleton\u201d battalions of officers with just a few men. About 1 percent of the equipment was manufactured in the past decade.", "sentence_answer": "The course on cutting wire is one of 63 classes of remedial military instruction being provided by 300 United States Army trainers in three consecutive two-month courses.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026d7c8e4820a9b66d350"} +{"question": "If you listen with half an ear how do the words sound combined?", "paragraph": "There\u2019s probably not one you haven\u2019t heard before. If you listen with half an ear, they sound, in combination, like the ordinary sentences you overhear every day. Listen more carefully, though, as these words are assembled into the exacting forms of declensions and syllogisms, or quaint questions and answers that suggest foreign language phrase books for travelers. Why, it\u2019s all gobbledygook. Except that something kind of wonderful has happened. These very pedestrian words seem to have sprouted wings, and resonate with surprising novelty. No wonder that the three people speaking them seem so delighted and perplexed. It\u2019s as if they\u2019d been born again as speakers of English.", "answer": "like the ordinary sentences you overhear every day", "sentence": "If you listen with half an ear, they sound, in combination, like the ordinary sentences you overhear every day .", "paragraph_sentence": "There\u2019s probably not one you haven\u2019t heard before. If you listen with half an ear, they sound, in combination, like the ordinary sentences you overhear every day . Listen more carefully, though, as these words are assembled into the exacting forms of declensions and syllogisms, or quaint questions and answers that suggest foreign language phrase books for travelers. Why, it\u2019s all gobbledygook. Except that something kind of wonderful has happened. These very pedestrian words seem to have sprouted wings, and resonate with surprising novelty. No wonder that the three people speaking them seem so delighted and perplexed. It\u2019s as if they\u2019d been born again as speakers of English.", "paragraph_answer": "There\u2019s probably not one you haven\u2019t heard before. If you listen with half an ear, they sound, in combination, like the ordinary sentences you overhear every day . Listen more carefully, though, as these words are assembled into the exacting forms of declensions and syllogisms, or quaint questions and answers that suggest foreign language phrase books for travelers. Why, it\u2019s all gobbledygook. Except that something kind of wonderful has happened. These very pedestrian words seem to have sprouted wings, and resonate with surprising novelty. No wonder that the three people speaking them seem so delighted and perplexed. It\u2019s as if they\u2019d been born again as speakers of English.", "sentence_answer": "If you listen with half an ear, they sound, in combination, like the ordinary sentences you overhear every day .", "paragraph_id": "5d7087aec8e4820a9b66f472"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d7008adc8e4820a9b66b087"} +{"question": "Where were the 2014 Olympics hosted?", "paragraph": "Ecclestone actually said this was sport, not politics. He held his race and stood side-by-side with Putin last October. Sochi, of course, hosted the 2014 Winter Games, despite concerns at the time about corruption, spiraling costs, terrorism and Russian legislation that was criticized as anti-gay. \u201cKeep politics from our sport\u201d was and still is the message. Putin has already stated that the Kremlin will waive visa restrictions for the World Cup. Blatter will soon run, and most likely easily win, another four-year term as FIFA president, taking him through the 2018 event. He will accept that mantle with his customary lecture about soccer overcoming all the beastly differences that mankind makes for itself.", "answer": "Sochi", "sentence": "Sochi , of course, hosted the 2014 Winter Games, despite concerns at the time about corruption, spiraling costs, terrorism and Russian legislation that was criticized as anti-gay.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ecclestone actually said this was sport, not politics. He held his race and stood side-by-side with Putin last October. Sochi , of course, hosted the 2014 Winter Games, despite concerns at the time about corruption, spiraling costs, terrorism and Russian legislation that was criticized as anti-gay. \u201cKeep politics from our sport\u201d was and still is the message. Putin has already stated that the Kremlin will waive visa restrictions for the World Cup. Blatter will soon run, and most likely easily win, another four-year term as FIFA president, taking him through the 2018 event. He will accept that mantle with his customary lecture about soccer overcoming all the beastly differences that mankind makes for itself.", "paragraph_answer": "Ecclestone actually said this was sport, not politics. He held his race and stood side-by-side with Putin last October. Sochi , of course, hosted the 2014 Winter Games, despite concerns at the time about corruption, spiraling costs, terrorism and Russian legislation that was criticized as anti-gay. \u201cKeep politics from our sport\u201d was and still is the message. Putin has already stated that the Kremlin will waive visa restrictions for the World Cup. Blatter will soon run, and most likely easily win, another four-year term as FIFA president, taking him through the 2018 event. He will accept that mantle with his customary lecture about soccer overcoming all the beastly differences that mankind makes for itself.", "sentence_answer": " Sochi , of course, hosted the 2014 Winter Games, despite concerns at the time about corruption, spiraling costs, terrorism and Russian legislation that was criticized as anti-gay.", "paragraph_id": "5d701cc0c8e4820a9b66c844"} +{"question": "What did the person start in junior high?", "paragraph": "It was with my classmates. Someone had been stealing from the cubbies in our classroom, and so I organized a couple of my classmates and we started the Star Detective Group. And I got my teacher to sign off on this group to make it legit, and we then investigated. When I got to junior high, I organized a walkout from the school to protest the first Iraq war. But I also got it endorsed by the teachers, because I was never too much of a rebel. I also learned resilience from my mother. The confidence that you have to have as a survival skill \u2014 I saw that in her and learned that from her. You have to feel that your voice matters and that you can drive change and impact change, because if you feel like you can\u2019t, then you won\u2019t.", "answer": "a walkout from the school to protest the first Iraq war", "sentence": "When I got to junior high, I organized a walkout from the school to protest the first Iraq war .", "paragraph_sentence": "It was with my classmates. Someone had been stealing from the cubbies in our classroom, and so I organized a couple of my classmates and we started the Star Detective Group. And I got my teacher to sign off on this group to make it legit, and we then investigated. When I got to junior high, I organized a walkout from the school to protest the first Iraq war . But I also got it endorsed by the teachers, because I was never too much of a rebel. I also learned resilience from my mother. The confidence that you have to have as a survival skill \u2014 I saw that in her and learned that from her. You have to feel that your voice matters and that you can drive change and impact change, because if you feel like you can\u2019t, then you won\u2019t.", "paragraph_answer": "It was with my classmates. Someone had been stealing from the cubbies in our classroom, and so I organized a couple of my classmates and we started the Star Detective Group. And I got my teacher to sign off on this group to make it legit, and we then investigated. When I got to junior high, I organized a walkout from the school to protest the first Iraq war . But I also got it endorsed by the teachers, because I was never too much of a rebel. I also learned resilience from my mother. The confidence that you have to have as a survival skill \u2014 I saw that in her and learned that from her. You have to feel that your voice matters and that you can drive change and impact change, because if you feel like you can\u2019t, then you won\u2019t.", "sentence_answer": "When I got to junior high, I organized a walkout from the school to protest the first Iraq war .", "paragraph_id": "5d705345c8e4820a9b66ec12"} +{"question": "What is Martin Baron's current position?", "paragraph": "The future is in flux. What is certain is that citizens value investigative work. \u201cPeople don\u2019t know of corruption unless it\u2019s disclosed to them,\u201d said Martin Baron, the Globe\u2019s editor during the church investigation, now editor of The Washington Post. When they see the media bringing wrongdoing to light, he said, they often express appreciation: \u201cIf it weren\u2019t for you, nobody would do this work.\u201d That enduring appetite for investigative journalism may hold the key. And so, for the good of the democracy (and their own survival) news organizations, whether start-up or legacy, must make it a high priority to keep digging \u2014 with the public\u2019s interest at heart.", "answer": "editor of The Washington Post", "sentence": "\u201cPeople don\u2019t know of corruption unless it\u2019s disclosed to them,\u201d said Martin Baron, the Globe\u2019s editor during the church investigation, now editor of The Washington Post .", "paragraph_sentence": "The future is in flux. What is certain is that citizens value investigative work. \u201cPeople don\u2019t know of corruption unless it\u2019s disclosed to them,\u201d said Martin Baron, the Globe\u2019s editor during the church investigation, now editor of The Washington Post . When they see the media bringing wrongdoing to light, he said, they often express appreciation: \u201cIf it weren\u2019t for you, nobody would do this work.\u201d That enduring appetite for investigative journalism may hold the key. And so, for the good of the democracy (and their own survival) news organizations, whether start-up or legacy, must make it a high priority to keep digging \u2014 with the public\u2019s interest at heart.", "paragraph_answer": "The future is in flux. What is certain is that citizens value investigative work. \u201cPeople don\u2019t know of corruption unless it\u2019s disclosed to them,\u201d said Martin Baron, the Globe\u2019s editor during the church investigation, now editor of The Washington Post . When they see the media bringing wrongdoing to light, he said, they often express appreciation: \u201cIf it weren\u2019t for you, nobody would do this work.\u201d That enduring appetite for investigative journalism may hold the key. And so, for the good of the democracy (and their own survival) news organizations, whether start-up or legacy, must make it a high priority to keep digging \u2014 with the public\u2019s interest at heart.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cPeople don\u2019t know of corruption unless it\u2019s disclosed to them,\u201d said Martin Baron, the Globe\u2019s editor during the church investigation, now editor of The Washington Post .", "paragraph_id": "5d704120c8e4820a9b66e576"} +{"question": "What field does the school emphasize?", "paragraph": "Many universities have decided to drop fossil fuel stocks from their investment portfolios, but the New School in New York City has decided to go a step further. The eclectic, historically progressive school said not only would it divest itself of all fossil fuel investments in coming years, but it is also reshaping the entire curriculum to focus more on climate change and sustainability. The school, which has a strong emphasis on the field of design, sees opportunities in meeting the challenge of climate change and economic growth, said Joel Towers, executive dean of Parsons the New School of Design.", "answer": "design", "sentence": "The school, which has a strong emphasis on the field of design , sees opportunities in meeting the challenge of climate change and economic growth, said Joel Towers, executive dean of Parsons the New School of Design.", "paragraph_sentence": "Many universities have decided to drop fossil fuel stocks from their investment portfolios, but the New School in New York City has decided to go a step further. The eclectic, historically progressive school said not only would it divest itself of all fossil fuel investments in coming years, but it is also reshaping the entire curriculum to focus more on climate change and sustainability. The school, which has a strong emphasis on the field of design , sees opportunities in meeting the challenge of climate change and economic growth, said Joel Towers, executive dean of Parsons the New School of Design. ", "paragraph_answer": "Many universities have decided to drop fossil fuel stocks from their investment portfolios, but the New School in New York City has decided to go a step further. The eclectic, historically progressive school said not only would it divest itself of all fossil fuel investments in coming years, but it is also reshaping the entire curriculum to focus more on climate change and sustainability. The school, which has a strong emphasis on the field of design , sees opportunities in meeting the challenge of climate change and economic growth, said Joel Towers, executive dean of Parsons the New School of Design.", "sentence_answer": "The school, which has a strong emphasis on the field of design , sees opportunities in meeting the challenge of climate change and economic growth, said Joel Towers, executive dean of Parsons the New School of Design.", "paragraph_id": "5d700b3ec8e4820a9b66b5b7"} +{"question": "Who hit a four-hitter during the Red Sox and the Yankees game on Sept. 25?", "paragraph": "On Sept. 25 the lead was gone, after the Red Sox beat the Yankees, 4-1, at Fenway Park behind Ted Williams\u2019s 43rd home run and a four-hitter by Mel Parnell. Still hopeful Yankees fans thronged Grand Central Terminal to greet the team as it arrived that night from Boston on Track 17. \u201cSo aggressive were the fans in their efforts to reach the ball players,\u201d The New York Times wrote, \u201cthat the police and station guards had to escort several of the team to side exits to avoid accidental injury to the already crippled squad.\u201d The optimistic fans had their hopes dashed the next night at Yankee Stadium. The Sox took over first place with a 7-6 win, Johnny Pesky scoring on a squeeze by Bobby Doerr.", "answer": "Mel Parnell", "sentence": "On Sept. 25 the lead was gone, after the Red Sox beat the Yankees, 4-1, at Fenway Park behind Ted Williams\u2019s 43rd home run and a four-hitter by Mel Parnell .", "paragraph_sentence": " On Sept. 25 the lead was gone, after the Red Sox beat the Yankees, 4-1, at Fenway Park behind Ted Williams\u2019s 43rd home run and a four-hitter by Mel Parnell . Still hopeful Yankees fans thronged Grand Central Terminal to greet the team as it arrived that night from Boston on Track 17. \u201cSo aggressive were the fans in their efforts to reach the ball players,\u201d The New York Times wrote, \u201cthat the police and station guards had to escort several of the team to side exits to avoid accidental injury to the already crippled squad.\u201d The optimistic fans had their hopes dashed the next night at Yankee Stadium. The Sox took over first place with a 7-6 win, Johnny Pesky scoring on a squeeze by Bobby Doerr.", "paragraph_answer": "On Sept. 25 the lead was gone, after the Red Sox beat the Yankees, 4-1, at Fenway Park behind Ted Williams\u2019s 43rd home run and a four-hitter by Mel Parnell . Still hopeful Yankees fans thronged Grand Central Terminal to greet the team as it arrived that night from Boston on Track 17. \u201cSo aggressive were the fans in their efforts to reach the ball players,\u201d The New York Times wrote, \u201cthat the police and station guards had to escort several of the team to side exits to avoid accidental injury to the already crippled squad.\u201d The optimistic fans had their hopes dashed the next night at Yankee Stadium. The Sox took over first place with a 7-6 win, Johnny Pesky scoring on a squeeze by Bobby Doerr.", "sentence_answer": "On Sept. 25 the lead was gone, after the Red Sox beat the Yankees, 4-1, at Fenway Park behind Ted Williams\u2019s 43rd home run and a four-hitter by Mel Parnell .", "paragraph_id": "5d7017a5c8e4820a9b66c3ae"} +{"question": "The author of Prudence believes that a lack of what is sad, deeply destructive, and irreversible?", "paragraph": "The poetics of damage permeates \u00adDavid Treuer\u2019s elegantly bitter fourth novel, \u201cPrudence,\u201d which unites a distinctly modern sociopolitical perspective with a more old-fashioned moral rigor about the \u00adconsequences of emotional cowardice, complicity and repression. On the evidence here, Treuer believes in bravery. Moreover, he believes that a lack of bravery isn\u2019t just sad, it\u2019s deeply destructive \u2014 and the destruction can\u2019t be undone. Cowardice can kill people. While there\u2019s much hope in this lyrical novel, as evidenced by the freedom with which it examines some of the more transgressive interstices of race, sexual orientation and gender, there\u2019s also an obdurate insistence on taking responsibility, particularly if one is a man. Treuer\u2019s perspective is bracingly tough. This \u00adauthor values honor. Who dares to take that kind of stance anymore?", "answer": "bravery", "sentence": "On the evidence here, Treuer believes in bravery .", "paragraph_sentence": "The poetics of damage permeates \u00adDavid Treuer\u2019s elegantly bitter fourth novel, \u201cPrudence,\u201d which unites a distinctly modern sociopolitical perspective with a more old-fashioned moral rigor about the \u00adconsequences of emotional cowardice, complicity and repression. On the evidence here, Treuer believes in bravery . Moreover, he believes that a lack of bravery isn\u2019t just sad, it\u2019s deeply destructive \u2014 and the destruction can\u2019t be undone. Cowardice can kill people. While there\u2019s much hope in this lyrical novel, as evidenced by the freedom with which it examines some of the more transgressive interstices of race, sexual orientation and gender, there\u2019s also an obdurate insistence on taking responsibility, particularly if one is a man. Treuer\u2019s perspective is bracingly tough. This \u00adauthor values honor. Who dares to take that kind of stance anymore?", "paragraph_answer": "The poetics of damage permeates \u00adDavid Treuer\u2019s elegantly bitter fourth novel, \u201cPrudence,\u201d which unites a distinctly modern sociopolitical perspective with a more old-fashioned moral rigor about the \u00adconsequences of emotional cowardice, complicity and repression. On the evidence here, Treuer believes in bravery . Moreover, he believes that a lack of bravery isn\u2019t just sad, it\u2019s deeply destructive \u2014 and the destruction can\u2019t be undone. Cowardice can kill people. While there\u2019s much hope in this lyrical novel, as evidenced by the freedom with which it examines some of the more transgressive interstices of race, sexual orientation and gender, there\u2019s also an obdurate insistence on taking responsibility, particularly if one is a man. Treuer\u2019s perspective is bracingly tough. This \u00adauthor values honor. Who dares to take that kind of stance anymore?", "sentence_answer": "On the evidence here, Treuer believes in bravery .", "paragraph_id": "5d704383c8e4820a9b66e6cb"} +{"question": "Who did Zach Redmond used to play for?", "paragraph": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "answer": "Jets", "sentence": "The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "paragraph_sentence": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45. ", "paragraph_answer": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "sentence_answer": "The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "paragraph_id": "5d70550bc8e4820a9b66ecbd"} +{"question": "Who went to the police station to try to see Mr. Yu but was refused?", "paragraph": "In recent days, the police have detained a number of other lawyers, including Li Chunfu, the brother of Li Heping, a prominent rights defender who is among those who disappeared in an earlier police sweep. \u201cThis is another blow to the Chinese government\u2019s pledge that it will uphold the rule of law,\u201d a spokesman for the China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group, a Hong Kong organization, said by telephone. Ms. Yan, Mr. Yu\u2019s wife, said officers at the police station where her husband was being held refused to allow her to see him on Friday. An officer who picked up the phone at the police station refused to confirm whether Mr. Yu was there.", "answer": "Ms. Yan", "sentence": "Ms. Yan , Mr. Yu\u2019s wife, said officers at the police station where her husband was being held refused to allow her to see him on Friday.", "paragraph_sentence": "In recent days, the police have detained a number of other lawyers, including Li Chunfu, the brother of Li Heping, a prominent rights defender who is among those who disappeared in an earlier police sweep. \u201cThis is another blow to the Chinese government\u2019s pledge that it will uphold the rule of law,\u201d a spokesman for the China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group, a Hong Kong organization, said by telephone. Ms. Yan , Mr. Yu\u2019s wife, said officers at the police station where her husband was being held refused to allow her to see him on Friday. An officer who picked up the phone at the police station refused to confirm whether Mr. Yu was there.", "paragraph_answer": "In recent days, the police have detained a number of other lawyers, including Li Chunfu, the brother of Li Heping, a prominent rights defender who is among those who disappeared in an earlier police sweep. \u201cThis is another blow to the Chinese government\u2019s pledge that it will uphold the rule of law,\u201d a spokesman for the China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group, a Hong Kong organization, said by telephone. Ms. Yan , Mr. Yu\u2019s wife, said officers at the police station where her husband was being held refused to allow her to see him on Friday. An officer who picked up the phone at the police station refused to confirm whether Mr. Yu was there.", "sentence_answer": " Ms. Yan , Mr. Yu\u2019s wife, said officers at the police station where her husband was being held refused to allow her to see him on Friday.", "paragraph_id": "5d708212c8e4820a9b66f3ff"} +{"question": "When did the local PD announce the autopsy results?", "paragraph": "The local police department, however, announced on April 16 that an autopsy determined the cause to be \u201csynthetic cannabinoid intoxication.\u201d The increases in cases in Mississippi and Alabama demonstrate the challenge facing law enforcement officials. Last year, D.E.A. agents made about 40 arrests and seized more than 400 pounds of synthetic drugs in those states as part of a wider national operation. Yet supply chains clearly remain. \u201cIs it frustrating? Yes, but when you\u2019re in this business what you come to understand is that total eradication of a drug threat just isn\u2019t going to happen,\u201d said Keith Brown, the special agent in charge of the D.E.A.\u2019s New Orleans field division, which covers Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi. \u201cUntil we can control the demand there\u2019s going to be someone with supply.\u201d", "answer": "April 16", "sentence": "The local police department, however, announced on April 16 that an autopsy determined the cause to be \u201csynthetic cannabinoid intoxication.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " The local police department, however, announced on April 16 that an autopsy determined the cause to be \u201csynthetic cannabinoid intoxication.\u201d The increases in cases in Mississippi and Alabama demonstrate the challenge facing law enforcement officials. Last year, D.E.A. agents made about 40 arrests and seized more than 400 pounds of synthetic drugs in those states as part of a wider national operation. Yet supply chains clearly remain. \u201cIs it frustrating? Yes, but when you\u2019re in this business what you come to understand is that total eradication of a drug threat just isn\u2019t going to happen,\u201d said Keith Brown, the special agent in charge of the D.E.A.\u2019s New Orleans field division, which covers Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi. \u201cUntil we can control the demand there\u2019s going to be someone with supply.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The local police department, however, announced on April 16 that an autopsy determined the cause to be \u201csynthetic cannabinoid intoxication.\u201d The increases in cases in Mississippi and Alabama demonstrate the challenge facing law enforcement officials. Last year, D.E.A. agents made about 40 arrests and seized more than 400 pounds of synthetic drugs in those states as part of a wider national operation. Yet supply chains clearly remain. \u201cIs it frustrating? Yes, but when you\u2019re in this business what you come to understand is that total eradication of a drug threat just isn\u2019t going to happen,\u201d said Keith Brown, the special agent in charge of the D.E.A.\u2019s New Orleans field division, which covers Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi. \u201cUntil we can control the demand there\u2019s going to be someone with supply.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The local police department, however, announced on April 16 that an autopsy determined the cause to be \u201csynthetic cannabinoid intoxication.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d700de8c8e4820a9b66b999"} +{"question": "What division are the Rangers in?", "paragraph": "Washington Capitals at Montreal Canadiens, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Entering Tuesday\u2019s games, Montreal led the N.H.L. with 39 points, but faced a second long stretch without goaltender Carey Price, who will miss at least six weeks with a lower-body injury (more on that later). With a five-game winning streak, Washington (17-5-1) has caught up to the Rangers in the Metropolitan Division. Goalie Braden Holtby has won his last seven starts and leads the N.H.L. with a 1.95 goals-against average. Buffalo Sabres at Edmonton Oilers, Sunday, 8 p.m.", "answer": "the Metropolitan Division", "sentence": "With a five-game winning streak, Washington (17-5-1) has caught up to the Rangers in the Metropolitan Division .", "paragraph_sentence": "Washington Capitals at Montreal Canadiens, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Entering Tuesday\u2019s games, Montreal led the N.H.L. with 39 points, but faced a second long stretch without goaltender Carey Price, who will miss at least six weeks with a lower-body injury (more on that later). With a five-game winning streak, Washington (17-5-1) has caught up to the Rangers in the Metropolitan Division . Goalie Braden Holtby has won his last seven starts and leads the N.H.L. with a 1.95 goals-against average. Buffalo Sabres at Edmonton Oilers, Sunday, 8 p.m.", "paragraph_answer": "Washington Capitals at Montreal Canadiens, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Entering Tuesday\u2019s games, Montreal led the N.H.L. with 39 points, but faced a second long stretch without goaltender Carey Price, who will miss at least six weeks with a lower-body injury (more on that later). With a five-game winning streak, Washington (17-5-1) has caught up to the Rangers in the Metropolitan Division . Goalie Braden Holtby has won his last seven starts and leads the N.H.L. with a 1.95 goals-against average. Buffalo Sabres at Edmonton Oilers, Sunday, 8 p.m.", "sentence_answer": "With a five-game winning streak, Washington (17-5-1) has caught up to the Rangers in the Metropolitan Division .", "paragraph_id": "5d702133c8e4820a9b66ccfc"} +{"question": "How many days later from the escape was Mr. Sweat discovered?", "paragraph": "Two days later, a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border. He chased him into an open field, and when the prisoner refused his order to stop running, the sergeant, a firearms instructor, dropped to one knee and fired, striking him twice from a distance of more than 50 yards with a .45-caliber pistol, two people briefed on the shooting said. Mr. Sweat provided the account to investigators from the State Police, the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, and the State Inspector General\u2019s Office during several sessions in recent weeks, according to the people briefed on his statements. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about the investigation. The escape, the manhunt and the resulting spectacle proved to be an embarrassment for the Corrections Department and the administration of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.", "answer": "Two days later", "sentence": "Two days later , a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border.", "paragraph_sentence": " Two days later , a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border. He chased him into an open field, and when the prisoner refused his order to stop running, the sergeant, a firearms instructor, dropped to one knee and fired, striking him twice from a distance of more than 50 yards with a .45-caliber pistol, two people briefed on the shooting said. Mr. Sweat provided the account to investigators from the State Police, the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, and the State Inspector General\u2019s Office during several sessions in recent weeks, according to the people briefed on his statements. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about the investigation. The escape, the manhunt and the resulting spectacle proved to be an embarrassment for the Corrections Department and the administration of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.", "paragraph_answer": " Two days later , a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border. He chased him into an open field, and when the prisoner refused his order to stop running, the sergeant, a firearms instructor, dropped to one knee and fired, striking him twice from a distance of more than 50 yards with a .45-caliber pistol, two people briefed on the shooting said. Mr. Sweat provided the account to investigators from the State Police, the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, and the State Inspector General\u2019s Office during several sessions in recent weeks, according to the people briefed on his statements. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about the investigation. The escape, the manhunt and the resulting spectacle proved to be an embarrassment for the Corrections Department and the administration of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.", "sentence_answer": " Two days later , a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border.", "paragraph_id": "5d7057ddc8e4820a9b66ed8d"} +{"question": "What does the agreement state?", "paragraph": "None of the leaders themselves signed the agreements \u2014 that was left to other representatives of the antagonists and the European truce observers \u2014 sending a discreet signal that they were not taking full responsibility for the outcome. Ms. Merkel did note that Mr. Putin had to pressure the rebel leaders to sign. The agreement also states that the Ukrainian military and its separatist opponents will complete the withdrawal of heavy weapons \u2014 with the largest missiles pulled back more than 40 miles \u2014 no later than two weeks after the start of the cease-fire.", "answer": "The agreement also states that the Ukrainian military and its separatist opponents will complete the withdrawal of heavy weapons", "sentence": "The agreement also states that the Ukrainian military and its separatist opponents will complete the withdrawal of heavy weapons \u2014 with the largest missiles pulled back more than 40 miles \u2014 no later than two weeks after the start of the cease-fire.", "paragraph_sentence": "None of the leaders themselves signed the agreements \u2014 that was left to other representatives of the antagonists and the European truce observers \u2014 sending a discreet signal that they were not taking full responsibility for the outcome. Ms. Merkel did note that Mr. Putin had to pressure the rebel leaders to sign. The agreement also states that the Ukrainian military and its separatist opponents will complete the withdrawal of heavy weapons \u2014 with the largest missiles pulled back more than 40 miles \u2014 no later than two weeks after the start of the cease-fire. ", "paragraph_answer": "None of the leaders themselves signed the agreements \u2014 that was left to other representatives of the antagonists and the European truce observers \u2014 sending a discreet signal that they were not taking full responsibility for the outcome. Ms. Merkel did note that Mr. Putin had to pressure the rebel leaders to sign. The agreement also states that the Ukrainian military and its separatist opponents will complete the withdrawal of heavy weapons \u2014 with the largest missiles pulled back more than 40 miles \u2014 no later than two weeks after the start of the cease-fire.", "sentence_answer": " The agreement also states that the Ukrainian military and its separatist opponents will complete the withdrawal of heavy weapons \u2014 with the largest missiles pulled back more than 40 miles \u2014 no later than two weeks after the start of the cease-fire.", "paragraph_id": "5d702082c8e4820a9b66cc4a"} +{"question": "On what day did the School of American Ballet hold its Winter Ball?", "paragraph": "The School of American Ballet held its annual Winter Ball on Monday night, and absolutely no one seemed to mind that it felt more like spring. In a cocktail area in the front of the David H. Koch Theater in Lincoln Center, guests primped and posed in floor-length gowns. Hair was sprayed to perfection, and many of the faces did not appear to move. A young crowd this was not. But perhaps the most surprising thing about the evening was that while David H. Koch and his wife, Julia, held court in one area of the lobby, Chelsea Clinton was in another. Ballet apparently makes for strange bedfellows. Mr. Koch, the conservative billionaire who oversees a well-funded political network, said he has met the Clintons before, including at a benefit last year for the Wildlife Conservation Society.", "answer": "Monday", "sentence": "The School of American Ballet held its annual Winter Ball on Monday night, and absolutely no one seemed to mind that it felt more like spring.", "paragraph_sentence": " The School of American Ballet held its annual Winter Ball on Monday night, and absolutely no one seemed to mind that it felt more like spring. In a cocktail area in the front of the David H. Koch Theater in Lincoln Center, guests primped and posed in floor-length gowns. Hair was sprayed to perfection, and many of the faces did not appear to move. A young crowd this was not. But perhaps the most surprising thing about the evening was that while David H. Koch and his wife, Julia, held court in one area of the lobby, Chelsea Clinton was in another. Ballet apparently makes for strange bedfellows. Mr. Koch, the conservative billionaire who oversees a well-funded political network, said he has met the Clintons before, including at a benefit last year for the Wildlife Conservation Society.", "paragraph_answer": "The School of American Ballet held its annual Winter Ball on Monday night, and absolutely no one seemed to mind that it felt more like spring. In a cocktail area in the front of the David H. Koch Theater in Lincoln Center, guests primped and posed in floor-length gowns. Hair was sprayed to perfection, and many of the faces did not appear to move. A young crowd this was not. But perhaps the most surprising thing about the evening was that while David H. Koch and his wife, Julia, held court in one area of the lobby, Chelsea Clinton was in another. Ballet apparently makes for strange bedfellows. Mr. Koch, the conservative billionaire who oversees a well-funded political network, said he has met the Clintons before, including at a benefit last year for the Wildlife Conservation Society.", "sentence_answer": "The School of American Ballet held its annual Winter Ball on Monday night, and absolutely no one seemed to mind that it felt more like spring.", "paragraph_id": "5d706306c8e4820a9b66f051"} +{"question": "Who has to accept this idea?", "paragraph": "They\u2019re prisoners of a cruel delusion. I don\u2019t see how a loving God could put them in such an impossible position. Then you can add this to the popular arguments against Christianity. But again, the Christian idea is that God asks the seemingly impossible of all of us \u2014 and, fortunately forgives us when we fail. Nobody has to accept this idea, but if you do it\u2019s compatible with a lot of pain, struggle and mystery where humanity encounters God. Especially in a faith whose \u201cHappy Easter\u201d can\u2019t be separated from the cross.", "answer": "Nobody", "sentence": "Nobody has to accept this idea, but if you do it\u2019s compatible with a lot of pain, struggle and mystery where humanity encounters God.", "paragraph_sentence": "They\u2019re prisoners of a cruel delusion. I don\u2019t see how a loving God could put them in such an impossible position. Then you can add this to the popular arguments against Christianity. But again, the Christian idea is that God asks the seemingly impossible of all of us \u2014 and, fortunately forgives us when we fail. Nobody has to accept this idea, but if you do it\u2019s compatible with a lot of pain, struggle and mystery where humanity encounters God. Especially in a faith whose \u201cHappy Easter\u201d can\u2019t be separated from the cross.", "paragraph_answer": "They\u2019re prisoners of a cruel delusion. I don\u2019t see how a loving God could put them in such an impossible position. Then you can add this to the popular arguments against Christianity. But again, the Christian idea is that God asks the seemingly impossible of all of us \u2014 and, fortunately forgives us when we fail. Nobody has to accept this idea, but if you do it\u2019s compatible with a lot of pain, struggle and mystery where humanity encounters God. Especially in a faith whose \u201cHappy Easter\u201d can\u2019t be separated from the cross.", "sentence_answer": " Nobody has to accept this idea, but if you do it\u2019s compatible with a lot of pain, struggle and mystery where humanity encounters God.", "paragraph_id": "5d702d5cc8e4820a9b66dae2"} +{"question": "Who said that the massage was not too harmful?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe irony, of course, is that the newspaper which first raised the alarm about the breast augmentation ads runs far more explicit advertisements in their own pages,\u201d said Mr. Lisberg, a former City Hall bureau chief for The News. \u201cSo trying to keep a family-friendly public environment in New York City can be challenging.\u201d Some think the authority may be too cautious. Jason Dorsey, the chief strategy officer at the Center for Generational Kinetics, which studies marketing to young people, said the message was not harmful.", "answer": "Jason Dorsey", "sentence": "Jason Dorsey , the chief strategy officer at the Center for Generational Kinetics, which studies marketing to young people, said the message was not harmful.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe irony, of course, is that the newspaper which first raised the alarm about the breast augmentation ads runs far more explicit advertisements in their own pages,\u201d said Mr. Lisberg, a former City Hall bureau chief for The News. \u201cSo trying to keep a family-friendly public environment in New York City can be challenging.\u201d Some think the authority may be too cautious. Jason Dorsey , the chief strategy officer at the Center for Generational Kinetics, which studies marketing to young people, said the message was not harmful. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe irony, of course, is that the newspaper which first raised the alarm about the breast augmentation ads runs far more explicit advertisements in their own pages,\u201d said Mr. Lisberg, a former City Hall bureau chief for The News. \u201cSo trying to keep a family-friendly public environment in New York City can be challenging.\u201d Some think the authority may be too cautious. Jason Dorsey , the chief strategy officer at the Center for Generational Kinetics, which studies marketing to young people, said the message was not harmful.", "sentence_answer": " Jason Dorsey , the chief strategy officer at the Center for Generational Kinetics, which studies marketing to young people, said the message was not harmful.", "paragraph_id": "5d702172c8e4820a9b66cd67"} +{"question": "Who made a comment on the volume?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt was a book this thick, but we were free,\u201d joked Mr. Harschel, waving an imaginary building code volume. Mr. Olthuis noted that the house had been built following code for land houses, which, in keeping with a mandate to build greener houses in the Netherlands, stipulated triple-glazed windows, heavy insulation and even a heat exchanger to retain heat from effluent \u2014 something that most houseboats, which tend to be light houses on a heavy foundation, avoid. Mr. Harschel estimates that the couple spent 350,000 euros, or $380,000, to build the house (the lease for the lot is \u20ac600 a month), and guesses that the value of the property has probably more than doubled in the years since it was built.", "answer": "Mr. Harschel", "sentence": "\u201cIt was a book this thick, but we were free,\u201d joked Mr. Harschel , waving an imaginary building code volume.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cIt was a book this thick, but we were free,\u201d joked Mr. Harschel , waving an imaginary building code volume. Mr. Olthuis noted that the house had been built following code for land houses, which, in keeping with a mandate to build greener houses in the Netherlands, stipulated triple-glazed windows, heavy insulation and even a heat exchanger to retain heat from effluent \u2014 something that most houseboats, which tend to be light houses on a heavy foundation, avoid. Mr. Harschel estimates that the couple spent 350,000 euros, or $380,000, to build the house (the lease for the lot is \u20ac600 a month), and guesses that the value of the property has probably more than doubled in the years since it was built.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt was a book this thick, but we were free,\u201d joked Mr. Harschel , waving an imaginary building code volume. Mr. Olthuis noted that the house had been built following code for land houses, which, in keeping with a mandate to build greener houses in the Netherlands, stipulated triple-glazed windows, heavy insulation and even a heat exchanger to retain heat from effluent \u2014 something that most houseboats, which tend to be light houses on a heavy foundation, avoid. Mr. Harschel estimates that the couple spent 350,000 euros, or $380,000, to build the house (the lease for the lot is \u20ac600 a month), and guesses that the value of the property has probably more than doubled in the years since it was built.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt was a book this thick, but we were free,\u201d joked Mr. Harschel , waving an imaginary building code volume.", "paragraph_id": "5d700c8ac8e4820a9b66b7dc"} +{"question": "What feature does the home have that moves up and down?", "paragraph": "As for pricing the house, Ms. Goldberg said the loftlike open spaces, abundant light, pair of parking spots and capacious elevator all contribute to its appeal. \u201cThere\u2019s nothing else like it,\u201d she said. \u201cBetween its size and airiness, the extravagance of the renovation and the beauty of the garden seen through the two window walls, it is truly a serenely special home and art studio. It would be wonderful if another artist bought it. Of course, the garden lot could also be sold separately, but that would be tragic.\u201d", "answer": "elevator", "sentence": "As for pricing the house, Ms. Goldberg said the loftlike open spaces, abundant light, pair of parking spots and capacious elevator all contribute to its appeal.", "paragraph_sentence": " As for pricing the house, Ms. Goldberg said the loftlike open spaces, abundant light, pair of parking spots and capacious elevator all contribute to its appeal. \u201cThere\u2019s nothing else like it,\u201d she said. \u201cBetween its size and airiness, the extravagance of the renovation and the beauty of the garden seen through the two window walls, it is truly a serenely special home and art studio. It would be wonderful if another artist bought it. Of course, the garden lot could also be sold separately, but that would be tragic.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "As for pricing the house, Ms. Goldberg said the loftlike open spaces, abundant light, pair of parking spots and capacious elevator all contribute to its appeal. \u201cThere\u2019s nothing else like it,\u201d she said. \u201cBetween its size and airiness, the extravagance of the renovation and the beauty of the garden seen through the two window walls, it is truly a serenely special home and art studio. It would be wonderful if another artist bought it. Of course, the garden lot could also be sold separately, but that would be tragic.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "As for pricing the house, Ms. Goldberg said the loftlike open spaces, abundant light, pair of parking spots and capacious elevator all contribute to its appeal.", "paragraph_id": "5d7010b4c8e4820a9b66bd3b"} +{"question": "When did Zaro's first come to this neighborhood?", "paragraph": "Though Zaro\u2019s is also a chain and not a mom-and-pop operation, it has survived in a changing part of the Bronx \u2014 a place where stromboli and red velvet cupcakes coexist with challah and hamantaschen, even as the neighborhood has transformed from heavily Jewish to one predominately of black and Hispanic residents. \u201cThe Bronx has been our home since 1927 \u2014 a long, long time ago in a galaxy far, far away,\u201d Mr. Zaro said. \u201cThe Bronx has been good to us, and we love the Bronx,\u201d he added. \u201cI was always proud to tell people that we still had a branch in Parkchester.\u201d", "answer": "1927", "sentence": "\u201cThe Bronx has been our home since 1927 \u2014 a long, long time ago in a galaxy far, far away", "paragraph_sentence": "Though Zaro\u2019s is also a chain and not a mom-and-pop operation, it has survived in a changing part of the Bronx \u2014 a place where stromboli and red velvet cupcakes coexist with challah and hamantaschen, even as the neighborhood has transformed from heavily Jewish to one predominately of black and Hispanic residents. \u201cThe Bronx has been our home since 1927 \u2014 a long, long time ago in a galaxy far, far away ,\u201d Mr. Zaro said. \u201cThe Bronx has been good to us, and we love the Bronx,\u201d he added. \u201cI was always proud to tell people that we still had a branch in Parkchester.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Though Zaro\u2019s is also a chain and not a mom-and-pop operation, it has survived in a changing part of the Bronx \u2014 a place where stromboli and red velvet cupcakes coexist with challah and hamantaschen, even as the neighborhood has transformed from heavily Jewish to one predominately of black and Hispanic residents. \u201cThe Bronx has been our home since 1927 \u2014 a long, long time ago in a galaxy far, far away,\u201d Mr. Zaro said. \u201cThe Bronx has been good to us, and we love the Bronx,\u201d he added. \u201cI was always proud to tell people that we still had a branch in Parkchester.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe Bronx has been our home since 1927 \u2014 a long, long time ago in a galaxy far, far away", "paragraph_id": "5d7032c2c8e4820a9b66ddfe"} +{"question": "When is \"The Last Waltz\" playing?", "paragraph": "MASHANTUCKET Comix at Foxwoods Greer Barnes. June 25 through 27. $15 to $40. Comix at Foxwoods, 350 Trolley Line Boulevard. comixatfoxwoods.com; 866-646-0609. Film HARTFORD Cinestudio A screening of Julie Taymor\u2019s production of \u201cA Midsummer Night\u2019s Dream.\u201d June 21 and 27 at 2:30 p.m. $12 and $20. \u201cThe Last Waltz\u201d (1976), directed by Martin Scorsese. June 26 through July 2. $7 and $9. \u201cNational Theater Live: \u2018The Audience,\u2019 \u201d screening of the play starring Helen Mirren. June 28 at 2:30 p.m. $12 and $20. Cinestudio, 300 Summit Street. 860-297-2463; cinestudio.org.", "answer": "June 26 through July 2", "sentence": "June 26 through July 2 .", "paragraph_sentence": "MASHANTUCKET Comix at Foxwoods Greer Barnes. June 25 through 27. $15 to $40. Comix at Foxwoods, 350 Trolley Line Boulevard. comixatfoxwoods.com; 866-646-0609. Film HARTFORD Cinestudio A screening of Julie Taymor\u2019s production of \u201cA Midsummer Night\u2019s Dream.\u201d June 21 and 27 at 2:30 p.m. $12 and $20. \u201cThe Last Waltz\u201d (1976), directed by Martin Scorsese. June 26 through July 2 . $7 and $9. \u201cNational Theater Live: \u2018The Audience,\u2019 \u201d screening of the play starring Helen Mirren. June 28 at 2:30 p.m. $12 and $20. Cinestudio, 300 Summit Street. 860-297-2463; cinestudio.org.", "paragraph_answer": "MASHANTUCKET Comix at Foxwoods Greer Barnes. June 25 through 27. $15 to $40. Comix at Foxwoods, 350 Trolley Line Boulevard. comixatfoxwoods.com; 866-646-0609. Film HARTFORD Cinestudio A screening of Julie Taymor\u2019s production of \u201cA Midsummer Night\u2019s Dream.\u201d June 21 and 27 at 2:30 p.m. $12 and $20. \u201cThe Last Waltz\u201d (1976), directed by Martin Scorsese. June 26 through July 2 . $7 and $9. \u201cNational Theater Live: \u2018The Audience,\u2019 \u201d screening of the play starring Helen Mirren. June 28 at 2:30 p.m. $12 and $20. Cinestudio, 300 Summit Street. 860-297-2463; cinestudio.org.", "sentence_answer": " June 26 through July 2 .", "paragraph_id": "5d700c88c8e4820a9b66b7d4"} +{"question": "What day was the vessel deflated?", "paragraph": "An article on Monday about the imposition of temporary border restrictions by Germany as record numbers of migrants arrive misspelled the surname of the German interior minister, who said it was \u201cdesperately necessary\u201d for Germany to limit the number of people coming into the country. He is Thomas de Maizi\u00e8re, not de Mazi\u00e8re. The error was repeated in a picture caption with the continuation of the article. Because of editing errors, that caption and a second one, on the front page, misstated, in some editions, the day on which the events described took place. It was Sunday, not Saturday, that a vessel carrying Syrian and Afghan refugees deflated and a German police officer inspected a Syrian man at a border.", "answer": "Sunday", "sentence": "It was Sunday , not Saturday, that a vessel carrying Syrian and Afghan refugees deflated and a German police officer inspected a Syrian man at a border.", "paragraph_sentence": "An article on Monday about the imposition of temporary border restrictions by Germany as record numbers of migrants arrive misspelled the surname of the German interior minister, who said it was \u201cdesperately necessary\u201d for Germany to limit the number of people coming into the country. He is Thomas de Maizi\u00e8re, not de Mazi\u00e8re. The error was repeated in a picture caption with the continuation of the article. Because of editing errors, that caption and a second one, on the front page, misstated, in some editions, the day on which the events described took place. It was Sunday , not Saturday, that a vessel carrying Syrian and Afghan refugees deflated and a German police officer inspected a Syrian man at a border. ", "paragraph_answer": "An article on Monday about the imposition of temporary border restrictions by Germany as record numbers of migrants arrive misspelled the surname of the German interior minister, who said it was \u201cdesperately necessary\u201d for Germany to limit the number of people coming into the country. He is Thomas de Maizi\u00e8re, not de Mazi\u00e8re. The error was repeated in a picture caption with the continuation of the article. Because of editing errors, that caption and a second one, on the front page, misstated, in some editions, the day on which the events described took place. It was Sunday , not Saturday, that a vessel carrying Syrian and Afghan refugees deflated and a German police officer inspected a Syrian man at a border.", "sentence_answer": "It was Sunday , not Saturday, that a vessel carrying Syrian and Afghan refugees deflated and a German police officer inspected a Syrian man at a border.", "paragraph_id": "5d700791c8e4820a9b66ae16"} +{"question": "Who was the C.I.A. director that was replaced?", "paragraph": "As part of a bureaucratic reshuffling last month by John O. Brennan, the C.I.A. director, Mr. D\u2019Andrea has been replaced as head of the drone program by Chris Wood. After the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, Mr. Wood held leadership roles in Alec Station, the group that led the hunt for Qaeda suspects and was central to the interrogation program. He ultimately was in charge of that unit and would later serve as station chief in Kabul. Most recently, he supervised all operations in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Mr. Wood now runs a targeted killing program that is the subject of multiple investigations that Mr. Obama announced last week.", "answer": "Mr. D\u2019Andrea", "sentence": "As part of a bureaucratic reshuffling last month by John O. Brennan, the C.I.A. director, Mr. D\u2019Andrea has been replaced as head of the drone program by Chris Wood.", "paragraph_sentence": " As part of a bureaucratic reshuffling last month by John O. Brennan, the C.I.A. director, Mr. D\u2019Andrea has been replaced as head of the drone program by Chris Wood. After the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, Mr. Wood held leadership roles in Alec Station, the group that led the hunt for Qaeda suspects and was central to the interrogation program. He ultimately was in charge of that unit and would later serve as station chief in Kabul. Most recently, he supervised all operations in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Mr. Wood now runs a targeted killing program that is the subject of multiple investigations that Mr. Obama announced last week.", "paragraph_answer": "As part of a bureaucratic reshuffling last month by John O. Brennan, the C.I.A. director, Mr. D\u2019Andrea has been replaced as head of the drone program by Chris Wood. After the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, Mr. Wood held leadership roles in Alec Station, the group that led the hunt for Qaeda suspects and was central to the interrogation program. He ultimately was in charge of that unit and would later serve as station chief in Kabul. Most recently, he supervised all operations in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Mr. Wood now runs a targeted killing program that is the subject of multiple investigations that Mr. Obama announced last week.", "sentence_answer": "As part of a bureaucratic reshuffling last month by John O. Brennan, the C.I.A. director, Mr. D\u2019Andrea has been replaced as head of the drone program by Chris Wood.", "paragraph_id": "5d70352ec8e4820a9b66df5f"} +{"question": "Who is overseeing the Petrobras investigation?", "paragraph": "If any good has come from the Petrobras debacle it is the flickering sense that this time could be different. Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro, who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato, or Operation Carwash. In Brazil, judges have wide latitude to define both the direction and scope of criminal inquiries, and Judge Moro\u2019s willingness to pursue even the eminent and influential has made him a folk hero. During a recent visit to the courthouse where he presides in Curitiba, ribbons of yellow and green, the national colors, were tied around trees, quiet expressions of solidarity and support. Another source of public optimism can be found on the eighth floor of an office building a few miles away, in rooms that could pass for a low-budget telemarketing operation. This is home to the team of nine prosecutors working on Lava Jato, as everyone here calls it.", "answer": "Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro", "sentence": "Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro , who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato, or Operation Carwash.", "paragraph_sentence": "If any good has come from the Petrobras debacle it is the flickering sense that this time could be different. Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro , who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato, or Operation Carwash. In Brazil, judges have wide latitude to define both the direction and scope of criminal inquiries, and Judge Moro\u2019s willingness to pursue even the eminent and influential has made him a folk hero. During a recent visit to the courthouse where he presides in Curitiba, ribbons of yellow and green, the national colors, were tied around trees, quiet expressions of solidarity and support. Another source of public optimism can be found on the eighth floor of an office building a few miles away, in rooms that could pass for a low-budget telemarketing operation. This is home to the team of nine prosecutors working on Lava Jato, as everyone here calls it.", "paragraph_answer": "If any good has come from the Petrobras debacle it is the flickering sense that this time could be different. Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro , who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato, or Operation Carwash. In Brazil, judges have wide latitude to define both the direction and scope of criminal inquiries, and Judge Moro\u2019s willingness to pursue even the eminent and influential has made him a folk hero. During a recent visit to the courthouse where he presides in Curitiba, ribbons of yellow and green, the national colors, were tied around trees, quiet expressions of solidarity and support. Another source of public optimism can be found on the eighth floor of an office building a few miles away, in rooms that could pass for a low-budget telemarketing operation. This is home to the team of nine prosecutors working on Lava Jato, as everyone here calls it.", "sentence_answer": "Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro , who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato, or Operation Carwash.", "paragraph_id": "5d70198dc8e4820a9b66c58b"} +{"question": "What genre of movie is \"Spy?\"", "paragraph": "\u201cThat was so beautifully cringe-y,\u201d Ms. McCarthy said afterward. Mr. Feig cheered. It was a wrap. \u201cSpy,\u201d which is to open on June 5, is the biggest-budget gamble of Mr. Feig\u2019s career, a high-stakes espionage thriller \u2014 a comic espionage thriller \u2014 that cost $65 million to make and had the cast and crew on location here for months last year. At a moment when there\u2019s extra scrutiny of women\u2019s roles in studio films, behind and in front of the camera, \u201cSpy\u201d is a rejoinder to all the testosterone-fueled fantasies that dominate the summer box office. That action stars need not be superheroes is also a testament to Ms. McCarthy\u2019s clout; it\u2019s her highest-budget movie, too.", "answer": "high-stakes espionage thriller", "sentence": "\u201cSpy,\u201d which is to open on June 5, is the biggest-budget gamble of Mr. Feig\u2019s career, a high-stakes espionage thriller \u2014 a comic espionage thriller \u2014 that cost $65 million to make and had the cast and crew on location here for months last year.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThat was so beautifully cringe-y,\u201d Ms. McCarthy said afterward. Mr. Feig cheered. It was a wrap. \u201cSpy,\u201d which is to open on June 5, is the biggest-budget gamble of Mr. Feig\u2019s career, a high-stakes espionage thriller \u2014 a comic espionage thriller \u2014 that cost $65 million to make and had the cast and crew on location here for months last year. At a moment when there\u2019s extra scrutiny of women\u2019s roles in studio films, behind and in front of the camera, \u201cSpy\u201d is a rejoinder to all the testosterone-fueled fantasies that dominate the summer box office. That action stars need not be superheroes is also a testament to Ms. McCarthy\u2019s clout; it\u2019s her highest-budget movie, too.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThat was so beautifully cringe-y,\u201d Ms. McCarthy said afterward. Mr. Feig cheered. It was a wrap. \u201cSpy,\u201d which is to open on June 5, is the biggest-budget gamble of Mr. Feig\u2019s career, a high-stakes espionage thriller \u2014 a comic espionage thriller \u2014 that cost $65 million to make and had the cast and crew on location here for months last year. At a moment when there\u2019s extra scrutiny of women\u2019s roles in studio films, behind and in front of the camera, \u201cSpy\u201d is a rejoinder to all the testosterone-fueled fantasies that dominate the summer box office. That action stars need not be superheroes is also a testament to Ms. McCarthy\u2019s clout; it\u2019s her highest-budget movie, too.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cSpy,\u201d which is to open on June 5, is the biggest-budget gamble of Mr. Feig\u2019s career, a high-stakes espionage thriller \u2014 a comic espionage thriller \u2014 that cost $65 million to make and had the cast and crew on location here for months last year.", "paragraph_id": "5d701668c8e4820a9b66c27a"} +{"question": "how does the officials react for the question?", "paragraph": "As for the security threats posed by migrants: This question regularly comes up in public meetings and has been raised by anti-immigrant parties on the right. So far, whenever I have asked officials that question, they seemed pretty sanguine. They say that there are easier ways for terrorists to infiltrate European countries than to tag along with migrants on a difficult and dangerous journey. Still, some people find it striking that thousands of people have entered Europe with hardly any screening.", "answer": "they seemed pretty sanguine.", "sentence": "So far, whenever I have asked officials that question, they seemed pretty sanguine. They say that there are easier ways for terrorists to infiltrate European countries than to tag along with migrants on a difficult and dangerous journey.", "paragraph_sentence": "As for the security threats posed by migrants: This question regularly comes up in public meetings and has been raised by anti-immigrant parties on the right. So far, whenever I have asked officials that question, they seemed pretty sanguine. They say that there are easier ways for terrorists to infiltrate European countries than to tag along with migrants on a difficult and dangerous journey. Still, some people find it striking that thousands of people have entered Europe with hardly any screening.", "paragraph_answer": "As for the security threats posed by migrants: This question regularly comes up in public meetings and has been raised by anti-immigrant parties on the right. So far, whenever I have asked officials that question, they seemed pretty sanguine. They say that there are easier ways for terrorists to infiltrate European countries than to tag along with migrants on a difficult and dangerous journey. Still, some people find it striking that thousands of people have entered Europe with hardly any screening.", "sentence_answer": "So far, whenever I have asked officials that question, they seemed pretty sanguine. They say that there are easier ways for terrorists to infiltrate European countries than to tag along with migrants on a difficult and dangerous journey.", "paragraph_id": "5d700748c8e4820a9b66ad39"} +{"question": "Who faces an increased burden to sustain social programs?", "paragraph": "But there is not a consensus about the impact of demographics. Some see a natural maturing of developed societies. Others see disaster ahead, because with fewer workers and more retirees, the active work force faces an increased burden to sustain social programs. Productivity gains over time, though, can make up for such population stresses. Declining birthrates can also lead to labor shortages, and Germany has faced a gap in skilled labor. But that is hardly an issue now for much of Europe, which is mired in high unemployment.", "answer": "active work force", "sentence": "Others see disaster ahead, because with fewer workers and more retirees, the active work force faces an increased burden to sustain social programs.", "paragraph_sentence": "But there is not a consensus about the impact of demographics. Some see a natural maturing of developed societies. Others see disaster ahead, because with fewer workers and more retirees, the active work force faces an increased burden to sustain social programs. Productivity gains over time, though, can make up for such population stresses. Declining birthrates can also lead to labor shortages, and Germany has faced a gap in skilled labor. But that is hardly an issue now for much of Europe, which is mired in high unemployment.", "paragraph_answer": "But there is not a consensus about the impact of demographics. Some see a natural maturing of developed societies. Others see disaster ahead, because with fewer workers and more retirees, the active work force faces an increased burden to sustain social programs. Productivity gains over time, though, can make up for such population stresses. Declining birthrates can also lead to labor shortages, and Germany has faced a gap in skilled labor. But that is hardly an issue now for much of Europe, which is mired in high unemployment.", "sentence_answer": "Others see disaster ahead, because with fewer workers and more retirees, the active work force faces an increased burden to sustain social programs.", "paragraph_id": "5d704fd5c8e4820a9b66eb03"} +{"question": "Who is the tour guide for the musuem?", "paragraph": "Not so long ago, travelers might have stopped in the Gl\u00f2ries area of Barcelona only if they were stuck in traffic. Three major roads leading in and out of this Spanish city \u2014 Avenida Diagonal, Avenida Meridiana and the Gran Via de les Corts Catalanes \u2014 converged here at an elevated roundabout, where cars often came to a standstill. But lately this northeastern axis of the Catalan capital \u2014 situated in the Sant Mart\u00ed district, bordering Eixample \u2014 is becoming a place to go to, not just through, especially for those interested in design. The roundabout has been torn down as part of a roadway reconfiguration, making the area more walkable. And some of the city\u2019s most exciting public spaces have sprung up nearby, including a popular flea market under a modernist metal roof and, opening last December, the Barcelona Design Museum. \u201cThe area is definitely up-and-coming,\u201d said the tour guide Jordan Susselman, whose company, Hi. This Is Barcelona \u2026 , increasingly makes stops in Gl\u00f2ries and adjacent Poblenou. In fact, the city has been trying to invigorate this part of town for some time. Ildefons Cerd\u00e0, the engineer who drew up the 1859 plan for the expansion of Barcelona, envisioned his Pla\u00e7a de les Gl\u00f2ries Catalanes as a new town center. Instead, Gl\u00f2ries (pronounced GLO-rias), as it\u2019s commonly called, became the aforementioned traffic snarl, a no man\u2019s land at the top point of a triangular swath stretching down to the Mediterranean, encompassing Poblenou, or \u201cnew city,\u201d a longtime manufacturing zone that declined in the 20th century.", "answer": "Jordan Susselman", "sentence": "\u201cThe area is definitely up-and-coming,\u201d said the tour guide Jordan Susselman ,", "paragraph_sentence": "Not so long ago, travelers might have stopped in the Gl\u00f2ries area of Barcelona only if they were stuck in traffic. Three major roads leading in and out of this Spanish city \u2014 Avenida Diagonal, Avenida Meridiana and the Gran Via de les Corts Catalanes \u2014 converged here at an elevated roundabout, where cars often came to a standstill. But lately this northeastern axis of the Catalan capital \u2014 situated in the Sant Mart\u00ed district, bordering Eixample \u2014 is becoming a place to go to, not just through, especially for those interested in design. The roundabout has been torn down as part of a roadway reconfiguration, making the area more walkable. And some of the city\u2019s most exciting public spaces have sprung up nearby, including a popular flea market under a modernist metal roof and, opening last December, the Barcelona Design Museum. \u201cThe area is definitely up-and-coming,\u201d said the tour guide Jordan Susselman , whose company, Hi. This Is Barcelona \u2026 , increasingly makes stops in Gl\u00f2ries and adjacent Poblenou. In fact, the city has been trying to invigorate this part of town for some time. Ildefons Cerd\u00e0, the engineer who drew up the 1859 plan for the expansion of Barcelona, envisioned his Pla\u00e7a de les Gl\u00f2ries Catalanes as a new town center. Instead, Gl\u00f2ries (pronounced GLO-rias), as it\u2019s commonly called, became the aforementioned traffic snarl, a no man\u2019s land at the top point of a triangular swath stretching down to the Mediterranean, encompassing Poblenou, or \u201cnew city,\u201d a longtime manufacturing zone that declined in the 20th century.", "paragraph_answer": "Not so long ago, travelers might have stopped in the Gl\u00f2ries area of Barcelona only if they were stuck in traffic. Three major roads leading in and out of this Spanish city \u2014 Avenida Diagonal, Avenida Meridiana and the Gran Via de les Corts Catalanes \u2014 converged here at an elevated roundabout, where cars often came to a standstill. But lately this northeastern axis of the Catalan capital \u2014 situated in the Sant Mart\u00ed district, bordering Eixample \u2014 is becoming a place to go to, not just through, especially for those interested in design. The roundabout has been torn down as part of a roadway reconfiguration, making the area more walkable. And some of the city\u2019s most exciting public spaces have sprung up nearby, including a popular flea market under a modernist metal roof and, opening last December, the Barcelona Design Museum. \u201cThe area is definitely up-and-coming,\u201d said the tour guide Jordan Susselman , whose company, Hi. This Is Barcelona \u2026 , increasingly makes stops in Gl\u00f2ries and adjacent Poblenou. In fact, the city has been trying to invigorate this part of town for some time. Ildefons Cerd\u00e0, the engineer who drew up the 1859 plan for the expansion of Barcelona, envisioned his Pla\u00e7a de les Gl\u00f2ries Catalanes as a new town center. Instead, Gl\u00f2ries (pronounced GLO-rias), as it\u2019s commonly called, became the aforementioned traffic snarl, a no man\u2019s land at the top point of a triangular swath stretching down to the Mediterranean, encompassing Poblenou, or \u201cnew city,\u201d a longtime manufacturing zone that declined in the 20th century.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe area is definitely up-and-coming,\u201d said the tour guide Jordan Susselman ,", "paragraph_id": "5d7069fbc8e4820a9b66f147"} +{"question": "The euro is used as a primary currency in how many nations?", "paragraph": "The euro on Friday reached its lowest level against the dollar since June 7, 2010, when it hit $1.1923. The currency of the 19-nation eurozone has fallen nearly 14 percent since it climbed to $1.3910 on May 7. The last time the euro was so low, Greece\u2019s debt problems were causing havoc in the eurozone and there was fear the common currency would not survive. Greece is again in turmoil, with coming elections likely to usher in a left-wing government, but is no longer the main cause of the euro\u2019s decline. The concern now is that the eurozone is already stuck in the same kind of stagnation that has afflicted Japan for two decades. \u201cHistory shows that falling prices can be as damaging to the prosperity and stability of our countries as high inflation,\u201d Mr. Draghi told Handelsblatt.", "answer": "19", "sentence": "19 23.", "paragraph_sentence": "The euro on Friday reached its lowest level against the dollar since June 7, 2010, when it hit $1. 19 23. The currency of the 19-nation eurozone has fallen nearly 14 percent since it climbed to $1.3910 on May 7. The last time the euro was so low, Greece\u2019s debt problems were causing havoc in the eurozone and there was fear the common currency would not survive. Greece is again in turmoil, with coming elections likely to usher in a left-wing government, but is no longer the main cause of the euro\u2019s decline. The concern now is that the eurozone is already stuck in the same kind of stagnation that has afflicted Japan for two decades. \u201cHistory shows that falling prices can be as damaging to the prosperity and stability of our countries as high inflation,\u201d Mr. Draghi told Handelsblatt.", "paragraph_answer": "The euro on Friday reached its lowest level against the dollar since June 7, 2010, when it hit $1. 19 23. The currency of the 19-nation eurozone has fallen nearly 14 percent since it climbed to $1.3910 on May 7. The last time the euro was so low, Greece\u2019s debt problems were causing havoc in the eurozone and there was fear the common currency would not survive. Greece is again in turmoil, with coming elections likely to usher in a left-wing government, but is no longer the main cause of the euro\u2019s decline. The concern now is that the eurozone is already stuck in the same kind of stagnation that has afflicted Japan for two decades. \u201cHistory shows that falling prices can be as damaging to the prosperity and stability of our countries as high inflation,\u201d Mr. Draghi told Handelsblatt.", "sentence_answer": " 19 23.", "paragraph_id": "5d706575c8e4820a9b66f08c"} +{"question": "Where is the Linville exhibition being held?", "paragraph": "LITCHFIELD Wisdom House \u201cEphemera: Holding a Moment in Your Hand,\u201d Jean Linville. Through Sept. 12. Mondays through Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wisdom House, 229 East Litchfield Road. 860-567-3163; wisdomhouse.org. MADISON Susan Powell Fine Art \u201cRealistically Speaking,\u201d group show. Through July 6. Tuesdays through Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.; and by appointment. Susan Powell Fine Art, 679 Boston Post Road. susanpowellfineart.com; 203-318-0616. MYSTIC Maritime Art Gallery, at Mystic Seaport \u201cModern Marine Masters,\u201d group show. Through July 19. Daily, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Maritime Art Gallery, at Mystic Seaport, 47 Greenmanville Avenue. mysticseaport.org/gallery; 860-572-5388.", "answer": "Wisdom House, 229 East Litchfield Road", "sentence": "Wisdom House, 229 East Litchfield Road .", "paragraph_sentence": "LITCHFIELD Wisdom House \u201cEphemera: Holding a Moment in Your Hand,\u201d Jean Linville. Through Sept. 12. Mondays through Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wisdom House, 229 East Litchfield Road . 860-567-3163; wisdomhouse.org. MADISON Susan Powell Fine Art \u201cRealistically Speaking,\u201d group show. Through July 6. Tuesdays through Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.; and by appointment. Susan Powell Fine Art, 679 Boston Post Road. susanpowellfineart.com; 203-318-0616. MYSTIC Maritime Art Gallery, at Mystic Seaport \u201cModern Marine Masters,\u201d group show. Through July 19. Daily, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Maritime Art Gallery, at Mystic Seaport, 47 Greenmanville Avenue. mysticseaport.org/gallery; 860-572-5388.", "paragraph_answer": "LITCHFIELD Wisdom House \u201cEphemera: Holding a Moment in Your Hand,\u201d Jean Linville. Through Sept. 12. Mondays through Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wisdom House, 229 East Litchfield Road . 860-567-3163; wisdomhouse.org. MADISON Susan Powell Fine Art \u201cRealistically Speaking,\u201d group show. Through July 6. Tuesdays through Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.; and by appointment. Susan Powell Fine Art, 679 Boston Post Road. susanpowellfineart.com; 203-318-0616. MYSTIC Maritime Art Gallery, at Mystic Seaport \u201cModern Marine Masters,\u201d group show. Through July 19. Daily, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Maritime Art Gallery, at Mystic Seaport, 47 Greenmanville Avenue. mysticseaport.org/gallery; 860-572-5388.", "sentence_answer": " Wisdom House, 229 East Litchfield Road .", "paragraph_id": "5d704285c8e4820a9b66e63d"} +{"question": "What political party does the president of the Auvergne region belong to?", "paragraph": "It was also in August that Marine Le Pen, the leader of France\u2019s far-right National Front, expelled her father, Jean-Marie, from the party he co-founded for refusing to repudiate its anti-Semitic past, which she fears will damage her chances in the 2017 presidential election. Local residents point out that the National Front never established a strong following here, and that the president of the Auvergne region, Ren\u00e9 Souchon, is a Socialist. \u201cCautious, perhaps, but not xenophobic or nationalist\u201d is how Mr. Gendre describes the relatively conservative politics of Vichy. In the second and final round of regional elections on Dec. 13, the right-of-center Republicans won with 51 percent of the vote. The National Front came in third with 20 percent. In 2008, the city hosted a European Union conference organized by Brice Hortefeux, President Nicolas Sarkozy\u2019s minister of immigration and integration. Although 27 ministers and high-ranking representatives of the union attended, many in France were outraged by the choice of location. Before World War II, that choice would most likely have been applauded. Vichy was an established settlement in Roman times, and by the 17th century, its waters were already known for their curative powers. Napoleon III, believing that his rheumatism had been conquered there, commissioned the casino and the first grand hotels. One reason that the puppet government chose Vichy as its capital during World War II was its many hotels. The many architectural styles that rise from its well-preserved boulevards and streets prompted The Guardian to once refer to it as \u201ca melancholy fragmentation of Bournemouth, Brighton, Bath, Baden Baden and Brigadoon.\u201d The city\u2019s longtime mayor, Claude Malhuret, a former president of Doctors Without Borders, seems, like many here, perplexed and slightly defensive over how to respond to the enduring stigma. \u201cThere are many stories about this city, and then there\u2019s the truth,\u201d he said, \u201cbecause that period was very complicated and has been incorrectly defining this city for too long.\u201d", "answer": "Socialist", "sentence": "Local residents point out that the National Front never established a strong following here, and that the president of the Auvergne region, Ren\u00e9 Souchon, is a Socialist .", "paragraph_sentence": "It was also in August that Marine Le Pen, the leader of France\u2019s far-right National Front, expelled her father, Jean-Marie, from the party he co-founded for refusing to repudiate its anti-Semitic past, which she fears will damage her chances in the 2017 presidential election. Local residents point out that the National Front never established a strong following here, and that the president of the Auvergne region, Ren\u00e9 Souchon, is a Socialist . \u201cCautious, perhaps, but not xenophobic or nationalist\u201d is how Mr. Gendre describes the relatively conservative politics of Vichy. In the second and final round of regional elections on Dec. 13, the right-of-center Republicans won with 51 percent of the vote. The National Front came in third with 20 percent. In 2008, the city hosted a European Union conference organized by Brice Hortefeux, President Nicolas Sarkozy\u2019s minister of immigration and integration. Although 27 ministers and high-ranking representatives of the union attended, many in France were outraged by the choice of location. Before World War II, that choice would most likely have been applauded. Vichy was an established settlement in Roman times, and by the 17th century, its waters were already known for their curative powers. Napoleon III, believing that his rheumatism had been conquered there, commissioned the casino and the first grand hotels. One reason that the puppet government chose Vichy as its capital during World War II was its many hotels. The many architectural styles that rise from its well-preserved boulevards and streets prompted The Guardian to once refer to it as \u201ca melancholy fragmentation of Bournemouth, Brighton, Bath, Baden Baden and Brigadoon.\u201d The city\u2019s longtime mayor, Claude Malhuret, a former president of Doctors Without Borders, seems, like many here, perplexed and slightly defensive over how to respond to the enduring stigma. \u201cThere are many stories about this city, and then there\u2019s the truth,\u201d he said, \u201cbecause that period was very complicated and has been incorrectly defining this city for too long.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "It was also in August that Marine Le Pen, the leader of France\u2019s far-right National Front, expelled her father, Jean-Marie, from the party he co-founded for refusing to repudiate its anti-Semitic past, which she fears will damage her chances in the 2017 presidential election. Local residents point out that the National Front never established a strong following here, and that the president of the Auvergne region, Ren\u00e9 Souchon, is a Socialist . \u201cCautious, perhaps, but not xenophobic or nationalist\u201d is how Mr. Gendre describes the relatively conservative politics of Vichy. In the second and final round of regional elections on Dec. 13, the right-of-center Republicans won with 51 percent of the vote. The National Front came in third with 20 percent. In 2008, the city hosted a European Union conference organized by Brice Hortefeux, President Nicolas Sarkozy\u2019s minister of immigration and integration. Although 27 ministers and high-ranking representatives of the union attended, many in France were outraged by the choice of location. Before World War II, that choice would most likely have been applauded. Vichy was an established settlement in Roman times, and by the 17th century, its waters were already known for their curative powers. Napoleon III, believing that his rheumatism had been conquered there, commissioned the casino and the first grand hotels. One reason that the puppet government chose Vichy as its capital during World War II was its many hotels. The many architectural styles that rise from its well-preserved boulevards and streets prompted The Guardian to once refer to it as \u201ca melancholy fragmentation of Bournemouth, Brighton, Bath, Baden Baden and Brigadoon.\u201d The city\u2019s longtime mayor, Claude Malhuret, a former president of Doctors Without Borders, seems, like many here, perplexed and slightly defensive over how to respond to the enduring stigma. \u201cThere are many stories about this city, and then there\u2019s the truth,\u201d he said, \u201cbecause that period was very complicated and has been incorrectly defining this city for too long.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Local residents point out that the National Front never established a strong following here, and that the president of the Auvergne region, Ren\u00e9 Souchon, is a Socialist .", "paragraph_id": "5d702df1c8e4820a9b66db73"} +{"question": "What country is an example of the way pollution can be made by industrialization?", "paragraph": "Pope Francis is a wonderful example of how to be a truly good person. But if we had followed his line of analysis, neither the Asian economic miracle nor the technology-based American energy revolution would have happened. There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term (China), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence.", "answer": "China", "sentence": "There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term ( China ), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence.", "paragraph_sentence": "Pope Francis is a wonderful example of how to be a truly good person. But if we had followed his line of analysis, neither the Asian economic miracle nor the technology-based American energy revolution would have happened. There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term ( China ), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence. ", "paragraph_answer": "Pope Francis is a wonderful example of how to be a truly good person. But if we had followed his line of analysis, neither the Asian economic miracle nor the technology-based American energy revolution would have happened. There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term ( China ), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence.", "sentence_answer": "There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term ( China ), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence.", "paragraph_id": "5d701229c8e4820a9b66be8e"} +{"question": "Who have abused the A.L.P. for their own purposes?", "paragraph": "The current expansion is happening without the mentorship of American forces, and under difficult circumstances. Thousands of men who had once been disarmed by government campaigns costing hundreds of millions of dollars are now being rearmed. The design is also being rolled out at a time when factional strongmen and elements of the former government in Kabul have mounted pressure on Mr. Ghani\u2019s government, accusing him of exclusionary politics. In the wake of the Kunduz disaster, the strongmen, many of whom have pasts as northern warlords, have been pressing the government to use militias loyal to them in the fight against the Taliban. Some officials fear the militia expansion amounts to a political payoff to these strongmen, who have often used A.L.P. units for their personal business.", "answer": "strongmen", "sentence": "The design is also being rolled out at a time when factional strongmen and elements of the former government in Kabul have mounted pressure on Mr. Ghani\u2019s government, accusing him of exclusionary politics.", "paragraph_sentence": "The current expansion is happening without the mentorship of American forces, and under difficult circumstances. Thousands of men who had once been disarmed by government campaigns costing hundreds of millions of dollars are now being rearmed. The design is also being rolled out at a time when factional strongmen and elements of the former government in Kabul have mounted pressure on Mr. Ghani\u2019s government, accusing him of exclusionary politics. In the wake of the Kunduz disaster, the strongmen, many of whom have pasts as northern warlords, have been pressing the government to use militias loyal to them in the fight against the Taliban. Some officials fear the militia expansion amounts to a political payoff to these strongmen, who have often used A.L.P. units for their personal business.", "paragraph_answer": "The current expansion is happening without the mentorship of American forces, and under difficult circumstances. Thousands of men who had once been disarmed by government campaigns costing hundreds of millions of dollars are now being rearmed. The design is also being rolled out at a time when factional strongmen and elements of the former government in Kabul have mounted pressure on Mr. Ghani\u2019s government, accusing him of exclusionary politics. In the wake of the Kunduz disaster, the strongmen, many of whom have pasts as northern warlords, have been pressing the government to use militias loyal to them in the fight against the Taliban. Some officials fear the militia expansion amounts to a political payoff to these strongmen, who have often used A.L.P. units for their personal business.", "sentence_answer": "The design is also being rolled out at a time when factional strongmen and elements of the former government in Kabul have mounted pressure on Mr. Ghani\u2019s government, accusing him of exclusionary politics.", "paragraph_id": "5d7018b7c8e4820a9b66c4c4"} +{"question": "Who was the second female justice ever appointed to the Supreme Court?", "paragraph": "Justice Ginsburg was appointed by President Jimmy Carter to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 1980. In 1993, President Bill Clinton elevated her to the Supreme Court, making her the court\u2019s second female justice, following Sandra Day O\u2019Connor. (Justice Ginsburg is the subject of a tribute biography, \u201cNotorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg,\u201d by Irin Carmon and Shana Knizhnik.) Meanwhile, Ms. Steinem was an editor at Ms. for nearly 20 years, becoming the public face of the women\u2019s movement. (She continues at the magazine as an adviser.) She has traveled extensively, speaking out for women\u2019s and human rights, winning numerous awards for her work in media and advocacy, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013. Her new book, \u201cMy Life on the Road,\u201d was published last month.", "answer": "Justice Ginsburg", "sentence": "Justice Ginsburg was appointed by President Jimmy Carter to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 1980.", "paragraph_sentence": " Justice Ginsburg was appointed by President Jimmy Carter to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 1980. In 1993, President Bill Clinton elevated her to the Supreme Court, making her the court\u2019s second female justice, following Sandra Day O\u2019Connor. (Justice Ginsburg is the subject of a tribute biography, \u201cNotorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg,\u201d by Irin Carmon and Shana Knizhnik.) Meanwhile, Ms. Steinem was an editor at Ms. for nearly 20 years, becoming the public face of the women\u2019s movement. (She continues at the magazine as an adviser.) She has traveled extensively, speaking out for women\u2019s and human rights, winning numerous awards for her work in media and advocacy, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013. Her new book, \u201cMy Life on the Road,\u201d was published last month.", "paragraph_answer": " Justice Ginsburg was appointed by President Jimmy Carter to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 1980. In 1993, President Bill Clinton elevated her to the Supreme Court, making her the court\u2019s second female justice, following Sandra Day O\u2019Connor. (Justice Ginsburg is the subject of a tribute biography, \u201cNotorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg,\u201d by Irin Carmon and Shana Knizhnik.) Meanwhile, Ms. Steinem was an editor at Ms. for nearly 20 years, becoming the public face of the women\u2019s movement. (She continues at the magazine as an adviser.) She has traveled extensively, speaking out for women\u2019s and human rights, winning numerous awards for her work in media and advocacy, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013. Her new book, \u201cMy Life on the Road,\u201d was published last month.", "sentence_answer": " Justice Ginsburg was appointed by President Jimmy Carter to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 1980.", "paragraph_id": "5d705a8bc8e4820a9b66ee68"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d70098fc8e4820a9b66b260"} +{"question": "What does Jean Pisani-Ferry think would be a serious threat to the economy?", "paragraph": "Mr. Draghi reiterated that the E.C.B. does not try to achieve a certain exchange rate for the euro. The recent decline in the euro, he said, is \u201ca natural outcome of diverging monetary policy path in the U.S. and the euro area. Markets expect a less accommodative monetary policy in the United States. This contributes to a stronger dollar.\u201d Mr. Draghi and other top E.C.B. officials appear to be preparing financial markets for stronger action to combat low inflation. \u201cLow inflation is already a serious obstacle to economic recovery and rebalancing within the eurozone,\u201d Jean Pisani-Ferry, an economist who serves as a policy adviser to the French government, wrote in a blog post this week. \u201cOutright deflation would be an even more dangerous threat.\u201d", "answer": "Outright deflation", "sentence": "\u201c Outright deflation would be an even more dangerous threat.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Draghi reiterated that the E.C.B. does not try to achieve a certain exchange rate for the euro. The recent decline in the euro, he said, is \u201ca natural outcome of diverging monetary policy path in the U.S. and the euro area. Markets expect a less accommodative monetary policy in the United States. This contributes to a stronger dollar.\u201d Mr. Draghi and other top E.C.B. officials appear to be preparing financial markets for stronger action to combat low inflation. \u201cLow inflation is already a serious obstacle to economic recovery and rebalancing within the eurozone,\u201d Jean Pisani-Ferry, an economist who serves as a policy adviser to the French government, wrote in a blog post this week. \u201c Outright deflation would be an even more dangerous threat.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Draghi reiterated that the E.C.B. does not try to achieve a certain exchange rate for the euro. The recent decline in the euro, he said, is \u201ca natural outcome of diverging monetary policy path in the U.S. and the euro area. Markets expect a less accommodative monetary policy in the United States. This contributes to a stronger dollar.\u201d Mr. Draghi and other top E.C.B. officials appear to be preparing financial markets for stronger action to combat low inflation. \u201cLow inflation is already a serious obstacle to economic recovery and rebalancing within the eurozone,\u201d Jean Pisani-Ferry, an economist who serves as a policy adviser to the French government, wrote in a blog post this week. \u201c Outright deflation would be an even more dangerous threat.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201c Outright deflation would be an even more dangerous threat.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d70678cc8e4820a9b66f0e6"} +{"question": "What did people believe would happen if women was focused on gender equality?", "paragraph": "PG: How did people respond when you first raised concerns about equality for women? GS: They were either disinterested or said it was impossible. My classic experience was an editor who said, \u201cO.K., you can publish an article saying women are equal.\u201d But right next to it, he would publish an article that said that they weren\u2019t \u2014 to be objective. RBG: The concern was that if a woman was doing gender equality, her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished. It was considered frivolous.", "answer": "her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished", "sentence": "RBG: The concern was that if a woman was doing gender equality, her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished .", "paragraph_sentence": "PG: How did people respond when you first raised concerns about equality for women? GS: They were either disinterested or said it was impossible. My classic experience was an editor who said, \u201cO.K., you can publish an article saying women are equal.\u201d But right next to it, he would publish an article that said that they weren\u2019t \u2014 to be objective. RBG: The concern was that if a woman was doing gender equality, her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished . It was considered frivolous.", "paragraph_answer": "PG: How did people respond when you first raised concerns about equality for women? GS: They were either disinterested or said it was impossible. My classic experience was an editor who said, \u201cO.K., you can publish an article saying women are equal.\u201d But right next to it, he would publish an article that said that they weren\u2019t \u2014 to be objective. RBG: The concern was that if a woman was doing gender equality, her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished . It was considered frivolous.", "sentence_answer": "RBG: The concern was that if a woman was doing gender equality, her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished .", "paragraph_id": "5d705f17c8e4820a9b66eff5"} +{"question": "Who ended the military agreement with the United States?", "paragraph": "That is why the answer to defeating Boko Haram begins and ends with Nigeria. That is not to say that allies cannot help us. My administration would welcome the resumption of a military training agreement with the United States, which was halted during the previous administration. We must, of course, have better coordination with the military campaigns our African allies, like Chad and Niger, are waging in the struggle against Boko Haram. But, in the end, the answer to this threat must come from within Nigeria.", "answer": "the previous administration", "sentence": "My administration would welcome the resumption of a military training agreement with the United States, which was halted during the previous administration .", "paragraph_sentence": "That is why the answer to defeating Boko Haram begins and ends with Nigeria. That is not to say that allies cannot help us. My administration would welcome the resumption of a military training agreement with the United States, which was halted during the previous administration . We must, of course, have better coordination with the military campaigns our African allies, like Chad and Niger, are waging in the struggle against Boko Haram. But, in the end, the answer to this threat must come from within Nigeria.", "paragraph_answer": "That is why the answer to defeating Boko Haram begins and ends with Nigeria. That is not to say that allies cannot help us. My administration would welcome the resumption of a military training agreement with the United States, which was halted during the previous administration . We must, of course, have better coordination with the military campaigns our African allies, like Chad and Niger, are waging in the struggle against Boko Haram. But, in the end, the answer to this threat must come from within Nigeria.", "sentence_answer": "My administration would welcome the resumption of a military training agreement with the United States, which was halted during the previous administration .", "paragraph_id": "5d705d9dc8e4820a9b66ef94"} +{"question": "What was the name of the housing project Ms. White lived on?", "paragraph": "PLANO, Tex. \u2014 Lamesa White and her four children moved in February from the most dangerous public housing project in Dallas to a single-family home in this affluent suburb. On the day she left, one of her daughter\u2019s old schoolmates was shot to death. Ms. White\u2019s escape from the Estell Village housing project \u2014 better known as The Pinks because the buildings were once painted that color \u2014 was made possible by an experiment in housing policy the federal government began in Dallas in 2011 and is now proposing to expand to most other large metropolitan areas.", "answer": "Estell Village", "sentence": "Ms. White\u2019s escape from the Estell Village housing project \u2014 better known as The Pinks because the buildings were once painted that color \u2014 was made possible by an experiment in housing policy the federal government began in Dallas in 2011 and is now proposing to expand to most other large metropolitan areas.", "paragraph_sentence": "PLANO, Tex. \u2014 Lamesa White and her four children moved in February from the most dangerous public housing project in Dallas to a single-family home in this affluent suburb. On the day she left, one of her daughter\u2019s old schoolmates was shot to death. Ms. White\u2019s escape from the Estell Village housing project \u2014 better known as The Pinks because the buildings were once painted that color \u2014 was made possible by an experiment in housing policy the federal government began in Dallas in 2011 and is now proposing to expand to most other large metropolitan areas. ", "paragraph_answer": "PLANO, Tex. \u2014 Lamesa White and her four children moved in February from the most dangerous public housing project in Dallas to a single-family home in this affluent suburb. On the day she left, one of her daughter\u2019s old schoolmates was shot to death. Ms. White\u2019s escape from the Estell Village housing project \u2014 better known as The Pinks because the buildings were once painted that color \u2014 was made possible by an experiment in housing policy the federal government began in Dallas in 2011 and is now proposing to expand to most other large metropolitan areas.", "sentence_answer": "Ms. White\u2019s escape from the Estell Village housing project \u2014 better known as The Pinks because the buildings were once painted that color \u2014 was made possible by an experiment in housing policy the federal government began in Dallas in 2011 and is now proposing to expand to most other large metropolitan areas.", "paragraph_id": "5d704680c8e4820a9b66e865"} +{"question": "At what age European girls started to play competitive against boys?", "paragraph": "Heinrichs is trying to keep the Americans at the forefront at a time when a number of European girls are playing primarily against boys to develop their technical skills and are turning professional as young as 14. One solution, Heinrichs believes, is to accelerate the development of female players in the United States by having them play up in age as they advance through the club and national-team systems and by having them play more often against boys, who tend to be faster and stronger. \u201cWhen people say the gap is closing, I would say the gap has closed and we\u2019re falling behind in these areas,\u201d Heinrichs, 51, said of the disparity between the United States and other countries. Perhaps no one can match her breadth of experience in American women\u2019s soccer. Heinrichs won three N.C.A.A. championships while playing at North Carolina. She served as captain of the United States team that won the inaugural Women\u2019s World Cup, in 1991. And she coached the American team to a gold medal at the 2004 Athens Olympics, a silver at the 2000 Sydney Games and third place at the 2003 World Cup.", "answer": "14", "sentence": "Heinrichs is trying to keep the Americans at the forefront at a time when a number of European girls are playing primarily against boys to develop their technical skills and are turning professional as young as 14 .", "paragraph_sentence": " Heinrichs is trying to keep the Americans at the forefront at a time when a number of European girls are playing primarily against boys to develop their technical skills and are turning professional as young as 14 . One solution, Heinrichs believes, is to accelerate the development of female players in the United States by having them play up in age as they advance through the club and national-team systems and by having them play more often against boys, who tend to be faster and stronger. \u201cWhen people say the gap is closing, I would say the gap has closed and we\u2019re falling behind in these areas,\u201d Heinrichs, 51, said of the disparity between the United States and other countries. Perhaps no one can match her breadth of experience in American women\u2019s soccer. Heinrichs won three N.C.A.A. championships while playing at North Carolina. She served as captain of the United States team that won the inaugural Women\u2019s World Cup, in 1991. And she coached the American team to a gold medal at the 2004 Athens Olympics, a silver at the 2000 Sydney Games and third place at the 2003 World Cup.", "paragraph_answer": "Heinrichs is trying to keep the Americans at the forefront at a time when a number of European girls are playing primarily against boys to develop their technical skills and are turning professional as young as 14 . One solution, Heinrichs believes, is to accelerate the development of female players in the United States by having them play up in age as they advance through the club and national-team systems and by having them play more often against boys, who tend to be faster and stronger. \u201cWhen people say the gap is closing, I would say the gap has closed and we\u2019re falling behind in these areas,\u201d Heinrichs, 51, said of the disparity between the United States and other countries. Perhaps no one can match her breadth of experience in American women\u2019s soccer. Heinrichs won three N.C.A.A. championships while playing at North Carolina. She served as captain of the United States team that won the inaugural Women\u2019s World Cup, in 1991. And she coached the American team to a gold medal at the 2004 Athens Olympics, a silver at the 2000 Sydney Games and third place at the 2003 World Cup.", "sentence_answer": "Heinrichs is trying to keep the Americans at the forefront at a time when a number of European girls are playing primarily against boys to develop their technical skills and are turning professional as young as 14 .", "paragraph_id": "5d700ea2c8e4820a9b66ba7f"} +{"question": "where was the Kia Classic held?", "paragraph": "Charley Hoffman took advantage of calmer afternoon conditions to take the first-round lead in the windswept Texas Open, shooting a five-under-par 67. Aaron Baddeley was second after a 68. Max Homa had a 69, and Phil Mickelson and Ryan Palmer each shot a 70. \u25a0 Mirim Lee birdied all four par-5 holes and finished with a bogey-free seven-under 65 to take the first-round lead in the Kia Classic in Carlsbad, Calif. Yani Tseng had a 66, and the top-ranked Lydia Ko, 17, was in a group two strokes back at 67.", "answer": "Carlsbad, Calif", "sentence": "\u25a0 Mirim Lee birdied all four par-5 holes and finished with a bogey-free seven-under 65 to take the first-round lead in the Kia Classic in Carlsbad, Calif .", "paragraph_sentence": "Charley Hoffman took advantage of calmer afternoon conditions to take the first-round lead in the windswept Texas Open, shooting a five-under-par 67. Aaron Baddeley was second after a 68. Max Homa had a 69, and Phil Mickelson and Ryan Palmer each shot a 70. \u25a0 Mirim Lee birdied all four par-5 holes and finished with a bogey-free seven-under 65 to take the first-round lead in the Kia Classic in Carlsbad, Calif . Yani Tseng had a 66, and the top-ranked Lydia Ko, 17, was in a group two strokes back at 67.", "paragraph_answer": "Charley Hoffman took advantage of calmer afternoon conditions to take the first-round lead in the windswept Texas Open, shooting a five-under-par 67. Aaron Baddeley was second after a 68. Max Homa had a 69, and Phil Mickelson and Ryan Palmer each shot a 70. \u25a0 Mirim Lee birdied all four par-5 holes and finished with a bogey-free seven-under 65 to take the first-round lead in the Kia Classic in Carlsbad, Calif . Yani Tseng had a 66, and the top-ranked Lydia Ko, 17, was in a group two strokes back at 67.", "sentence_answer": "\u25a0 Mirim Lee birdied all four par-5 holes and finished with a bogey-free seven-under 65 to take the first-round lead in the Kia Classic in Carlsbad, Calif .", "paragraph_id": "5d700659c8e4820a9b66ab1f"} +{"question": "What kind of firm is Mandiant?", "paragraph": "In the last several months, Mandiant, the security firm that is a division of the security consultant FireEye, has been advising a half-dozen unidentified law firms that were victims of a breach or other attack, said a person briefed on the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity. Federal law enforcement authorities are urging law firms to be more open about reporting incidents. Agents with the Federal Bureau of Investigation have met with law firm leaders in the last few years to discuss online security. Top federal prosecutors at the Justice Department have begun to do the same.", "answer": "security firm", "sentence": "In the last several months, Mandiant, the security firm that is a division of the security consultant FireEye, has been advising a half-dozen unidentified law firms that were victims of a breach or other attack, said a person briefed on the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity.", "paragraph_sentence": " In the last several months, Mandiant, the security firm that is a division of the security consultant FireEye, has been advising a half-dozen unidentified law firms that were victims of a breach or other attack, said a person briefed on the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity. Federal law enforcement authorities are urging law firms to be more open about reporting incidents. Agents with the Federal Bureau of Investigation have met with law firm leaders in the last few years to discuss online security. Top federal prosecutors at the Justice Department have begun to do the same.", "paragraph_answer": "In the last several months, Mandiant, the security firm that is a division of the security consultant FireEye, has been advising a half-dozen unidentified law firms that were victims of a breach or other attack, said a person briefed on the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity. Federal law enforcement authorities are urging law firms to be more open about reporting incidents. Agents with the Federal Bureau of Investigation have met with law firm leaders in the last few years to discuss online security. Top federal prosecutors at the Justice Department have begun to do the same.", "sentence_answer": "In the last several months, Mandiant, the security firm that is a division of the security consultant FireEye, has been advising a half-dozen unidentified law firms that were victims of a breach or other attack, said a person briefed on the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity.", "paragraph_id": "5d7005e5c8e4820a9b66a9fe"} +{"question": "Why did the author pause before the art piece?", "paragraph": "Religious images live switched-on, switched-off lives. I remember walking through the National Museum in Kyoto, Japan, some years back, taking in its rows of Buddhist sculpture, and being stopped by one piece, not because it was especially beautiful \u2014 it wasn\u2019t \u2014 but because a vase with a single fresh flower had been placed in front of it, like an offering in a temple. I stayed with the image because someone \u2014 a guard? a visitor? \u2014 was telling me, in terms I don\u2019t often think of in museums, that it was important, in a personal, spiritual way.", "answer": "because a vase with a single fresh flower had been placed in front of it", "sentence": "I remember walking through the National Museum in Kyoto, Japan, some years back, taking in its rows of Buddhist sculpture, and being stopped by one piece, not because it was especially beautiful \u2014 it wasn\u2019t \u2014 but because a vase with a single fresh flower had been placed in front of it , like an offering in a temple.", "paragraph_sentence": "Religious images live switched-on, switched-off lives. I remember walking through the National Museum in Kyoto, Japan, some years back, taking in its rows of Buddhist sculpture, and being stopped by one piece, not because it was especially beautiful \u2014 it wasn\u2019t \u2014 but because a vase with a single fresh flower had been placed in front of it , like an offering in a temple. I stayed with the image because someone \u2014 a guard? a visitor? \u2014 was telling me, in terms I don\u2019t often think of in museums, that it was important, in a personal, spiritual way.", "paragraph_answer": "Religious images live switched-on, switched-off lives. I remember walking through the National Museum in Kyoto, Japan, some years back, taking in its rows of Buddhist sculpture, and being stopped by one piece, not because it was especially beautiful \u2014 it wasn\u2019t \u2014 but because a vase with a single fresh flower had been placed in front of it , like an offering in a temple. I stayed with the image because someone \u2014 a guard? a visitor? \u2014 was telling me, in terms I don\u2019t often think of in museums, that it was important, in a personal, spiritual way.", "sentence_answer": "I remember walking through the National Museum in Kyoto, Japan, some years back, taking in its rows of Buddhist sculpture, and being stopped by one piece, not because it was especially beautiful \u2014 it wasn\u2019t \u2014 but because a vase with a single fresh flower had been placed in front of it , like an offering in a temple.", "paragraph_id": "5d702440c8e4820a9b66d076"} +{"question": "Who was Mr Aponte warned not to say anything to?", "paragraph": "Mr. Aponte, along with several other inmates, said they were initially denied medical care. Days later, when he was finally taken to the prison clinic, officers warned him not to tell the medical staff how he got his injuries, he wrote in a letter. \u201cThe sergeant tells me that I\u2019ve been in prison for a long time and I should know better, that if I didn\u2019t tell the nurse that was going to examine me that nothing has happened that they were going to kill me for real this time,\u201d he wrote. Paul Davila, another resident of the honor block, wrote in his complaint that after he was beaten during an interrogation, he was pressured to \u201csign a report stating, \u2018I was not assaulted.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "medical staff", "sentence": "Days later, when he was finally taken to the prison clinic, officers warned him not to tell the medical staff how he got his injuries, he wrote in a letter.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Aponte, along with several other inmates, said they were initially denied medical care. Days later, when he was finally taken to the prison clinic, officers warned him not to tell the medical staff how he got his injuries, he wrote in a letter. \u201cThe sergeant tells me that I\u2019ve been in prison for a long time and I should know better, that if I didn\u2019t tell the nurse that was going to examine me that nothing has happened that they were going to kill me for real this time,\u201d he wrote. Paul Davila, another resident of the honor block, wrote in his complaint that after he was beaten during an interrogation, he was pressured to \u201csign a report stating, \u2018I was not assaulted.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Aponte, along with several other inmates, said they were initially denied medical care. Days later, when he was finally taken to the prison clinic, officers warned him not to tell the medical staff how he got his injuries, he wrote in a letter. \u201cThe sergeant tells me that I\u2019ve been in prison for a long time and I should know better, that if I didn\u2019t tell the nurse that was going to examine me that nothing has happened that they were going to kill me for real this time,\u201d he wrote. Paul Davila, another resident of the honor block, wrote in his complaint that after he was beaten during an interrogation, he was pressured to \u201csign a report stating, \u2018I was not assaulted.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "Days later, when he was finally taken to the prison clinic, officers warned him not to tell the medical staff how he got his injuries, he wrote in a letter.", "paragraph_id": "5d707a6ac8e4820a9b66f317"} +{"question": "Ms. Clyne originally composed what type of music?", "paragraph": "Ms. Clyne\u2019s attention to craft across different media is all the more noteworthy because she started out as a composer of electronic music \u2014 an intangible art form. Ms. Clyne, who was born in London, spoke about her creative process during a recent interview over tea and McVitie\u2019s biscuits in her sunlit apartment in Brooklyn. To avoid becoming bogged down in habit and \u201ctendencies,\u201d she seeks out conversations across disciplines \u2014 whether in collaboration with choreographers and visual artists or, as in the case of the \u201cNight Ferry\u201d collages, with her own inner painter. \u201cIt was like a timeline,\u201d she said of the seven panels, which each represented three minutes of music. \u201cI knew I wanted it to have a very turbulent beginning. I\u2019d paint that, and then I\u2019d write it. It would keep me on track.\u201d The Miller program includes \u201cFits and Starts,\u201d for solo cello and electronics, which she wrote for the choreographer Kitty McNamee and in which an increasingly lyrical and impassioned cello line coalesces out of skittish and distorted beginnings. In a phone interview, Ms. McNamee described Ms. Clyne\u2019s musical language as \u201cvery visual,\u201d adding: \u201cIt has incredible tension and release, which is very helpful to me. It has great shape to it.\u201d", "answer": "electronic", "sentence": "Ms. Clyne\u2019s attention to craft across different media is all the more noteworthy because she started out as a composer of electronic music \u2014 an intangible art form.", "paragraph_sentence": " Ms. Clyne\u2019s attention to craft across different media is all the more noteworthy because she started out as a composer of electronic music \u2014 an intangible art form. Ms. Clyne, who was born in London, spoke about her creative process during a recent interview over tea and McVitie\u2019s biscuits in her sunlit apartment in Brooklyn. To avoid becoming bogged down in habit and \u201ctendencies,\u201d she seeks out conversations across disciplines \u2014 whether in collaboration with choreographers and visual artists or, as in the case of the \u201cNight Ferry\u201d collages, with her own inner painter. \u201cIt was like a timeline,\u201d she said of the seven panels, which each represented three minutes of music. \u201cI knew I wanted it to have a very turbulent beginning. I\u2019d paint that, and then I\u2019d write it. It would keep me on track.\u201d The Miller program includes \u201cFits and Starts,\u201d for solo cello and electronics, which she wrote for the choreographer Kitty McNamee and in which an increasingly lyrical and impassioned cello line coalesces out of skittish and distorted beginnings. In a phone interview, Ms. McNamee described Ms. Clyne\u2019s musical language as \u201cvery visual,\u201d adding: \u201cIt has incredible tension and release, which is very helpful to me. It has great shape to it.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Clyne\u2019s attention to craft across different media is all the more noteworthy because she started out as a composer of electronic music \u2014 an intangible art form. Ms. Clyne, who was born in London, spoke about her creative process during a recent interview over tea and McVitie\u2019s biscuits in her sunlit apartment in Brooklyn. To avoid becoming bogged down in habit and \u201ctendencies,\u201d she seeks out conversations across disciplines \u2014 whether in collaboration with choreographers and visual artists or, as in the case of the \u201cNight Ferry\u201d collages, with her own inner painter. \u201cIt was like a timeline,\u201d she said of the seven panels, which each represented three minutes of music. \u201cI knew I wanted it to have a very turbulent beginning. I\u2019d paint that, and then I\u2019d write it. It would keep me on track.\u201d The Miller program includes \u201cFits and Starts,\u201d for solo cello and electronics, which she wrote for the choreographer Kitty McNamee and in which an increasingly lyrical and impassioned cello line coalesces out of skittish and distorted beginnings. In a phone interview, Ms. McNamee described Ms. Clyne\u2019s musical language as \u201cvery visual,\u201d adding: \u201cIt has incredible tension and release, which is very helpful to me. It has great shape to it.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Clyne\u2019s attention to craft across different media is all the more noteworthy because she started out as a composer of electronic music \u2014 an intangible art form.", "paragraph_id": "5d704d0ac8e4820a9b66ea35"} +{"question": "Can a politician claim to care about the middle class if they support the sides of the blow back?", "paragraph": "Some details still need to be worked out. In the coming months, the Labor Department will solicit public comment on how to adjust the new salary threshold so it does not erode all over again. The best option is to raise it in line with wages or prices, whichever is greater in a given year. There will also be inevitable blowback from business interests, but their Republican allies in Congress should think twice about backing them up: No party and no politician that opposes the new overtime rules can credibly claim to care about the middle class.", "answer": "No party and no politician that opposes the new overtime rules can credibly claim to care about the middle class.", "sentence": "There will also be inevitable blowback from business interests, but their Republican allies in Congress should think twice about backing them up: No party and no politician that opposes the new overtime rules can credibly claim to care about the middle class.", "paragraph_sentence": "Some details still need to be worked out. In the coming months, the Labor Department will solicit public comment on how to adjust the new salary threshold so it does not erode all over again. The best option is to raise it in line with wages or prices, whichever is greater in a given year. There will also be inevitable blowback from business interests, but their Republican allies in Congress should think twice about backing them up: No party and no politician that opposes the new overtime rules can credibly claim to care about the middle class. ", "paragraph_answer": "Some details still need to be worked out. In the coming months, the Labor Department will solicit public comment on how to adjust the new salary threshold so it does not erode all over again. The best option is to raise it in line with wages or prices, whichever is greater in a given year. There will also be inevitable blowback from business interests, but their Republican allies in Congress should think twice about backing them up: No party and no politician that opposes the new overtime rules can credibly claim to care about the middle class. ", "sentence_answer": "There will also be inevitable blowback from business interests, but their Republican allies in Congress should think twice about backing them up: No party and no politician that opposes the new overtime rules can credibly claim to care about the middle class. ", "paragraph_id": "5d700aafc8e4820a9b66b4bc"} +{"question": "What is the size of Eaton Vance?", "paragraph": "Thomas E. Faust Jr. does not come across as an industry disrupter. He is the chief executive of Eaton Vance, a midsize fund company in Boston that has carved out a solid yet unspectacular niche as a provider of investment funds and advice. But since last November, when his company won regulatory approval for a new fund vehicle that seeks to marry the best features of active and passive investing, Mr. Faust has been arguing that the mutual fund industry \u2014 or stock-picking funds at least \u2014 must either embrace his model or die.", "answer": "midsize", "sentence": "He is the chief executive of Eaton Vance, a midsize fund company in Boston that has carved out a solid yet unspectacular niche as a provider of investment funds and advice.", "paragraph_sentence": "Thomas E. Faust Jr. does not come across as an industry disrupter. He is the chief executive of Eaton Vance, a midsize fund company in Boston that has carved out a solid yet unspectacular niche as a provider of investment funds and advice. But since last November, when his company won regulatory approval for a new fund vehicle that seeks to marry the best features of active and passive investing, Mr. Faust has been arguing that the mutual fund industry \u2014 or stock-picking funds at least \u2014 must either embrace his model or die.", "paragraph_answer": "Thomas E. Faust Jr. does not come across as an industry disrupter. He is the chief executive of Eaton Vance, a midsize fund company in Boston that has carved out a solid yet unspectacular niche as a provider of investment funds and advice. But since last November, when his company won regulatory approval for a new fund vehicle that seeks to marry the best features of active and passive investing, Mr. Faust has been arguing that the mutual fund industry \u2014 or stock-picking funds at least \u2014 must either embrace his model or die.", "sentence_answer": "He is the chief executive of Eaton Vance, a midsize fund company in Boston that has carved out a solid yet unspectacular niche as a provider of investment funds and advice.", "paragraph_id": "5d70055ac8e4820a9b66a8bb"} +{"question": "What does Tingting think is the worst thing about domestic violence in China?", "paragraph": "In 2012, as she, Li Tingting and another woman prepared for a Valentine\u2019s Day protest against domestic violence in Beijing, she described the childhood trauma of watching men pummel their wives in public \u2014 including her own father. \u201cPeople thought that women deserved beating,\u201d she said, according to a video made at the time. \u201cThe worst thing is people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life, but no one believes beating a man is O.K.\u201d As a project manager at the Beijing Gender Health Education Institute, Ms. Wei helped stage an annual AIDS Walk on the Great Wall, attended women\u2019s conferences in India and South Korea, and started collecting footage for a documentary about bisexuality in China.", "answer": "people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life,", "sentence": "\u201cThe worst thing is people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life, but no one believes beating a man is O.K.\u201d As a project manager at the Beijing Gender Health Education Institute, Ms. Wei helped stage an annual AIDS Walk on the Great Wall, attended women\u2019s conferences in India and South Korea, and started collecting footage for a documentary about bisexuality in China.", "paragraph_sentence": "In 2012, as she, Li Tingting and another woman prepared for a Valentine\u2019s Day protest against domestic violence in Beijing, she described the childhood trauma of watching men pummel their wives in public \u2014 including her own father. \u201cPeople thought that women deserved beating,\u201d she said, according to a video made at the time. \u201cThe worst thing is people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life, but no one believes beating a man is O.K.\u201d As a project manager at the Beijing Gender Health Education Institute, Ms. Wei helped stage an annual AIDS Walk on the Great Wall, attended women\u2019s conferences in India and South Korea, and started collecting footage for a documentary about bisexuality in China. ", "paragraph_answer": "In 2012, as she, Li Tingting and another woman prepared for a Valentine\u2019s Day protest against domestic violence in Beijing, she described the childhood trauma of watching men pummel their wives in public \u2014 including her own father. \u201cPeople thought that women deserved beating,\u201d she said, according to a video made at the time. \u201cThe worst thing is people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life, but no one believes beating a man is O.K.\u201d As a project manager at the Beijing Gender Health Education Institute, Ms. Wei helped stage an annual AIDS Walk on the Great Wall, attended women\u2019s conferences in India and South Korea, and started collecting footage for a documentary about bisexuality in China.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe worst thing is people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life, but no one believes beating a man is O.K.\u201d As a project manager at the Beijing Gender Health Education Institute, Ms. Wei helped stage an annual AIDS Walk on the Great Wall, attended women\u2019s conferences in India and South Korea, and started collecting footage for a documentary about bisexuality in China.", "paragraph_id": "5d701bc7c8e4820a9b66c742"} +{"question": "What book about George W. Bush did Robert Draper write?", "paragraph": "That hardball, in-the-trenches style of politics, said friends, aides and scholars of the three men, goes against the ethos of the blue-blooded dynasty with roots in New England, where manners and decorum were ingrained not just at the dinner table but in the halls and playing fields of Andover. \u201cEven the most visceral of the Bushes, George W. Bush, has been averse to that kind of pugnation,\u201d said Robert Draper, the author of \u201cDead Certain: The Presidency of George W. Bush.\u201d \u201cThe charitable view of it is manners \u2014 it\u2019s better not to flash anger and swing elbows. The less charitable view is it derives from a kind of superiority that Bushes don\u2019t fight in alleys.\u201d", "answer": "Dead Certain: The Presidency of George W. Bush", "sentence": "\u201cEven the most visceral of the Bushes, George W. Bush, has been averse to that kind of pugnation,\u201d said Robert Draper, the author of \u201c Dead Certain: The Presidency of George W. Bush .", "paragraph_sentence": "That hardball, in-the-trenches style of politics, said friends, aides and scholars of the three men, goes against the ethos of the blue-blooded dynasty with roots in New England, where manners and decorum were ingrained not just at the dinner table but in the halls and playing fields of Andover. \u201cEven the most visceral of the Bushes, George W. Bush, has been averse to that kind of pugnation,\u201d said Robert Draper, the author of \u201c Dead Certain: The Presidency of George W. Bush . \u201d \u201cThe charitable view of it is manners \u2014 it\u2019s better not to flash anger and swing elbows. The less charitable view is it derives from a kind of superiority that Bushes don\u2019t fight in alleys.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "That hardball, in-the-trenches style of politics, said friends, aides and scholars of the three men, goes against the ethos of the blue-blooded dynasty with roots in New England, where manners and decorum were ingrained not just at the dinner table but in the halls and playing fields of Andover. \u201cEven the most visceral of the Bushes, George W. Bush, has been averse to that kind of pugnation,\u201d said Robert Draper, the author of \u201c Dead Certain: The Presidency of George W. Bush .\u201d \u201cThe charitable view of it is manners \u2014 it\u2019s better not to flash anger and swing elbows. The less charitable view is it derives from a kind of superiority that Bushes don\u2019t fight in alleys.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cEven the most visceral of the Bushes, George W. Bush, has been averse to that kind of pugnation,\u201d said Robert Draper, the author of \u201c Dead Certain: The Presidency of George W. Bush .", "paragraph_id": "5d7007e8c8e4820a9b66aedc"} +{"question": "What business is MR. Mana the founder of?", "paragraph": "Mr. Mana, 57, the founder of Moishe\u2019s Moving and Storage, who had recently acquired a significant swath of the Wynwood art district in Miami, paused just long enough to chide his companion: \u201cPay attention, Michael.\u201d Michael Capponi, his host, obliged, glancing up briefly from the iPhone he had been monitoring as avidly as an N.F.L. game. Mr. Capponi, a 42-year-old bon viveur, developer, night life impresario and champion of humanitarian causes (having made no fewer than 70 trips to Haiti since the island\u2019s 2010 earthquake), had in fact been listening. Then Mr. Capponi spoke, waxing effusive as he presided over the kind of high-testosterone boastfest increasingly common inside the restaurant\u2019s tulle-tented courtyard. The space, which he had constructed with his building partner, Gary Shear, is thriving these days as a hub for power diners. \u201cWe built it from scratch,\u201d Mr. Capponi all but gloated. \u201cIt took four months and a lot of getting yelled at.\u201d", "answer": "Moishe\u2019s Moving and Storage", "sentence": "Mr. Mana, 57, the founder of Moishe\u2019s Moving and Storage , who had recently acquired a significant swath of the Wynwood art district in Miami, paused just long enough to chide his companion: \u201cPay attention, Michael.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Mana, 57, the founder of Moishe\u2019s Moving and Storage , who had recently acquired a significant swath of the Wynwood art district in Miami, paused just long enough to chide his companion: \u201cPay attention, Michael.\u201d Michael Capponi, his host, obliged, glancing up briefly from the iPhone he had been monitoring as avidly as an N.F.L. game. Mr. Capponi, a 42-year-old bon viveur, developer, night life impresario and champion of humanitarian causes (having made no fewer than 70 trips to Haiti since the island\u2019s 2010 earthquake), had in fact been listening. Then Mr. Capponi spoke, waxing effusive as he presided over the kind of high-testosterone boastfest increasingly common inside the restaurant\u2019s tulle-tented courtyard. The space, which he had constructed with his building partner, Gary Shear, is thriving these days as a hub for power diners. \u201cWe built it from scratch,\u201d Mr. Capponi all but gloated. \u201cIt took four months and a lot of getting yelled at.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Mana, 57, the founder of Moishe\u2019s Moving and Storage , who had recently acquired a significant swath of the Wynwood art district in Miami, paused just long enough to chide his companion: \u201cPay attention, Michael.\u201d Michael Capponi, his host, obliged, glancing up briefly from the iPhone he had been monitoring as avidly as an N.F.L. game. Mr. Capponi, a 42-year-old bon viveur, developer, night life impresario and champion of humanitarian causes (having made no fewer than 70 trips to Haiti since the island\u2019s 2010 earthquake), had in fact been listening. Then Mr. Capponi spoke, waxing effusive as he presided over the kind of high-testosterone boastfest increasingly common inside the restaurant\u2019s tulle-tented courtyard. The space, which he had constructed with his building partner, Gary Shear, is thriving these days as a hub for power diners. \u201cWe built it from scratch,\u201d Mr. Capponi all but gloated. \u201cIt took four months and a lot of getting yelled at.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Mana, 57, the founder of Moishe\u2019s Moving and Storage , who had recently acquired a significant swath of the Wynwood art district in Miami, paused just long enough to chide his companion: \u201cPay attention, Michael.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d700e12c8e4820a9b66b9d3"} +{"question": "Who is Mr. Lewis best known for playing?", "paragraph": "\u201cHere comes this series, based on two Booker Prize novels with magnificent actors and a substantial investment of time and money,\u201d Mr. Kosminsky said. \u201cThe BBC is saying, this is the kind of thing only the BBC can do.\u201d After the series was broadcast in Britain, there was exhaustive media coverage discussing everything from Tudor economics to fashion, and engendering a predictable amount of historical debate. \u201cThere\u2019s an important distinction to make,\u201d said Mr. Lewis, best known for playing Nicholas Brody in the series \u201cHomeland.\u201d Sitting on the lawn in full big-shouldered costume, looking every inch the handsome, charismatic and still-trim monarch he plays in the series, he added: \u201cWe are not telling Tudor history; we are creating \u2018Wolf Hall\u2019 from novels, which are already a rereading of Tudor history.\u201d The apparently inexhaustible appetite for versions of Ms. Mantel\u2019s story is partly the result of Britain\u2019s perpetual fascination with the Tudor dynasty but is mostly testament to her vividly original reading of the period: Henry\u2019s desperation for a male heir, the break with the Roman Catholic Church, the beginnings of Protestantism, the dissolution of the monasteries and the eventual execution of Anne, the point at which the second book ends. (Ms. Mantel is writing a third installment, \u201cThe Mirror and the Light,\u201d which will chronicle the last four years of Cromwell\u2019s life.) All these events are mediated through the perspective and personality of Cromwell, usually depicted by historians as an unscrupulous and cruel power-monger, but here given a far more enigmatic profile as Ms. Mantel\u2019s narrative follows his rise from blacksmith\u2019s son to heights of power second only to the king. As Cromwell frees his master from his marriage to Catherine of Aragon so that he may marry Anne Boleyn, then orchestrates her downfall, he emerges as clever, witty and urbane, multilingual, inexhaustibly energetic and a master of the dog-eat-dog political chess game that is Henry\u2019s court.", "answer": "Nicholas Brody", "sentence": "\u201cThere\u2019s an important distinction to make,\u201d said Mr. Lewis, best known for playing Nicholas Brody in the series \u201cHomeland.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cHere comes this series, based on two Booker Prize novels with magnificent actors and a substantial investment of time and money,\u201d Mr. Kosminsky said. \u201cThe BBC is saying, this is the kind of thing only the BBC can do.\u201d After the series was broadcast in Britain, there was exhaustive media coverage discussing everything from Tudor economics to fashion, and engendering a predictable amount of historical debate. \u201cThere\u2019s an important distinction to make,\u201d said Mr. Lewis, best known for playing Nicholas Brody in the series \u201cHomeland.\u201d Sitting on the lawn in full big-shouldered costume, looking every inch the handsome, charismatic and still-trim monarch he plays in the series, he added: \u201cWe are not telling Tudor history; we are creating \u2018Wolf Hall\u2019 from novels, which are already a rereading of Tudor history.\u201d The apparently inexhaustible appetite for versions of Ms. Mantel\u2019s story is partly the result of Britain\u2019s perpetual fascination with the Tudor dynasty but is mostly testament to her vividly original reading of the period: Henry\u2019s desperation for a male heir, the break with the Roman Catholic Church, the beginnings of Protestantism, the dissolution of the monasteries and the eventual execution of Anne, the point at which the second book ends. (Ms. Mantel is writing a third installment, \u201cThe Mirror and the Light,\u201d which will chronicle the last four years of Cromwell\u2019s life.) All these events are mediated through the perspective and personality of Cromwell, usually depicted by historians as an unscrupulous and cruel power-monger, but here given a far more enigmatic profile as Ms. Mantel\u2019s narrative follows his rise from blacksmith\u2019s son to heights of power second only to the king. As Cromwell frees his master from his marriage to Catherine of Aragon so that he may marry Anne Boleyn, then orchestrates her downfall, he emerges as clever, witty and urbane, multilingual, inexhaustibly energetic and a master of the dog-eat-dog political chess game that is Henry\u2019s court.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cHere comes this series, based on two Booker Prize novels with magnificent actors and a substantial investment of time and money,\u201d Mr. Kosminsky said. \u201cThe BBC is saying, this is the kind of thing only the BBC can do.\u201d After the series was broadcast in Britain, there was exhaustive media coverage discussing everything from Tudor economics to fashion, and engendering a predictable amount of historical debate. \u201cThere\u2019s an important distinction to make,\u201d said Mr. Lewis, best known for playing Nicholas Brody in the series \u201cHomeland.\u201d Sitting on the lawn in full big-shouldered costume, looking every inch the handsome, charismatic and still-trim monarch he plays in the series, he added: \u201cWe are not telling Tudor history; we are creating \u2018Wolf Hall\u2019 from novels, which are already a rereading of Tudor history.\u201d The apparently inexhaustible appetite for versions of Ms. Mantel\u2019s story is partly the result of Britain\u2019s perpetual fascination with the Tudor dynasty but is mostly testament to her vividly original reading of the period: Henry\u2019s desperation for a male heir, the break with the Roman Catholic Church, the beginnings of Protestantism, the dissolution of the monasteries and the eventual execution of Anne, the point at which the second book ends. (Ms. Mantel is writing a third installment, \u201cThe Mirror and the Light,\u201d which will chronicle the last four years of Cromwell\u2019s life.) All these events are mediated through the perspective and personality of Cromwell, usually depicted by historians as an unscrupulous and cruel power-monger, but here given a far more enigmatic profile as Ms. Mantel\u2019s narrative follows his rise from blacksmith\u2019s son to heights of power second only to the king. As Cromwell frees his master from his marriage to Catherine of Aragon so that he may marry Anne Boleyn, then orchestrates her downfall, he emerges as clever, witty and urbane, multilingual, inexhaustibly energetic and a master of the dog-eat-dog political chess game that is Henry\u2019s court.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThere\u2019s an important distinction to make,\u201d said Mr. Lewis, best known for playing Nicholas Brody in the series \u201cHomeland.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d707350c8e4820a9b66f213"} +{"question": "What was the actual rate of inflation in November?", "paragraph": "FRANKFURT \u2014 A strong indication on Friday that the European Central Bank is on the verge of aggressive action to stimulate the economy, just as the Federal Reserve is dialing back its stimulus, helped push the euro to its lowest level against the dollar since 2010. Mario Draghi, the president of the European Central Bank, said in an interview published in the German newspaper Handelsblatt that the risk that the central bank would not be able to meet its main task of keeping inflation from being too low or too high was greater than it had been six months ago. At 0.3 percent in November, inflation in the eurozone was far below the central bank\u2019s official target of close to 2 percent. Investors interpreted Mr. Draghi\u2019s comments to mean that the central bank is moving closer to broad-based purchases of government bonds, the same kind of \u201cquantitative easing\u201d that the Fed used to push down market interest rates in the United States \u2014 and is phasing out as growth picks up.", "answer": "0.3 percent", "sentence": "At 0.3 percent in November, inflation in the eurozone was far below the central bank\u2019s official target of close to 2 percent.", "paragraph_sentence": "FRANKFURT \u2014 A strong indication on Friday that the European Central Bank is on the verge of aggressive action to stimulate the economy, just as the Federal Reserve is dialing back its stimulus, helped push the euro to its lowest level against the dollar since 2010. Mario Draghi, the president of the European Central Bank, said in an interview published in the German newspaper Handelsblatt that the risk that the central bank would not be able to meet its main task of keeping inflation from being too low or too high was greater than it had been six months ago. At 0.3 percent in November, inflation in the eurozone was far below the central bank\u2019s official target of close to 2 percent. Investors interpreted Mr. Draghi\u2019s comments to mean that the central bank is moving closer to broad-based purchases of government bonds, the same kind of \u201cquantitative easing\u201d that the Fed used to push down market interest rates in the United States \u2014 and is phasing out as growth picks up.", "paragraph_answer": "FRANKFURT \u2014 A strong indication on Friday that the European Central Bank is on the verge of aggressive action to stimulate the economy, just as the Federal Reserve is dialing back its stimulus, helped push the euro to its lowest level against the dollar since 2010. Mario Draghi, the president of the European Central Bank, said in an interview published in the German newspaper Handelsblatt that the risk that the central bank would not be able to meet its main task of keeping inflation from being too low or too high was greater than it had been six months ago. At 0.3 percent in November, inflation in the eurozone was far below the central bank\u2019s official target of close to 2 percent. Investors interpreted Mr. Draghi\u2019s comments to mean that the central bank is moving closer to broad-based purchases of government bonds, the same kind of \u201cquantitative easing\u201d that the Fed used to push down market interest rates in the United States \u2014 and is phasing out as growth picks up.", "sentence_answer": "At 0.3 percent in November, inflation in the eurozone was far below the central bank\u2019s official target of close to 2 percent.", "paragraph_id": "5d6fb1ecc8e4820a9b66a79a"} +{"question": "What type of app is AirStrip?", "paragraph": "Mr. Cook also presented a new, enhanced Apple TV, which represents the company\u2019s most ambitious effort yet to become the focal point of home entertainment systems. Apple TV already streams videos and music. Now it is set to offer video games, shopping and travel tools through an expanded array of apps. \u201cOur vision for TV is simple,\u201d Mr. Cook said. \u201cWe believe the future of television is apps.\u201d The new version of Apple TV also includes a remote control that could be used as a video game controller. The product now comes with a higher price tag that starts at $150, up from $70, indicating that the company is betting that consumers will think all of the new features are worth the higher price. Jeff Williams, Apple\u2019s senior vice president of operations, also talked about improvements to the Apple Watch, including a number of new apps like Facebook Messenger and AirStrip, a health care app that lets doctors coordinate patient care and monitor health data.", "answer": "health care", "sentence": "Jeff Williams, Apple\u2019s senior vice president of operations, also talked about improvements to the Apple Watch, including a number of new apps like Facebook Messenger and AirStrip, a health care app that lets doctors coordinate patient care and monitor health data.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Cook also presented a new, enhanced Apple TV, which represents the company\u2019s most ambitious effort yet to become the focal point of home entertainment systems. Apple TV already streams videos and music. Now it is set to offer video games, shopping and travel tools through an expanded array of apps. \u201cOur vision for TV is simple,\u201d Mr. Cook said. \u201cWe believe the future of television is apps.\u201d The new version of Apple TV also includes a remote control that could be used as a video game controller. The product now comes with a higher price tag that starts at $150, up from $70, indicating that the company is betting that consumers will think all of the new features are worth the higher price. Jeff Williams, Apple\u2019s senior vice president of operations, also talked about improvements to the Apple Watch, including a number of new apps like Facebook Messenger and AirStrip, a health care app that lets doctors coordinate patient care and monitor health data. ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Cook also presented a new, enhanced Apple TV, which represents the company\u2019s most ambitious effort yet to become the focal point of home entertainment systems. Apple TV already streams videos and music. Now it is set to offer video games, shopping and travel tools through an expanded array of apps. \u201cOur vision for TV is simple,\u201d Mr. Cook said. \u201cWe believe the future of television is apps.\u201d The new version of Apple TV also includes a remote control that could be used as a video game controller. The product now comes with a higher price tag that starts at $150, up from $70, indicating that the company is betting that consumers will think all of the new features are worth the higher price. Jeff Williams, Apple\u2019s senior vice president of operations, also talked about improvements to the Apple Watch, including a number of new apps like Facebook Messenger and AirStrip, a health care app that lets doctors coordinate patient care and monitor health data.", "sentence_answer": "Jeff Williams, Apple\u2019s senior vice president of operations, also talked about improvements to the Apple Watch, including a number of new apps like Facebook Messenger and AirStrip, a health care app that lets doctors coordinate patient care and monitor health data.", "paragraph_id": "5d702db7c8e4820a9b66db18"} +{"question": "what would be the requirement of any deal?", "paragraph": "Analysts and commentators from across the political spectrum welcomed the agreement. Iranian officials called the agreement a \u201cstatement\u201d and a \u201csolution,\u201d in keeping with Mr. Khamenei\u2019s pronouncement that any deal would have to lift all sanctions in one step. The American negotiators had preferred a step-by-step approach, but the Iranians seem to have gotten their way, for the most part.", "answer": "lift all sanctions in one step", "sentence": "Iranian officials called the agreement a \u201cstatement\u201d and a \u201csolution,\u201d in keeping with Mr. Khamenei\u2019s pronouncement that any deal would have to lift all sanctions in one step .", "paragraph_sentence": "Analysts and commentators from across the political spectrum welcomed the agreement. Iranian officials called the agreement a \u201cstatement\u201d and a \u201csolution,\u201d in keeping with Mr. Khamenei\u2019s pronouncement that any deal would have to lift all sanctions in one step . The American negotiators had preferred a step-by-step approach, but the Iranians seem to have gotten their way, for the most part.", "paragraph_answer": "Analysts and commentators from across the political spectrum welcomed the agreement. Iranian officials called the agreement a \u201cstatement\u201d and a \u201csolution,\u201d in keeping with Mr. Khamenei\u2019s pronouncement that any deal would have to lift all sanctions in one step . The American negotiators had preferred a step-by-step approach, but the Iranians seem to have gotten their way, for the most part.", "sentence_answer": "Iranian officials called the agreement a \u201cstatement\u201d and a \u201csolution,\u201d in keeping with Mr. Khamenei\u2019s pronouncement that any deal would have to lift all sanctions in one step .", "paragraph_id": "5d7004f8c8e4820a9b66a841"} +{"question": "What should journalist make a high priority?", "paragraph": "The future is in flux. What is certain is that citizens value investigative work. \u201cPeople don\u2019t know of corruption unless it\u2019s disclosed to them,\u201d said Martin Baron, the Globe\u2019s editor during the church investigation, now editor of The Washington Post. When they see the media bringing wrongdoing to light, he said, they often express appreciation: \u201cIf it weren\u2019t for you, nobody would do this work.\u201d That enduring appetite for investigative journalism may hold the key. And so, for the good of the democracy (and their own survival) news organizations, whether start-up or legacy, must make it a high priority to keep digging \u2014 with the public\u2019s interest at heart.", "answer": "investigative journalism", "sentence": "That enduring appetite for investigative journalism may hold the key.", "paragraph_sentence": "The future is in flux. What is certain is that citizens value investigative work. \u201cPeople don\u2019t know of corruption unless it\u2019s disclosed to them,\u201d said Martin Baron, the Globe\u2019s editor during the church investigation, now editor of The Washington Post. When they see the media bringing wrongdoing to light, he said, they often express appreciation: \u201cIf it weren\u2019t for you, nobody would do this work.\u201d That enduring appetite for investigative journalism may hold the key. And so, for the good of the democracy (and their own survival) news organizations, whether start-up or legacy, must make it a high priority to keep digging \u2014 with the public\u2019s interest at heart.", "paragraph_answer": "The future is in flux. What is certain is that citizens value investigative work. \u201cPeople don\u2019t know of corruption unless it\u2019s disclosed to them,\u201d said Martin Baron, the Globe\u2019s editor during the church investigation, now editor of The Washington Post. When they see the media bringing wrongdoing to light, he said, they often express appreciation: \u201cIf it weren\u2019t for you, nobody would do this work.\u201d That enduring appetite for investigative journalism may hold the key. And so, for the good of the democracy (and their own survival) news organizations, whether start-up or legacy, must make it a high priority to keep digging \u2014 with the public\u2019s interest at heart.", "sentence_answer": "That enduring appetite for investigative journalism may hold the key.", "paragraph_id": "5d704120c8e4820a9b66e577"} +{"question": "Why would not going before a juvenile court make a difference for a child?", "paragraph": "Kwame Anthony Appiah: If the police haven\u2019t changed the behavior, that suggests they haven\u2019t done enough. Unless this child is a committed lifelong criminal and doesn\u2019t care about this sort of thing, the fact of going before a juvenile court might make a difference. Being scared a little bit by police intervention would be a good thing. I grew up in a place where every adult was Auntie This or Uncle That and everybody was in charge of you. You had absolutely no right as a child to ignore the suggestions, advice and admonishment of other adults; that was one of the reasons we all felt so safe. There would always be somebody looking out for us.", "answer": "Unless this child is a committed lifelong criminal and doesn\u2019t care about this sort of thing", "sentence": "Unless this child is a committed lifelong criminal and doesn\u2019t care about this sort of thing , the fact of going before a juvenile court might make a difference.", "paragraph_sentence": "Kwame Anthony Appiah: If the police haven\u2019t changed the behavior, that suggests they haven\u2019t done enough. Unless this child is a committed lifelong criminal and doesn\u2019t care about this sort of thing , the fact of going before a juvenile court might make a difference. Being scared a little bit by police intervention would be a good thing. I grew up in a place where every adult was Auntie This or Uncle That and everybody was in charge of you. You had absolutely no right as a child to ignore the suggestions, advice and admonishment of other adults; that was one of the reasons we all felt so safe. There would always be somebody looking out for us.", "paragraph_answer": "Kwame Anthony Appiah: If the police haven\u2019t changed the behavior, that suggests they haven\u2019t done enough. Unless this child is a committed lifelong criminal and doesn\u2019t care about this sort of thing , the fact of going before a juvenile court might make a difference. Being scared a little bit by police intervention would be a good thing. I grew up in a place where every adult was Auntie This or Uncle That and everybody was in charge of you. You had absolutely no right as a child to ignore the suggestions, advice and admonishment of other adults; that was one of the reasons we all felt so safe. There would always be somebody looking out for us.", "sentence_answer": " Unless this child is a committed lifelong criminal and doesn\u2019t care about this sort of thing , the fact of going before a juvenile court might make a difference.", "paragraph_id": "5d7028b2c8e4820a9b66d660"} +{"question": "What the advertiser, Dumbo Moving and Storage hoped for?", "paragraph": "The advertiser, Dumbo Moving and Storage, hoped the ad would make riders do a double take. The image hints at an intimate encounter without showing it and even promotes a positive message about safe sex, said Lior Rachmany, the company\u2019s chief executive. \u201cObviously it\u2019s kind of intriguing to the eye,\u201d Mr. Rachmany said, \u201cbut it\u2019s not too suggestive, if you ask me.\u201d Dean Crutchfield, a senior vice president at Sterling Brands, a brand consulting firm, said the moving company ad clearly depicted sexual activity and had nothing to do with the business.", "answer": "the ad would make riders do a double take", "sentence": "The advertiser, Dumbo Moving and Storage, hoped the ad would make riders do a double take .", "paragraph_sentence": " The advertiser, Dumbo Moving and Storage, hoped the ad would make riders do a double take . The image hints at an intimate encounter without showing it and even promotes a positive message about safe sex, said Lior Rachmany, the company\u2019s chief executive. \u201cObviously it\u2019s kind of intriguing to the eye,\u201d Mr. Rachmany said, \u201cbut it\u2019s not too suggestive, if you ask me.\u201d Dean Crutchfield, a senior vice president at Sterling Brands, a brand consulting firm, said the moving company ad clearly depicted sexual activity and had nothing to do with the business.", "paragraph_answer": "The advertiser, Dumbo Moving and Storage, hoped the ad would make riders do a double take . The image hints at an intimate encounter without showing it and even promotes a positive message about safe sex, said Lior Rachmany, the company\u2019s chief executive. \u201cObviously it\u2019s kind of intriguing to the eye,\u201d Mr. Rachmany said, \u201cbut it\u2019s not too suggestive, if you ask me.\u201d Dean Crutchfield, a senior vice president at Sterling Brands, a brand consulting firm, said the moving company ad clearly depicted sexual activity and had nothing to do with the business.", "sentence_answer": "The advertiser, Dumbo Moving and Storage, hoped the ad would make riders do a double take .", "paragraph_id": "5d70157ac8e4820a9b66c19d"} +{"question": "Who retired Abreu?", "paragraph": "Watson, of the Pittsburgh Pirates, retired Abreu on a fly ball to left. But the move made little sense in baseball terms, if the goal of the All-Star Game is really to win and secure home-field advantage in the World Series for the victorious league. Matheny, the manager of the St. Louis Cardinals, had already used four right-handed relievers and went against the percentages to a dangerous hitter. He got away with it, but the move illustrated the real priorities for those who manage and play in the All-Star Game. They want as many players as possible to participate, and they want to have fun.", "answer": "Watson", "sentence": "Watson , of the Pittsburgh Pirates, retired Abreu on a fly ball to left.", "paragraph_sentence": " Watson , of the Pittsburgh Pirates, retired Abreu on a fly ball to left. But the move made little sense in baseball terms, if the goal of the All-Star Game is really to win and secure home-field advantage in the World Series for the victorious league. Matheny, the manager of the St. Louis Cardinals, had already used four right-handed relievers and went against the percentages to a dangerous hitter. He got away with it, but the move illustrated the real priorities for those who manage and play in the All-Star Game. They want as many players as possible to participate, and they want to have fun.", "paragraph_answer": " Watson , of the Pittsburgh Pirates, retired Abreu on a fly ball to left. But the move made little sense in baseball terms, if the goal of the All-Star Game is really to win and secure home-field advantage in the World Series for the victorious league. Matheny, the manager of the St. Louis Cardinals, had already used four right-handed relievers and went against the percentages to a dangerous hitter. He got away with it, but the move illustrated the real priorities for those who manage and play in the All-Star Game. They want as many players as possible to participate, and they want to have fun.", "sentence_answer": " Watson , of the Pittsburgh Pirates, retired Abreu on a fly ball to left.", "paragraph_id": "5d704126c8e4820a9b66e57f"} +{"question": "What was the name of the first professional baseball team?", "paragraph": "Rose has permission to be on the field Tuesday as part of M.L.B.\u2019s fan-voted Franchise Four promotion. REDS FANS SAVOR TEAM HISTORY Cincinnati was home to the first professional baseball team, the 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings, who went unbeaten their inaugural season. There are tributes to the vintage players around the city, and former players will be in town from two other great Cincinnati teams \u2014 the 1975-76 world champions, including Rose, and the 1990 team, led by Barry Larkin, which swept the World Series over Oakland.", "answer": "Cincinnati Red Stockings,", "sentence": "Cincinnati was home to the first professional baseball team, the 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings, who went unbeaten their inaugural season.", "paragraph_sentence": "Rose has permission to be on the field Tuesday as part of M.L.B.\u2019s fan-voted Franchise Four promotion. REDS FANS SAVOR TEAM HISTORY Cincinnati was home to the first professional baseball team, the 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings, who went unbeaten their inaugural season. There are tributes to the vintage players around the city, and former players will be in town from two other great Cincinnati teams \u2014 the 1975-76 world champions, including Rose, and the 1990 team, led by Barry Larkin, which swept the World Series over Oakland.", "paragraph_answer": "Rose has permission to be on the field Tuesday as part of M.L.B.\u2019s fan-voted Franchise Four promotion. REDS FANS SAVOR TEAM HISTORY Cincinnati was home to the first professional baseball team, the 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings, who went unbeaten their inaugural season. There are tributes to the vintage players around the city, and former players will be in town from two other great Cincinnati teams \u2014 the 1975-76 world champions, including Rose, and the 1990 team, led by Barry Larkin, which swept the World Series over Oakland.", "sentence_answer": "Cincinnati was home to the first professional baseball team, the 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings, who went unbeaten their inaugural season.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026ebc8e4820a9b66d444"} +{"question": "What beer does Atlas Brew Works produce?", "paragraph": "The bandwidth of lagers is rather narrow, but they have their refreshing role to play. None did it better than our No. 1 brew, Session Premium Lager from Full Sail Brewing, clean, crisp, lively and fresh. Session, surprisingly, is not made entirely of malted barley. It uses a touch of malted wheat as well. Apparently, lager producers have found ways to be creative without exploding the genre. Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing. The Lawnmower, by the way, was the lowest in alcohol in the tasting at just 3.9 percent.", "answer": "District Common", "sentence": "Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing.", "paragraph_sentence": "The bandwidth of lagers is rather narrow, but they have their refreshing role to play. None did it better than our No. 1 brew, Session Premium Lager from Full Sail Brewing, clean, crisp, lively and fresh. Session, surprisingly, is not made entirely of malted barley. It uses a touch of malted wheat as well. Apparently, lager producers have found ways to be creative without exploding the genre. Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing. The Lawnmower, by the way, was the lowest in alcohol in the tasting at just 3.9 percent.", "paragraph_answer": "The bandwidth of lagers is rather narrow, but they have their refreshing role to play. None did it better than our No. 1 brew, Session Premium Lager from Full Sail Brewing, clean, crisp, lively and fresh. Session, surprisingly, is not made entirely of malted barley. It uses a touch of malted wheat as well. Apparently, lager producers have found ways to be creative without exploding the genre. Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing. The Lawnmower, by the way, was the lowest in alcohol in the tasting at just 3.9 percent.", "sentence_answer": "Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing.", "paragraph_id": "5d7016e1c8e4820a9b66c2e8"} +{"question": "What can happen to a drug patent if it's discovered to have been disclosed in an old academic article?", "paragraph": "When it comes to drugs, some of those obvious, old ideas that cannot be patented have not been clinically tested, as required for F.D.A. approval. That takes money, which nobody will invest without a patent. It\u2019s a Catch-22 that ends up excluding potentially valuable drugs from ever even being considered for development. There\u2019s evidence that the provision of patents only for nonobvious and novel innovations affects drug development. In a paper published in the Texas Law Review, Mr. Roin documents many examples of patent invalidation on these grounds \u2014 importantly, even for ideas that had never been developed into drugs and that still required clinical trials for F.D.A. approval. For example, the patent of an anti-inflammatory drug was invalidated because it had been disclosed in a prior academic article. A patent for a hypertension drug was invalidated because it was deemed to have been created by a well-known process.", "answer": "patent invalidation", "sentence": "In a paper published in the Texas Law Review, Mr. Roin documents many examples of patent invalidation on these grounds \u2014 importantly, even for ideas that had never been developed into drugs and that still required clinical trials for F.D.A. approval.", "paragraph_sentence": "When it comes to drugs, some of those obvious, old ideas that cannot be patented have not been clinically tested, as required for F.D.A. approval. That takes money, which nobody will invest without a patent. It\u2019s a Catch-22 that ends up excluding potentially valuable drugs from ever even being considered for development. There\u2019s evidence that the provision of patents only for nonobvious and novel innovations affects drug development. In a paper published in the Texas Law Review, Mr. Roin documents many examples of patent invalidation on these grounds \u2014 importantly, even for ideas that had never been developed into drugs and that still required clinical trials for F.D.A. approval. For example, the patent of an anti-inflammatory drug was invalidated because it had been disclosed in a prior academic article. A patent for a hypertension drug was invalidated because it was deemed to have been created by a well-known process.", "paragraph_answer": "When it comes to drugs, some of those obvious, old ideas that cannot be patented have not been clinically tested, as required for F.D.A. approval. That takes money, which nobody will invest without a patent. It\u2019s a Catch-22 that ends up excluding potentially valuable drugs from ever even being considered for development. There\u2019s evidence that the provision of patents only for nonobvious and novel innovations affects drug development. In a paper published in the Texas Law Review, Mr. Roin documents many examples of patent invalidation on these grounds \u2014 importantly, even for ideas that had never been developed into drugs and that still required clinical trials for F.D.A. approval. For example, the patent of an anti-inflammatory drug was invalidated because it had been disclosed in a prior academic article. A patent for a hypertension drug was invalidated because it was deemed to have been created by a well-known process.", "sentence_answer": "In a paper published in the Texas Law Review, Mr. Roin documents many examples of patent invalidation on these grounds \u2014 importantly, even for ideas that had never been developed into drugs and that still required clinical trials for F.D.A. approval.", "paragraph_id": "5d701216c8e4820a9b66be84"} +{"question": "How many suites is Wild Tales comprised of?", "paragraph": "\u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile, \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests. Ms. Rivas\u2019s brewing hysteria and Mr. Gentile\u2019s macho cluelessness are played for both laughs but also something larger and grimmer. They help make a violent Looney Toons bit feel like sick national cataclysm. (Read the review) The HBO All-Stars (Power-Rankings Edition)", "answer": "five", "sentence": "\u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile, \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile, \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests. Ms. Rivas\u2019s brewing hysteria and Mr. Gentile\u2019s macho cluelessness are played for both laughs but also something larger and grimmer. They help make a violent Looney Toons bit feel like sick national cataclysm. (Read the review) The HBO All-Stars (Power-Rankings Edition)", "paragraph_answer": "\u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile, \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests. Ms. Rivas\u2019s brewing hysteria and Mr. Gentile\u2019s macho cluelessness are played for both laughs but also something larger and grimmer. They help make a violent Looney Toons bit feel like sick national cataclysm. (Read the review) The HBO All-Stars (Power-Rankings Edition)", "sentence_answer": "\u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile, \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests.", "paragraph_id": "5d705a3fc8e4820a9b66ee33"} +{"question": "When did the imprisonment occur?", "paragraph": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "answer": "in the 1990s", "sentence": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s , the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York.", "paragraph_sentence": " We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s , the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "paragraph_answer": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s , the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "sentence_answer": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s , the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York.", "paragraph_id": "5d70285cc8e4820a9b66d61d"} +{"question": "How old is Jeremy Clarkson?", "paragraph": "LONDON \u2014 Jeremy Clarkson has reached the end of the road, at least with the BBC. Mr. Clarkson, the popular and moneymaking host of BBC\u2019s \u201cTop Gear,\u201d an entertainment show built around cars and British macho, was told on Wednesday that his contract, which is up at the end of March, will not be renewed, the BBC said. The decision comes after Mr. Clarkson, 54, was accused of verbally and physically attacking a BBC producer, Oisin Tymon, after Mr. Clarkson returned to a Yorkshire hotel after a late-night drinking session to find that there was no hot food served at that hour. Mr. Tymon was treated at a hospital for his injuries but has not pressed charges against Mr. Clarkson. After the BBC was informed of what it initially called \u201ca fracas,\u201d Mr. Clarkson was suspended on March 10 and the last three episodes of this season of the popular \u201cTop Gear\u201d program were postponed. After an investigation, the BBC director general, Tony Hall, said in a statement, \u201cIt is with great regret that I have told Jeremy Clarkson today that the BBC will not be renewing his contract.\u201d", "answer": "54", "sentence": "The decision comes after Mr. Clarkson, 54 , was accused of verbally and physically attacking a BBC producer, Oisin Tymon, after Mr. Clarkson returned to a Yorkshire hotel after a late-night drinking session to find that there was no hot food served at that hour.", "paragraph_sentence": "LONDON \u2014 Jeremy Clarkson has reached the end of the road, at least with the BBC. Mr. Clarkson, the popular and moneymaking host of BBC\u2019s \u201cTop Gear,\u201d an entertainment show built around cars and British macho, was told on Wednesday that his contract, which is up at the end of March, will not be renewed, the BBC said. The decision comes after Mr. Clarkson, 54 , was accused of verbally and physically attacking a BBC producer, Oisin Tymon, after Mr. Clarkson returned to a Yorkshire hotel after a late-night drinking session to find that there was no hot food served at that hour. Mr. Tymon was treated at a hospital for his injuries but has not pressed charges against Mr. Clarkson. After the BBC was informed of what it initially called \u201ca fracas,\u201d Mr. Clarkson was suspended on March 10 and the last three episodes of this season of the popular \u201cTop Gear\u201d program were postponed. After an investigation, the BBC director general, Tony Hall, said in a statement, \u201cIt is with great regret that I have told Jeremy Clarkson today that the BBC will not be renewing his contract.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "LONDON \u2014 Jeremy Clarkson has reached the end of the road, at least with the BBC. Mr. Clarkson, the popular and moneymaking host of BBC\u2019s \u201cTop Gear,\u201d an entertainment show built around cars and British macho, was told on Wednesday that his contract, which is up at the end of March, will not be renewed, the BBC said. The decision comes after Mr. Clarkson, 54 , was accused of verbally and physically attacking a BBC producer, Oisin Tymon, after Mr. Clarkson returned to a Yorkshire hotel after a late-night drinking session to find that there was no hot food served at that hour. Mr. Tymon was treated at a hospital for his injuries but has not pressed charges against Mr. Clarkson. After the BBC was informed of what it initially called \u201ca fracas,\u201d Mr. Clarkson was suspended on March 10 and the last three episodes of this season of the popular \u201cTop Gear\u201d program were postponed. After an investigation, the BBC director general, Tony Hall, said in a statement, \u201cIt is with great regret that I have told Jeremy Clarkson today that the BBC will not be renewing his contract.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The decision comes after Mr. Clarkson, 54 , was accused of verbally and physically attacking a BBC producer, Oisin Tymon, after Mr. Clarkson returned to a Yorkshire hotel after a late-night drinking session to find that there was no hot food served at that hour.", "paragraph_id": "5d7005f7c8e4820a9b66aa2f"} +{"question": "What is the hope that the author has about the Muslims struggles?", "paragraph": "KARACHI, Pakistan \u2014 I worry about Muslims. Islam teaches me to care about all human beings, and animals too, but life is short and I can\u2019t even find enough time to worry about all the Muslims. I don\u2019t worry too much about the Muslims who face racial slurs in Europe and America, the ones who are suspected of harboring murderous thoughts at their workplaces or those who are picked out of immigration queues and asked awkward questions about their luggage and their ancestors. I tell myself that at the end of their humiliating journeys they can expect privileges like running water, electricity and tainted promises of equality.", "answer": "expect privileges like running water, electricity and tainted promises of equality.", "sentence": "I tell myself that at the end of their humiliating journeys they can expect privileges like running water, electricity and tainted promises of equality.", "paragraph_sentence": "KARACHI, Pakistan \u2014 I worry about Muslims. Islam teaches me to care about all human beings, and animals too, but life is short and I can\u2019t even find enough time to worry about all the Muslims. I don\u2019t worry too much about the Muslims who face racial slurs in Europe and America, the ones who are suspected of harboring murderous thoughts at their workplaces or those who are picked out of immigration queues and asked awkward questions about their luggage and their ancestors. I tell myself that at the end of their humiliating journeys they can expect privileges like running water, electricity and tainted promises of equality. ", "paragraph_answer": "KARACHI, Pakistan \u2014 I worry about Muslims. Islam teaches me to care about all human beings, and animals too, but life is short and I can\u2019t even find enough time to worry about all the Muslims. I don\u2019t worry too much about the Muslims who face racial slurs in Europe and America, the ones who are suspected of harboring murderous thoughts at their workplaces or those who are picked out of immigration queues and asked awkward questions about their luggage and their ancestors. I tell myself that at the end of their humiliating journeys they can expect privileges like running water, electricity and tainted promises of equality. ", "sentence_answer": "I tell myself that at the end of their humiliating journeys they can expect privileges like running water, electricity and tainted promises of equality. ", "paragraph_id": "5d7005c3c8e4820a9b66a98f"} +{"question": "What was the name of the American trainer", "paragraph": "The training aims to remold the Ukrainian units by increasing the responsibilities of noncommissioned officers, fixing a Soviet legacy of an officer-heavy infantry. Without sergeants paying attention, basic mistakes were being made, the trainers said. Capt. Nicholas Salimbene, an American trainer, noticed with alarm that the Ukrainians were carrying their rifles with the safeties off. \u201cIt\u2019s about the professionalism of the force,\u201d he said. \u201cWe want them to look like soldiers.\u201d \u201cYou see reports about the little green men,\u201d he said, referring to the Russian soldiers who invaded the Crimean Peninsula last year in unmarked uniforms, \u201cand they all walk around professionally, and carry their weapons professionally.\u201d The Ukrainians should, too, Captain Salimbene said. The United States is also providing advanced courses for military professionals known as forward observers \u2014 the ones who call in targets \u2014 to improve the accuracy of artillery fire, making it more lethal for the enemy and less so for civilians. Oleksandr I. Leshchenko, the deputy director for training in the National Guard, was somewhat skeptical about the value of the training, saying that \u201c99 percent\u201d of the men in the course had already been in combat.", "answer": "Capt. Nicholas Salimbene", "sentence": "Capt. Nicholas Salimbene , an American trainer, noticed with alarm that the Ukrainians were carrying their rifles with the safeties off.", "paragraph_sentence": "The training aims to remold the Ukrainian units by increasing the responsibilities of noncommissioned officers, fixing a Soviet legacy of an officer-heavy infantry. Without sergeants paying attention, basic mistakes were being made, the trainers said. Capt. Nicholas Salimbene , an American trainer, noticed with alarm that the Ukrainians were carrying their rifles with the safeties off. \u201cIt\u2019s about the professionalism of the force,\u201d he said. \u201cWe want them to look like soldiers.\u201d \u201cYou see reports about the little green men,\u201d he said, referring to the Russian soldiers who invaded the Crimean Peninsula last year in unmarked uniforms, \u201cand they all walk around professionally, and carry their weapons professionally.\u201d The Ukrainians should, too, Captain Salimbene said. The United States is also providing advanced courses for military professionals known as forward observers \u2014 the ones who call in targets \u2014 to improve the accuracy of artillery fire, making it more lethal for the enemy and less so for civilians. Oleksandr I. Leshchenko, the deputy director for training in the National Guard, was somewhat skeptical about the value of the training, saying that \u201c99 percent\u201d of the men in the course had already been in combat.", "paragraph_answer": "The training aims to remold the Ukrainian units by increasing the responsibilities of noncommissioned officers, fixing a Soviet legacy of an officer-heavy infantry. Without sergeants paying attention, basic mistakes were being made, the trainers said. Capt. Nicholas Salimbene , an American trainer, noticed with alarm that the Ukrainians were carrying their rifles with the safeties off. \u201cIt\u2019s about the professionalism of the force,\u201d he said. \u201cWe want them to look like soldiers.\u201d \u201cYou see reports about the little green men,\u201d he said, referring to the Russian soldiers who invaded the Crimean Peninsula last year in unmarked uniforms, \u201cand they all walk around professionally, and carry their weapons professionally.\u201d The Ukrainians should, too, Captain Salimbene said. The United States is also providing advanced courses for military professionals known as forward observers \u2014 the ones who call in targets \u2014 to improve the accuracy of artillery fire, making it more lethal for the enemy and less so for civilians. Oleksandr I. Leshchenko, the deputy director for training in the National Guard, was somewhat skeptical about the value of the training, saying that \u201c99 percent\u201d of the men in the course had already been in combat.", "sentence_answer": " Capt. Nicholas Salimbene , an American trainer, noticed with alarm that the Ukrainians were carrying their rifles with the safeties off.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026fec8e4820a9b66d484"} +{"question": "What type of performer is considered Mr. Bridges to be?", "paragraph": "They also played in his band here: In White Denim, they\u2019re not especially restrained, but here, they played with a light touch. Maybe that\u2019s out of deference to the style, or maybe it\u2019s because Mr. Bridges isn\u2019t yet a fully realized stage performer: He looked reluctant at times, and often the band was clobbering him as he was attempting subtlety. In between songs, he mumbled words quickly and unintelligibly. Playing the part is not enough. That mode gives him a framework, historical and structural. It takes the pressure off. It also advertises him without his having to so much as open his mouth.", "answer": "isn\u2019t yet a fully realized stage performer", "sentence": "Maybe that\u2019s out of deference to the style, or maybe it\u2019s because Mr. Bridges isn\u2019t yet a fully realized stage performer : He looked reluctant at times, and often the band was clobbering him as he was attempting subtlety.", "paragraph_sentence": "They also played in his band here: In White Denim, they\u2019re not especially restrained, but here, they played with a light touch. Maybe that\u2019s out of deference to the style, or maybe it\u2019s because Mr. Bridges isn\u2019t yet a fully realized stage performer : He looked reluctant at times, and often the band was clobbering him as he was attempting subtlety. In between songs, he mumbled words quickly and unintelligibly. Playing the part is not enough. That mode gives him a framework, historical and structural. It takes the pressure off. It also advertises him without his having to so much as open his mouth.", "paragraph_answer": "They also played in his band here: In White Denim, they\u2019re not especially restrained, but here, they played with a light touch. Maybe that\u2019s out of deference to the style, or maybe it\u2019s because Mr. Bridges isn\u2019t yet a fully realized stage performer : He looked reluctant at times, and often the band was clobbering him as he was attempting subtlety. In between songs, he mumbled words quickly and unintelligibly. Playing the part is not enough. That mode gives him a framework, historical and structural. It takes the pressure off. It also advertises him without his having to so much as open his mouth.", "sentence_answer": "Maybe that\u2019s out of deference to the style, or maybe it\u2019s because Mr. Bridges isn\u2019t yet a fully realized stage performer : He looked reluctant at times, and often the band was clobbering him as he was attempting subtlety.", "paragraph_id": "5d701252c8e4820a9b66bec8"} +{"question": "What does Bob Gregory believe Mr. Turnbull has to do?", "paragraph": "Proposed university overhauls, widely disliked by voters, stalled in Parliament, and a paid parental leave plan and a co-payment for visits to the doctor covered by Australia\u2019s Medicare system were either amended or dropped by the government, which could not negotiate the passage of the legislation. Bob Gregory, a professor of economics at Australian National University, said Mr. Turnbull\u2019s task would be largely one of communication. \u201cWhat Mr. Turnbull has to do is straightforward,\u201d Mr. Gregory said. \u201cHe\u2019s got to explain things. You\u2019ve no idea how powerful that is.\u201d", "answer": "explain things", "sentence": "\u201cHe\u2019s got to explain things .", "paragraph_sentence": "Proposed university overhauls, widely disliked by voters, stalled in Parliament, and a paid parental leave plan and a co-payment for visits to the doctor covered by Australia\u2019s Medicare system were either amended or dropped by the government, which could not negotiate the passage of the legislation. Bob Gregory, a professor of economics at Australian National University, said Mr. Turnbull\u2019s task would be largely one of communication. \u201cWhat Mr. Turnbull has to do is straightforward,\u201d Mr. Gregory said. \u201cHe\u2019s got to explain things . You\u2019ve no idea how powerful that is.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Proposed university overhauls, widely disliked by voters, stalled in Parliament, and a paid parental leave plan and a co-payment for visits to the doctor covered by Australia\u2019s Medicare system were either amended or dropped by the government, which could not negotiate the passage of the legislation. Bob Gregory, a professor of economics at Australian National University, said Mr. Turnbull\u2019s task would be largely one of communication. \u201cWhat Mr. Turnbull has to do is straightforward,\u201d Mr. Gregory said. \u201cHe\u2019s got to explain things . You\u2019ve no idea how powerful that is.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cHe\u2019s got to explain things .", "paragraph_id": "5d700f62c8e4820a9b66bb69"} +{"question": "how many years was mccain in vietnam?", "paragraph": "And then Trump insulted John McCain, saying he was only a war hero because he got captured, adding, \u201cI like people that weren\u2019t captured, O.K.?\u201d McCain spent five and a half years as a P.O.W. in Vietnam and was repeatedly tortured and had his bones broken. As CNN reported, \u201cTrump, meanwhile, received four student deferments and one medical deferment to avoid serving in the Vietnam War.\u201d What does it mean to impugn a man who has sacrificed so much for his country? It means you can smear anyone. Last week another redline was crossed. At a Trump town hall event, the first questioner began: \u201cWe got a problem in this country. It\u2019s called Muslims. We know our current president is one. We know he\u2019s not even an American. But anyway. We have training camps brewing where they want to kill us. That\u2019s my question. When can we get rid of them?\u201d", "answer": "McCain spent five and a half years as a P.O.W. in Vietnam", "sentence": "And then Trump insulted John McCain, saying he was only a war hero because he got captured, adding, \u201cI like people that weren\u2019t captured, O.K.?\u201d McCain spent five and a half years as a P.O.W. in Vietnam and was repeatedly tortured and had his bones broken.", "paragraph_sentence": " And then Trump insulted John McCain, saying he was only a war hero because he got captured, adding, \u201cI like people that weren\u2019t captured, O.K.?\u201d McCain spent five and a half years as a P.O.W. in Vietnam and was repeatedly tortured and had his bones broken. As CNN reported, \u201cTrump, meanwhile, received four student deferments and one medical deferment to avoid serving in the Vietnam War.\u201d What does it mean to impugn a man who has sacrificed so much for his country? It means you can smear anyone. Last week another redline was crossed. At a Trump town hall event, the first questioner began: \u201cWe got a problem in this country. It\u2019s called Muslims. We know our current president is one. We know he\u2019s not even an American. But anyway. We have training camps brewing where they want to kill us. That\u2019s my question. When can we get rid of them?\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "And then Trump insulted John McCain, saying he was only a war hero because he got captured, adding, \u201cI like people that weren\u2019t captured, O.K.?\u201d McCain spent five and a half years as a P.O.W. in Vietnam and was repeatedly tortured and had his bones broken. As CNN reported, \u201cTrump, meanwhile, received four student deferments and one medical deferment to avoid serving in the Vietnam War.\u201d What does it mean to impugn a man who has sacrificed so much for his country? It means you can smear anyone. Last week another redline was crossed. At a Trump town hall event, the first questioner began: \u201cWe got a problem in this country. It\u2019s called Muslims. We know our current president is one. We know he\u2019s not even an American. But anyway. We have training camps brewing where they want to kill us. That\u2019s my question. When can we get rid of them?\u201d", "sentence_answer": "And then Trump insulted John McCain, saying he was only a war hero because he got captured, adding, \u201cI like people that weren\u2019t captured, O.K.?\u201d McCain spent five and a half years as a P.O.W. in Vietnam and was repeatedly tortured and had his bones broken.", "paragraph_id": "5d70299dc8e4820a9b66d74b"} +{"question": "What was Cookie celebrating?", "paragraph": "Cookie\u2019s celebration of her son\u2019s victory ends abruptly when Lucious\u2019s sneer informs the after-party that her sister Candice is outside the club. Through her (according to Cookie) practiced hysteria about their third sister\u2019s alleged drug bender, we learn from Candice that Cookie\u2019s real name is Loretha. Cookie hadn\u2019t been born a Lyon \u2014 a flashback intimates that neither had Lucious, likely taking the name as an child abandoned on the street \u2014 and up until now, her lineage outside of Lucious hadn\u2019t been much referenced, leaving the show\u2019s relatively clueless audience hungry to know how Cookie came to be.", "answer": "son\u2019s victory", "sentence": "Cookie\u2019s celebration of her son\u2019s victory ends abruptly when Lucious\u2019s sneer informs the after-party that her sister Candice is outside the club.", "paragraph_sentence": " Cookie\u2019s celebration of her son\u2019s victory ends abruptly when Lucious\u2019s sneer informs the after-party that her sister Candice is outside the club. Through her (according to Cookie) practiced hysteria about their third sister\u2019s alleged drug bender, we learn from Candice that Cookie\u2019s real name is Loretha. Cookie hadn\u2019t been born a Lyon \u2014 a flashback intimates that neither had Lucious, likely taking the name as an child abandoned on the street \u2014 and up until now, her lineage outside of Lucious hadn\u2019t been much referenced, leaving the show\u2019s relatively clueless audience hungry to know how Cookie came to be.", "paragraph_answer": "Cookie\u2019s celebration of her son\u2019s victory ends abruptly when Lucious\u2019s sneer informs the after-party that her sister Candice is outside the club. Through her (according to Cookie) practiced hysteria about their third sister\u2019s alleged drug bender, we learn from Candice that Cookie\u2019s real name is Loretha. Cookie hadn\u2019t been born a Lyon \u2014 a flashback intimates that neither had Lucious, likely taking the name as an child abandoned on the street \u2014 and up until now, her lineage outside of Lucious hadn\u2019t been much referenced, leaving the show\u2019s relatively clueless audience hungry to know how Cookie came to be.", "sentence_answer": "Cookie\u2019s celebration of her son\u2019s victory ends abruptly when Lucious\u2019s sneer informs the after-party that her sister Candice is outside the club.", "paragraph_id": "5d701018c8e4820a9b66bc2f"} +{"question": "Which has replaced movie stars as the main reason why people buy movie tickets?", "paragraph": "So schools have evolved to place more emphasis on the collaborative filmmaking process. \u201cIncoming students may know how to operate a camera,\u201d said Bob Gazzale, president of the nonprofit American Film Institute in Los Angeles, whose conservatory counts directors like David Lynch and Terrence Malick as graduates. \u201cWhat we teach them is how to work together to tell a story.\u201d Schools are also changing to keep pace with the entertainment industry, which is unrecognizable compared to the days when Martin Scorsese was a film student at New York University and Michael Bay at Wesleyan. Computer-generated visual effects have replaced movie stars as the primary reason the masses buy tickets. China is rapidly becoming Hollywood\u2019s No. 1 box office market. Netflix is now making movies at almost the same clip as Paramount. Big studios now expect filmmakers to help create spinoff video games. And television has stolen much of film\u2019s cultural and financial heat. To keep up, administrators have broadened their curriculums. Film school used to essentially mean learning to direct, write and shoot a movie. Now students go to study television writing and production, digital media, computer animation or video game design. If a picture moves, there is a program for it. At the film school of the University of Texas, Austin, a class offers instruction in \u201cvirtual realities, cyborg identities, multimedia applications, technological convergence, digital divide and transnational politics.\u201d Creating entertainment for an increasingly diverse audience \u2014 Hispanic moviegoers now drive the North American box office, according to industry data \u2014 is a growing focus in film schools across the board. Among the new classes in DePaul University\u2019s film program: \u201cWriting the Web Series.\u201d You Wanna Work in Movies? Good Luck One very important aspect of film school has not changed: There is still no guarantee of a career.", "answer": "Computer-generated visual effects", "sentence": "Computer-generated visual effects have replaced movie stars as the primary reason the masses buy tickets.", "paragraph_sentence": "So schools have evolved to place more emphasis on the collaborative filmmaking process. \u201cIncoming students may know how to operate a camera,\u201d said Bob Gazzale, president of the nonprofit American Film Institute in Los Angeles, whose conservatory counts directors like David Lynch and Terrence Malick as graduates. \u201cWhat we teach them is how to work together to tell a story.\u201d Schools are also changing to keep pace with the entertainment industry, which is unrecognizable compared to the days when Martin Scorsese was a film student at New York University and Michael Bay at Wesleyan. Computer-generated visual effects have replaced movie stars as the primary reason the masses buy tickets. China is rapidly becoming Hollywood\u2019s No. 1 box office market. Netflix is now making movies at almost the same clip as Paramount. Big studios now expect filmmakers to help create spinoff video games. And television has stolen much of film\u2019s cultural and financial heat. To keep up, administrators have broadened their curriculums. Film school used to essentially mean learning to direct, write and shoot a movie. Now students go to study television writing and production, digital media, computer animation or video game design. If a picture moves, there is a program for it. At the film school of the University of Texas, Austin, a class offers instruction in \u201cvirtual realities, cyborg identities, multimedia applications, technological convergence, digital divide and transnational politics.\u201d Creating entertainment for an increasingly diverse audience \u2014 Hispanic moviegoers now drive the North American box office, according to industry data \u2014 is a growing focus in film schools across the board. Among the new classes in DePaul University\u2019s film program: \u201cWriting the Web Series.\u201d You Wanna Work in Movies? Good Luck One very important aspect of film school has not changed: There is still no guarantee of a career.", "paragraph_answer": "So schools have evolved to place more emphasis on the collaborative filmmaking process. \u201cIncoming students may know how to operate a camera,\u201d said Bob Gazzale, president of the nonprofit American Film Institute in Los Angeles, whose conservatory counts directors like David Lynch and Terrence Malick as graduates. \u201cWhat we teach them is how to work together to tell a story.\u201d Schools are also changing to keep pace with the entertainment industry, which is unrecognizable compared to the days when Martin Scorsese was a film student at New York University and Michael Bay at Wesleyan. Computer-generated visual effects have replaced movie stars as the primary reason the masses buy tickets. China is rapidly becoming Hollywood\u2019s No. 1 box office market. Netflix is now making movies at almost the same clip as Paramount. Big studios now expect filmmakers to help create spinoff video games. And television has stolen much of film\u2019s cultural and financial heat. To keep up, administrators have broadened their curriculums. Film school used to essentially mean learning to direct, write and shoot a movie. Now students go to study television writing and production, digital media, computer animation or video game design. If a picture moves, there is a program for it. At the film school of the University of Texas, Austin, a class offers instruction in \u201cvirtual realities, cyborg identities, multimedia applications, technological convergence, digital divide and transnational politics.\u201d Creating entertainment for an increasingly diverse audience \u2014 Hispanic moviegoers now drive the North American box office, according to industry data \u2014 is a growing focus in film schools across the board. Among the new classes in DePaul University\u2019s film program: \u201cWriting the Web Series.\u201d You Wanna Work in Movies? Good Luck One very important aspect of film school has not changed: There is still no guarantee of a career.", "sentence_answer": " Computer-generated visual effects have replaced movie stars as the primary reason the masses buy tickets.", "paragraph_id": "5d702a30c8e4820a9b66d7b5"} +{"question": "Where was the KLM Open held?", "paragraph": "\u25a0 Thomas Pieters of Belgium won his second European Tour title, two weeks after his first, shooting a five-under-par 65 to win the KLM Open in Zandvoort, Netherlands, by one shot after Lee Slattery faltered on the final hole. Pieters parred the last five holes and finished with a 19-under total of 261. (AP)", "answer": "Zandvoort, Netherlands", "sentence": "\u25a0 Thomas Pieters of Belgium won his second European Tour title, two weeks after his first, shooting a five-under-par 65 to win the KLM Open in Zandvoort, Netherlands , by one shot after Lee Slattery faltered on the final hole.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u25a0 Thomas Pieters of Belgium won his second European Tour title, two weeks after his first, shooting a five-under-par 65 to win the KLM Open in Zandvoort, Netherlands , by one shot after Lee Slattery faltered on the final hole. Pieters parred the last five holes and finished with a 19-under total of 261. (AP)", "paragraph_answer": "\u25a0 Thomas Pieters of Belgium won his second European Tour title, two weeks after his first, shooting a five-under-par 65 to win the KLM Open in Zandvoort, Netherlands , by one shot after Lee Slattery faltered on the final hole. Pieters parred the last five holes and finished with a 19-under total of 261. (AP)", "sentence_answer": "\u25a0 Thomas Pieters of Belgium won his second European Tour title, two weeks after his first, shooting a five-under-par 65 to win the KLM Open in Zandvoort, Netherlands , by one shot after Lee Slattery faltered on the final hole.", "paragraph_id": "5d7008b2c8e4820a9b66b091"} +{"question": "How many wounded survivors were there in the attack?", "paragraph": "The brutal terrorist attack on the French satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo in Paris on Wednesday has badly shaken France. But the French have reacted with a fierce determination to defend their freedoms. President Fran\u00e7ois Hollande, speaking from outside the magazine\u2019s office a couple of hours after the murder of 12 people, was crystal clear: This was an assault, he said, on \u201cthe expression of freedom\u201d that is the \u201cspirit of the republic.\u201d Two heavily armed attackers, who apparently knew the magazine\u2019s staff would be gathered around a table late on Wednesday morning for a weekly editorial meeting, forced themselves into Charlie Hebdo\u2019s office and shot 10 people dead, including the top editor and prominent cartoonists. Two policemen were also killed. At least 11 other victims were wounded. The gunmen then fled with a third accomplice in a waiting car. One of the three later surrendered to police, but the other two, who are brothers, remain at large.", "answer": "11", "sentence": "At least 11 other victims were wounded.", "paragraph_sentence": "The brutal terrorist attack on the French satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo in Paris on Wednesday has badly shaken France. But the French have reacted with a fierce determination to defend their freedoms. President Fran\u00e7ois Hollande, speaking from outside the magazine\u2019s office a couple of hours after the murder of 12 people, was crystal clear: This was an assault, he said, on \u201cthe expression of freedom\u201d that is the \u201cspirit of the republic.\u201d Two heavily armed attackers, who apparently knew the magazine\u2019s staff would be gathered around a table late on Wednesday morning for a weekly editorial meeting, forced themselves into Charlie Hebdo\u2019s office and shot 10 people dead, including the top editor and prominent cartoonists. Two policemen were also killed. At least 11 other victims were wounded. The gunmen then fled with a third accomplice in a waiting car. One of the three later surrendered to police, but the other two, who are brothers, remain at large.", "paragraph_answer": "The brutal terrorist attack on the French satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo in Paris on Wednesday has badly shaken France. But the French have reacted with a fierce determination to defend their freedoms. President Fran\u00e7ois Hollande, speaking from outside the magazine\u2019s office a couple of hours after the murder of 12 people, was crystal clear: This was an assault, he said, on \u201cthe expression of freedom\u201d that is the \u201cspirit of the republic.\u201d Two heavily armed attackers, who apparently knew the magazine\u2019s staff would be gathered around a table late on Wednesday morning for a weekly editorial meeting, forced themselves into Charlie Hebdo\u2019s office and shot 10 people dead, including the top editor and prominent cartoonists. Two policemen were also killed. At least 11 other victims were wounded. The gunmen then fled with a third accomplice in a waiting car. One of the three later surrendered to police, but the other two, who are brothers, remain at large.", "sentence_answer": "At least 11 other victims were wounded.", "paragraph_id": "5d701e2fc8e4820a9b66c9a0"} +{"question": "When was the first porcelain made in Dresden?", "paragraph": "Invented in China, about 1,000 years ago, porcelain is a ceramic made from a varying mixture of materials, the most indispensable of which is a whitish clay, kaolin. The city of Jingdezhen produced the most beautiful of these objects: bowls, jars, vases and other items created in vast quantities for the imperial court. Porcelain was so abundant in China that when Marco Polo made the first mention of the material in Western literature, it was to marvel that the pieces he encountered in China were \u201cso plentiful and cheap that for a Venetian groat you might buy three bowls of such beauty that nothing lovelier could be imagined.\u201d Not so in Europe, where, for 400 years after they laid eyes on it, no one knew how to make the stuff. Aristocrats and monarchs regarded imported \u201cchina\u201d as treasure. It was nicknamed \u201cwhite gold.\u201d Augustus II, elector of Saxony, an omnivorous collector of both mistresses and china, wrote, \u201cThe same is true for oranges as for porcelain, that once one has the sickness of one or the other, one can never get enough of the things and wishes to have more and more.\u201d In the early 18th century, under his orders, an odd couple of proto-scientists \u2014 an urbane mathematician and a young, eccentric alchemist \u2014 finally figured out how to make porcelain in Dresden. A few years later, William Cookworthy, a mild-mannered Quaker apothecary living in Devon, noticed that the clay in a nearby Cornish hill resembled the kaolin described in newly published letters from China. He became the first person to make true porcelain in England. This is the rough origin story Edmund de Waal sets out to tell in \u201cThe White Road: Journey Into an Obsession.\u201d He would appear to be the ideal candidate for the job: A celebrated ceramist who makes austere white porcelain vessels, he is also the author of a surprise best seller: \u201cThe Hare With Amber Eyes,\u201d published in 2010. That book followed the fate of a collection of netsuke (small Japanese carvings) acquired by his fabulously wealthy Jewish family during the belle epoque, lost when they fled Austria following the Anschluss and then recovered again when a former servant revealed that she had stealthily secreted the little objects in her mattress. What makes \u201cThe Hare With Amber Eyes\u201d so entrancing is not the netsuke, however charming they may be, but the family, beginning with the suave cousin of his great-grandfather, one of the models for Proust\u2019s Charles Swann and an early enthusiast and collector of Japanese art and a patron of the Impressionists. De Waal has a wicked gift for dissecting the tricky relations between artists and the rich people whose whims make it possible for them to both work and eat. He applies it to delicious effect in the strongest section of \u201cThe White Road,\u201d which describes the travails of Ehrenfried Walther von Tschirnhaus \u2014 student of Spinoza, friend of Newton and Leibniz \u2014 as he rattled around Europe seeking an aristocrat to fund his research: \u201cIf you are interested in optics or mineralogy or funding a dictionary of philosophy, you are lucky to get two minutes of the attention of a margrave who lives for killing stags or boar in inventive ways.\u201d", "answer": "early 18th century", "sentence": "In the early 18th century , under his orders, an odd couple of proto-scientists \u2014 an urbane mathematician and a young, eccentric alchemist \u2014 finally figured out how to make porcelain in Dresden.", "paragraph_sentence": "Invented in China, about 1,000 years ago, porcelain is a ceramic made from a varying mixture of materials, the most indispensable of which is a whitish clay, kaolin. The city of Jingdezhen produced the most beautiful of these objects: bowls, jars, vases and other items created in vast quantities for the imperial court. Porcelain was so abundant in China that when Marco Polo made the first mention of the material in Western literature, it was to marvel that the pieces he encountered in China were \u201cso plentiful and cheap that for a Venetian groat you might buy three bowls of such beauty that nothing lovelier could be imagined.\u201d Not so in Europe, where, for 400 years after they laid eyes on it, no one knew how to make the stuff. Aristocrats and monarchs regarded imported \u201cchina\u201d as treasure. It was nicknamed \u201cwhite gold.\u201d Augustus II, elector of Saxony, an omnivorous collector of both mistresses and china, wrote, \u201cThe same is true for oranges as for porcelain, that once one has the sickness of one or the other, one can never get enough of the things and wishes to have more and more.\u201d In the early 18th century , under his orders, an odd couple of proto-scientists \u2014 an urbane mathematician and a young, eccentric alchemist \u2014 finally figured out how to make porcelain in Dresden. A few years later, William Cookworthy, a mild-mannered Quaker apothecary living in Devon, noticed that the clay in a nearby Cornish hill resembled the kaolin described in newly published letters from China. He became the first person to make true porcelain in England. This is the rough origin story Edmund de Waal sets out to tell in \u201cThe White Road: Journey Into an Obsession.\u201d He would appear to be the ideal candidate for the job: A celebrated ceramist who makes austere white porcelain vessels, he is also the author of a surprise best seller: \u201cThe Hare With Amber Eyes,\u201d published in 2010. That book followed the fate of a collection of netsuke (small Japanese carvings) acquired by his fabulously wealthy Jewish family during the belle epoque, lost when they fled Austria following the Anschluss and then recovered again when a former servant revealed that she had stealthily secreted the little objects in her mattress. What makes \u201cThe Hare With Amber Eyes\u201d so entrancing is not the netsuke, however charming they may be, but the family, beginning with the suave cousin of his great-grandfather, one of the models for Proust\u2019s Charles Swann and an early enthusiast and collector of Japanese art and a patron of the Impressionists. De Waal has a wicked gift for dissecting the tricky relations between artists and the rich people whose whims make it possible for them to both work and eat. He applies it to delicious effect in the strongest section of \u201cThe White Road,\u201d which describes the travails of Ehrenfried Walther von Tschirnhaus \u2014 student of Spinoza, friend of Newton and Leibniz \u2014 as he rattled around Europe seeking an aristocrat to fund his research: \u201cIf you are interested in optics or mineralogy or funding a dictionary of philosophy, you are lucky to get two minutes of the attention of a margrave who lives for killing stags or boar in inventive ways.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Invented in China, about 1,000 years ago, porcelain is a ceramic made from a varying mixture of materials, the most indispensable of which is a whitish clay, kaolin. The city of Jingdezhen produced the most beautiful of these objects: bowls, jars, vases and other items created in vast quantities for the imperial court. Porcelain was so abundant in China that when Marco Polo made the first mention of the material in Western literature, it was to marvel that the pieces he encountered in China were \u201cso plentiful and cheap that for a Venetian groat you might buy three bowls of such beauty that nothing lovelier could be imagined.\u201d Not so in Europe, where, for 400 years after they laid eyes on it, no one knew how to make the stuff. Aristocrats and monarchs regarded imported \u201cchina\u201d as treasure. It was nicknamed \u201cwhite gold.\u201d Augustus II, elector of Saxony, an omnivorous collector of both mistresses and china, wrote, \u201cThe same is true for oranges as for porcelain, that once one has the sickness of one or the other, one can never get enough of the things and wishes to have more and more.\u201d In the early 18th century , under his orders, an odd couple of proto-scientists \u2014 an urbane mathematician and a young, eccentric alchemist \u2014 finally figured out how to make porcelain in Dresden. A few years later, William Cookworthy, a mild-mannered Quaker apothecary living in Devon, noticed that the clay in a nearby Cornish hill resembled the kaolin described in newly published letters from China. He became the first person to make true porcelain in England. This is the rough origin story Edmund de Waal sets out to tell in \u201cThe White Road: Journey Into an Obsession.\u201d He would appear to be the ideal candidate for the job: A celebrated ceramist who makes austere white porcelain vessels, he is also the author of a surprise best seller: \u201cThe Hare With Amber Eyes,\u201d published in 2010. That book followed the fate of a collection of netsuke (small Japanese carvings) acquired by his fabulously wealthy Jewish family during the belle epoque, lost when they fled Austria following the Anschluss and then recovered again when a former servant revealed that she had stealthily secreted the little objects in her mattress. What makes \u201cThe Hare With Amber Eyes\u201d so entrancing is not the netsuke, however charming they may be, but the family, beginning with the suave cousin of his great-grandfather, one of the models for Proust\u2019s Charles Swann and an early enthusiast and collector of Japanese art and a patron of the Impressionists. De Waal has a wicked gift for dissecting the tricky relations between artists and the rich people whose whims make it possible for them to both work and eat. He applies it to delicious effect in the strongest section of \u201cThe White Road,\u201d which describes the travails of Ehrenfried Walther von Tschirnhaus \u2014 student of Spinoza, friend of Newton and Leibniz \u2014 as he rattled around Europe seeking an aristocrat to fund his research: \u201cIf you are interested in optics or mineralogy or funding a dictionary of philosophy, you are lucky to get two minutes of the attention of a margrave who lives for killing stags or boar in inventive ways.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In the early 18th century , under his orders, an odd couple of proto-scientists \u2014 an urbane mathematician and a young, eccentric alchemist \u2014 finally figured out how to make porcelain in Dresden.", "paragraph_id": "5d7007d2c8e4820a9b66aeaa"} +{"question": "Does Ms. Simpson prefer to be addressed as a she or a he when referring to her drag persona?", "paragraph": "Between 1987 and 1996, Ms. Simpson (whose birth name is Leslie and who prefers female pronouns when referring to her drag persona) took some 5,000 photographs of drag performers posing in clubs, on the street and on gay-pride parade floats, unwittingly creating a time capsule of an era when drag queens were the de rigueur jesters and goddesses of the underground. The photos are alternately carefree and glamorous, with rising stars like RuPaul, Lady Bunny and Sweetie looking sultry for the camera, and Page Potter Reynolds (the transgender subject of Ms. Simpson\u2019s 2013 photo book, \u201cPages\u201d) exuding subversive charm in a clown wig.", "answer": "prefers female pronouns", "sentence": "Between 1987 and 1996, Ms. Simpson (whose birth name is Leslie and who prefers female pronouns when referring to her drag persona) took some 5,000 photographs of drag performers posing in clubs, on the street and on gay-pride parade floats, unwittingly creating a time capsule of an era when drag queens were the de rigueur jesters and goddesses of the underground.", "paragraph_sentence": " Between 1987 and 1996, Ms. Simpson (whose birth name is Leslie and who prefers female pronouns when referring to her drag persona) took some 5,000 photographs of drag performers posing in clubs, on the street and on gay-pride parade floats, unwittingly creating a time capsule of an era when drag queens were the de rigueur jesters and goddesses of the underground. The photos are alternately carefree and glamorous, with rising stars like RuPaul, Lady Bunny and Sweetie looking sultry for the camera, and Page Potter Reynolds (the transgender subject of Ms. Simpson\u2019s 2013 photo book, \u201cPages\u201d) exuding subversive charm in a clown wig.", "paragraph_answer": "Between 1987 and 1996, Ms. Simpson (whose birth name is Leslie and who prefers female pronouns when referring to her drag persona) took some 5,000 photographs of drag performers posing in clubs, on the street and on gay-pride parade floats, unwittingly creating a time capsule of an era when drag queens were the de rigueur jesters and goddesses of the underground. The photos are alternately carefree and glamorous, with rising stars like RuPaul, Lady Bunny and Sweetie looking sultry for the camera, and Page Potter Reynolds (the transgender subject of Ms. Simpson\u2019s 2013 photo book, \u201cPages\u201d) exuding subversive charm in a clown wig.", "sentence_answer": "Between 1987 and 1996, Ms. Simpson (whose birth name is Leslie and who prefers female pronouns when referring to her drag persona) took some 5,000 photographs of drag performers posing in clubs, on the street and on gay-pride parade floats, unwittingly creating a time capsule of an era when drag queens were the de rigueur jesters and goddesses of the underground.", "paragraph_id": "5d702d1fc8e4820a9b66dab8"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700da9c8e4820a9b66b941"} +{"question": "In which city will the Chiefs and the Bengals play this week?", "paragraph": "The Chiefs\u2019 secondary has had a hard time defending the pass, which makes a trip to Cincinnati to go against the Bengals\u2019 thriving offense a case of unfortunate timing. Last week, Bengals wide receiver A. J. Green humiliated Baltimore with 227 receiving yards and two touchdowns. Sean Smith will be back from a suspension and will do his best against Green, but with Phillip Gaines out with a knee injury, Cincinnati\u2019s offense may be off to the races. PICK: BENGALS Cowboys (2-1) at Saints (0-3) 8:30 p.m. Line: Even The Saints\u2019 offense performed reasonably well with Drew Brees sidelined last week, but frustration continued as the team remained winless and finished the week three games behind two teams in its division. Brees has expressed optimism that he will be back this week, but how his shoulder woes could affect his ability to stretch the field is unknown.", "answer": "Cincinnati", "sentence": "The Chiefs\u2019 secondary has had a hard time defending the pass, which makes a trip to Cincinnati to go against the Bengals\u2019 thriving offense a case of unfortunate timing.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Chiefs\u2019 secondary has had a hard time defending the pass, which makes a trip to Cincinnati to go against the Bengals\u2019 thriving offense a case of unfortunate timing. Last week, Bengals wide receiver A. J. Green humiliated Baltimore with 227 receiving yards and two touchdowns. Sean Smith will be back from a suspension and will do his best against Green, but with Phillip Gaines out with a knee injury, Cincinnati\u2019s offense may be off to the races. PICK: BENGALS Cowboys (2-1) at Saints (0-3) 8:30 p.m. Line: Even The Saints\u2019 offense performed reasonably well with Drew Brees sidelined last week, but frustration continued as the team remained winless and finished the week three games behind two teams in its division. Brees has expressed optimism that he will be back this week, but how his shoulder woes could affect his ability to stretch the field is unknown.", "paragraph_answer": "The Chiefs\u2019 secondary has had a hard time defending the pass, which makes a trip to Cincinnati to go against the Bengals\u2019 thriving offense a case of unfortunate timing. Last week, Bengals wide receiver A. J. Green humiliated Baltimore with 227 receiving yards and two touchdowns. Sean Smith will be back from a suspension and will do his best against Green, but with Phillip Gaines out with a knee injury, Cincinnati\u2019s offense may be off to the races. PICK: BENGALS Cowboys (2-1) at Saints (0-3) 8:30 p.m. Line: Even The Saints\u2019 offense performed reasonably well with Drew Brees sidelined last week, but frustration continued as the team remained winless and finished the week three games behind two teams in its division. Brees has expressed optimism that he will be back this week, but how his shoulder woes could affect his ability to stretch the field is unknown.", "sentence_answer": "The Chiefs\u2019 secondary has had a hard time defending the pass, which makes a trip to Cincinnati to go against the Bengals\u2019 thriving offense a case of unfortunate timing.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026a9c8e4820a9b66d302"} +{"question": "What does OK Go zip around on in their video?", "paragraph": "OK Go (Saturday) These chipper pop-rockers have an innovative eye for music video concepts. In their new clip for the slippery n\u00fc-disco track \u201cI Won\u2019t Let You Down,\u201d off their fourth record, \u201cHungry Ghosts,\u201d they zip around on motorized scooter chairs, weaving among choreographed dancers, as the action is filmed above by a drone. The footage recently was shown as part of the New York City Drone Film Festival, an appropriate setting for such lofty and left-of-center minds. At 8 p.m., Terminal 5, 610 West 56th Street, Clinton, 800-745-3000, terminal5nyc.com. (Anderson)", "answer": "motorized scooter chairs", "sentence": "In their new clip for the slippery n\u00fc-disco track \u201cI Won\u2019t Let You Down,\u201d off their fourth record, \u201cHungry Ghosts,\u201d they zip around on motorized scooter chairs , weaving among choreographed dancers, as the action is filmed above by a drone.", "paragraph_sentence": "OK Go (Saturday) These chipper pop-rockers have an innovative eye for music video concepts. In their new clip for the slippery n\u00fc-disco track \u201cI Won\u2019t Let You Down,\u201d off their fourth record, \u201cHungry Ghosts,\u201d they zip around on motorized scooter chairs , weaving among choreographed dancers, as the action is filmed above by a drone. The footage recently was shown as part of the New York City Drone Film Festival, an appropriate setting for such lofty and left-of-center minds. At 8 p.m., Terminal 5, 610 West 56th Street, Clinton, 800-745-3000, terminal5nyc.com. (Anderson)", "paragraph_answer": "OK Go (Saturday) These chipper pop-rockers have an innovative eye for music video concepts. In their new clip for the slippery n\u00fc-disco track \u201cI Won\u2019t Let You Down,\u201d off their fourth record, \u201cHungry Ghosts,\u201d they zip around on motorized scooter chairs , weaving among choreographed dancers, as the action is filmed above by a drone. The footage recently was shown as part of the New York City Drone Film Festival, an appropriate setting for such lofty and left-of-center minds. At 8 p.m., Terminal 5, 610 West 56th Street, Clinton, 800-745-3000, terminal5nyc.com. (Anderson)", "sentence_answer": "In their new clip for the slippery n\u00fc-disco track \u201cI Won\u2019t Let You Down,\u201d off their fourth record, \u201cHungry Ghosts,\u201d they zip around on motorized scooter chairs , weaving among choreographed dancers, as the action is filmed above by a drone.", "paragraph_id": "5d7025e5c8e4820a9b66d213"} +{"question": "what did silver predict for himself in court?", "paragraph": "In an unusual arrangement, Mr. Silver would not quit his post. Instead, he would temporarily delegate his duties as speaker to a group of senior Assembly members. Under the plan, which the Assembly\u2019s Democratic caucus is to consider in a closed-door meeting on Monday afternoon, Mr. Silver would \u201cnot specifically step down, but step back,\u201d according to a person briefed on the situation, who insisted on anonymity because the plan had not yet been presented to the caucus. Immediately after Mr. Silver\u2019s arrest on Thursday, Democrats in the Assembly rallied behind him. Mr. Silver, who has proved adept over the years at withstanding ethical and legal scrutiny, predicted he would be vindicated.", "answer": "he would be vindicated.", "sentence": "Mr. Silver, who has proved adept over the years at withstanding ethical and legal scrutiny, predicted he would be vindicated.", "paragraph_sentence": "In an unusual arrangement, Mr. Silver would not quit his post. Instead, he would temporarily delegate his duties as speaker to a group of senior Assembly members. Under the plan, which the Assembly\u2019s Democratic caucus is to consider in a closed-door meeting on Monday afternoon, Mr. Silver would \u201cnot specifically step down, but step back,\u201d according to a person briefed on the situation, who insisted on anonymity because the plan had not yet been presented to the caucus. Immediately after Mr. Silver\u2019s arrest on Thursday, Democrats in the Assembly rallied behind him. Mr. Silver, who has proved adept over the years at withstanding ethical and legal scrutiny, predicted he would be vindicated. ", "paragraph_answer": "In an unusual arrangement, Mr. Silver would not quit his post. Instead, he would temporarily delegate his duties as speaker to a group of senior Assembly members. Under the plan, which the Assembly\u2019s Democratic caucus is to consider in a closed-door meeting on Monday afternoon, Mr. Silver would \u201cnot specifically step down, but step back,\u201d according to a person briefed on the situation, who insisted on anonymity because the plan had not yet been presented to the caucus. Immediately after Mr. Silver\u2019s arrest on Thursday, Democrats in the Assembly rallied behind him. Mr. Silver, who has proved adept over the years at withstanding ethical and legal scrutiny, predicted he would be vindicated. ", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Silver, who has proved adept over the years at withstanding ethical and legal scrutiny, predicted he would be vindicated. ", "paragraph_id": "5d707ff2c8e4820a9b66f3c3"} +{"question": "How are co-borrowers treated?", "paragraph": "Co-buyers should be aware that the mortgage underwriter will base their eligibility on the lower of their credit scores, just as with married couples jointly applying for a loan. They should carefully consider the stability of each other\u2019s income, and how long one buyer could cover the mortgage if the other fell short. Mr. Venable noted that if one buyer loses a job and cannot pay, resulting in a delinquency or default, both buyers\u2019 credit would suffer. (The same principles apply if more than two friends are buying together.) Mr. Venable also recommends planning upfront for how home repairs, insurance and other expenses would be managed in a detailed co-ownership agreement.", "answer": "as with married couples jointly applying for a loan", "sentence": "Co-buyers should be aware that the mortgage underwriter will base their eligibility on the lower of their credit scores, just as with married couples jointly applying for a loan .", "paragraph_sentence": " Co-buyers should be aware that the mortgage underwriter will base their eligibility on the lower of their credit scores, just as with married couples jointly applying for a loan . They should carefully consider the stability of each other\u2019s income, and how long one buyer could cover the mortgage if the other fell short. Mr. Venable noted that if one buyer loses a job and cannot pay, resulting in a delinquency or default, both buyers\u2019 credit would suffer. (The same principles apply if more than two friends are buying together.) Mr. Venable also recommends planning upfront for how home repairs, insurance and other expenses would be managed in a detailed co-ownership agreement.", "paragraph_answer": "Co-buyers should be aware that the mortgage underwriter will base their eligibility on the lower of their credit scores, just as with married couples jointly applying for a loan . They should carefully consider the stability of each other\u2019s income, and how long one buyer could cover the mortgage if the other fell short. Mr. Venable noted that if one buyer loses a job and cannot pay, resulting in a delinquency or default, both buyers\u2019 credit would suffer. (The same principles apply if more than two friends are buying together.) Mr. Venable also recommends planning upfront for how home repairs, insurance and other expenses would be managed in a detailed co-ownership agreement.", "sentence_answer": "Co-buyers should be aware that the mortgage underwriter will base their eligibility on the lower of their credit scores, just as with married couples jointly applying for a loan .", "paragraph_id": "5d7067bdc8e4820a9b66f0ee"} +{"question": "What system is used for rating factors?", "paragraph": "FYI Decision, which is free for iOS, is a great alternative to ChoiceMap and Decision Buddy. The app works in similar ways, using a slider system for rating how much each of the influencing factors should weigh into the decision. But this app\u2019s strength is that it displays the results more visually, with charts that show how your ratings affected the recommended outcome. If you\u2019re choosing a car to buy, for example, you can see how your concern about price would affect the available models. I love this app\u2019s simplicity, but it\u2019s worth pointing out that it is supported by advertising, and the pop-up ads can be annoying. It costs $3 to upgrade to remove the ads. The upgrade also allows it to output results as a PDF.", "answer": "slider", "sentence": "The app works in similar ways, using a slider system for rating how much each of the influencing factors should weigh into the decision.", "paragraph_sentence": "FYI Decision, which is free for iOS, is a great alternative to ChoiceMap and Decision Buddy. The app works in similar ways, using a slider system for rating how much each of the influencing factors should weigh into the decision. But this app\u2019s strength is that it displays the results more visually, with charts that show how your ratings affected the recommended outcome. If you\u2019re choosing a car to buy, for example, you can see how your concern about price would affect the available models. I love this app\u2019s simplicity, but it\u2019s worth pointing out that it is supported by advertising, and the pop-up ads can be annoying. It costs $3 to upgrade to remove the ads. The upgrade also allows it to output results as a PDF.", "paragraph_answer": "FYI Decision, which is free for iOS, is a great alternative to ChoiceMap and Decision Buddy. The app works in similar ways, using a slider system for rating how much each of the influencing factors should weigh into the decision. But this app\u2019s strength is that it displays the results more visually, with charts that show how your ratings affected the recommended outcome. If you\u2019re choosing a car to buy, for example, you can see how your concern about price would affect the available models. I love this app\u2019s simplicity, but it\u2019s worth pointing out that it is supported by advertising, and the pop-up ads can be annoying. It costs $3 to upgrade to remove the ads. The upgrade also allows it to output results as a PDF.", "sentence_answer": "The app works in similar ways, using a slider system for rating how much each of the influencing factors should weigh into the decision.", "paragraph_id": "5d705b10c8e4820a9b66eea1"} +{"question": "Which newspaper investigated the incident?", "paragraph": "For days after the June prison break, corrections officers carried out what seemed like a campaign of retribution against dozens of Clinton inmates, particularly those on the honor block, an investigation by The New York Times found. In letters reviewed by The Times, as well as prison interviews, inmates described a strikingly similar catalog of abuses, including being beaten while handcuffed, choked and slammed against cell bars and walls. They were also subjected to harsh policies ordered by the State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision: Dozens of inmates, many of whom had won the right to live on the honor block after years of good behavior, were transferred out of Clinton to other prisons. Many were placed in solitary confinement, and stripped of privileges they had accrued over the years \u2014 even though no prisoners have yet been linked to Mr. Matt\u2019s and Mr. Sweat\u2019s actions.", "answer": "The New York Times", "sentence": "For days after the June prison break, corrections officers carried out what seemed like a campaign of retribution against dozens of Clinton inmates, particularly those on the honor block, an investigation by The New York Times found.", "paragraph_sentence": " For days after the June prison break, corrections officers carried out what seemed like a campaign of retribution against dozens of Clinton inmates, particularly those on the honor block, an investigation by The New York Times found. In letters reviewed by The Times, as well as prison interviews, inmates described a strikingly similar catalog of abuses, including being beaten while handcuffed, choked and slammed against cell bars and walls. They were also subjected to harsh policies ordered by the State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision: Dozens of inmates, many of whom had won the right to live on the honor block after years of good behavior, were transferred out of Clinton to other prisons. Many were placed in solitary confinement, and stripped of privileges they had accrued over the years \u2014 even though no prisoners have yet been linked to Mr. Matt\u2019s and Mr. Sweat\u2019s actions.", "paragraph_answer": "For days after the June prison break, corrections officers carried out what seemed like a campaign of retribution against dozens of Clinton inmates, particularly those on the honor block, an investigation by The New York Times found. In letters reviewed by The Times, as well as prison interviews, inmates described a strikingly similar catalog of abuses, including being beaten while handcuffed, choked and slammed against cell bars and walls. They were also subjected to harsh policies ordered by the State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision: Dozens of inmates, many of whom had won the right to live on the honor block after years of good behavior, were transferred out of Clinton to other prisons. Many were placed in solitary confinement, and stripped of privileges they had accrued over the years \u2014 even though no prisoners have yet been linked to Mr. Matt\u2019s and Mr. Sweat\u2019s actions.", "sentence_answer": "For days after the June prison break, corrections officers carried out what seemed like a campaign of retribution against dozens of Clinton inmates, particularly those on the honor block, an investigation by The New York Times found.", "paragraph_id": "5d707874c8e4820a9b66f2cb"} +{"question": "What kind of windows are in the living room area?", "paragraph": "The three-story house was updated over the last 15 years. It has a gambrel roof, a white clapboard exterior and an exposed stone base. A gentle C shape, it faces south, and bends around a patio and pool. The entrance is through a glassed-in porch whose windows have the original copper hardware and open to screens. Other original features include maple floors and raised wall paneling, which contrast with Sputnik-style light fixtures. The floor plan is open, with a broad bay of floor-to-ceiling windows in the living area, which has a fireplace. Intersecting walls of windows in the informal dining room area face the pool and patio. There is also a formal dining area. The kitchen was updated during renovations with a Sub-Zero refrigerator, a Miele range, a Jenn-Air oven and quartz countertops. A bar with a separate sink is just off the kitchen. Four bedrooms are on the second floor, including the master, which is part of a suite with a bathroom and a walk-in closet with a picture window overlooking the pool. The remaining two bedrooms are on the third floor, built into the eaves, with pitched ceilings. The basement is finished with wood-paneled walls, a fireplace and a wet bar.", "answer": "floor-to-ceiling", "sentence": "The floor plan is open, with a broad bay of floor-to-ceiling windows in the living area, which has a fireplace.", "paragraph_sentence": "The three-story house was updated over the last 15 years. It has a gambrel roof, a white clapboard exterior and an exposed stone base. A gentle C shape, it faces south, and bends around a patio and pool. The entrance is through a glassed-in porch whose windows have the original copper hardware and open to screens. Other original features include maple floors and raised wall paneling, which contrast with Sputnik-style light fixtures. The floor plan is open, with a broad bay of floor-to-ceiling windows in the living area, which has a fireplace. Intersecting walls of windows in the informal dining room area face the pool and patio. There is also a formal dining area. The kitchen was updated during renovations with a Sub-Zero refrigerator, a Miele range, a Jenn-Air oven and quartz countertops. A bar with a separate sink is just off the kitchen. Four bedrooms are on the second floor, including the master, which is part of a suite with a bathroom and a walk-in closet with a picture window overlooking the pool. The remaining two bedrooms are on the third floor, built into the eaves, with pitched ceilings. The basement is finished with wood-paneled walls, a fireplace and a wet bar.", "paragraph_answer": "The three-story house was updated over the last 15 years. It has a gambrel roof, a white clapboard exterior and an exposed stone base. A gentle C shape, it faces south, and bends around a patio and pool. The entrance is through a glassed-in porch whose windows have the original copper hardware and open to screens. Other original features include maple floors and raised wall paneling, which contrast with Sputnik-style light fixtures. The floor plan is open, with a broad bay of floor-to-ceiling windows in the living area, which has a fireplace. Intersecting walls of windows in the informal dining room area face the pool and patio. There is also a formal dining area. The kitchen was updated during renovations with a Sub-Zero refrigerator, a Miele range, a Jenn-Air oven and quartz countertops. A bar with a separate sink is just off the kitchen. Four bedrooms are on the second floor, including the master, which is part of a suite with a bathroom and a walk-in closet with a picture window overlooking the pool. The remaining two bedrooms are on the third floor, built into the eaves, with pitched ceilings. The basement is finished with wood-paneled walls, a fireplace and a wet bar.", "sentence_answer": "The floor plan is open, with a broad bay of floor-to-ceiling windows in the living area, which has a fireplace.", "paragraph_id": "5d700d20c8e4820a9b66b8b1"} +{"question": "How many right answers are there for why they want the job?", "paragraph": "I always ask people why they want the job. There\u2019s not one right answer, but I want to see that there is a reason. Years ago, Leonard Lauder [the former C.E.O. of the Est\u00e9e Lauder Companies] told me that somebody needs to ask for the job, to say something along the lines of: \u201cI really want this position. I think I could do something great with it, and I\u2019d be so excited to join your team. What else can I do to convince you?\u201d If they haven\u2019t said that, then they haven\u2019t gone far enough. I\u2019m always pleased when somebody does that.", "answer": "not one", "sentence": "There\u2019s not one right answer, but I want to see that there is a reason.", "paragraph_sentence": "I always ask people why they want the job. There\u2019s not one right answer, but I want to see that there is a reason. Years ago, Leonard Lauder [the former C.E.O. of the Est\u00e9e Lauder Companies] told me that somebody needs to ask for the job, to say something along the lines of: \u201cI really want this position. I think I could do something great with it, and I\u2019d be so excited to join your team. What else can I do to convince you?\u201d If they haven\u2019t said that, then they haven\u2019t gone far enough. I\u2019m always pleased when somebody does that.", "paragraph_answer": "I always ask people why they want the job. There\u2019s not one right answer, but I want to see that there is a reason. Years ago, Leonard Lauder [the former C.E.O. of the Est\u00e9e Lauder Companies] told me that somebody needs to ask for the job, to say something along the lines of: \u201cI really want this position. I think I could do something great with it, and I\u2019d be so excited to join your team. What else can I do to convince you?\u201d If they haven\u2019t said that, then they haven\u2019t gone far enough. I\u2019m always pleased when somebody does that.", "sentence_answer": "There\u2019s not one right answer, but I want to see that there is a reason.", "paragraph_id": "5d7016a7c8e4820a9b66c2b8"} +{"question": "In what inning did Clint Robinson hit a double?", "paragraph": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Three months ago, Matt Harvey strutted around the Nationals\u2019 mound here during one of the most important starts of his young career, his first since having Tommy John surgery. He fired fastballs at will, snapped his slider like a whip, struck out Bryce Harper three times and announced to the baseball world that he was back. During his start here Monday, the lasting image of Harvey was him turning, his hands out, watching as a Clint Robinson double ricocheted high off the center-field wall in the third inning. Harvey\u2019s command looked off, and this time the Nationals did not look intimidated. Harvey often walked off the mound in conversation with catcher Anthony Recker, searching for answers. The Mets had aligned their starters after the All-Star break with this series in mind. They wanted to line up Harvey, Jacob deGrom and Noah Syndergaard, their three best starters, to make a run at the Nationals, the National League East leaders. Harvey lost the first game, 7-2, in humbling and conflicting fashion. He allowed five early runs and issued four walks, yet he lasted seven innings and even drove in two runs. Harvey was not at his best, but his offense and his defense repeatedly failed him.", "answer": "third inning", "sentence": "the third inning .", "paragraph_sentence": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Three months ago, Matt Harvey strutted around the Nationals\u2019 mound here during one of the most important starts of his young career, his first since having Tommy John surgery. He fired fastballs at will, snapped his slider like a whip, struck out Bryce Harper three times and announced to the baseball world that he was back. During his start here Monday, the lasting image of Harvey was him turning, his hands out, watching as a Clint Robinson double ricocheted high off the center-field wall in the third inning . Harvey\u2019s command looked off, and this time the Nationals did not look intimidated. Harvey often walked off the mound in conversation with catcher Anthony Recker, searching for answers. The Mets had aligned their starters after the All-Star break with this series in mind. They wanted to line up Harvey, Jacob deGrom and Noah Syndergaard, their three best starters, to make a run at the Nationals, the National League East leaders. Harvey lost the first game, 7-2, in humbling and conflicting fashion. He allowed five early runs and issued four walks, yet he lasted seven innings and even drove in two runs. Harvey was not at his best, but his offense and his defense repeatedly failed him.", "paragraph_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Three months ago, Matt Harvey strutted around the Nationals\u2019 mound here during one of the most important starts of his young career, his first since having Tommy John surgery. He fired fastballs at will, snapped his slider like a whip, struck out Bryce Harper three times and announced to the baseball world that he was back. During his start here Monday, the lasting image of Harvey was him turning, his hands out, watching as a Clint Robinson double ricocheted high off the center-field wall in the third inning . Harvey\u2019s command looked off, and this time the Nationals did not look intimidated. Harvey often walked off the mound in conversation with catcher Anthony Recker, searching for answers. The Mets had aligned their starters after the All-Star break with this series in mind. They wanted to line up Harvey, Jacob deGrom and Noah Syndergaard, their three best starters, to make a run at the Nationals, the National League East leaders. Harvey lost the first game, 7-2, in humbling and conflicting fashion. He allowed five early runs and issued four walks, yet he lasted seven innings and even drove in two runs. Harvey was not at his best, but his offense and his defense repeatedly failed him.", "sentence_answer": "the third inning .", "paragraph_id": "5d700508c8e4820a9b66a85f"} +{"question": "Which craftspeople located the specialized pipes for St. Joseph's organ?", "paragraph": "That was far from a simple task. When Monsignor Harrington started work at St. Joseph in 2008, the organ had not been played in nearly 50 years. Dust clogged the ranks and dirt marred the case. Plumbers found the pipes for the voix humaine stop, and joked that they didn\u2019t look as if they could carry water. But the Peragallos have burnished the facade to a subtle glory, resurrecting the old instrument\u2019s virtues and adding new voices to its three manuals.", "answer": "Plumbers", "sentence": "Plumbers found the pipes for the voix humaine stop, and joked that they didn\u2019t look as if they could carry water.", "paragraph_sentence": "That was far from a simple task. When Monsignor Harrington started work at St. Joseph in 2008, the organ had not been played in nearly 50 years. Dust clogged the ranks and dirt marred the case. Plumbers found the pipes for the voix humaine stop, and joked that they didn\u2019t look as if they could carry water. But the Peragallos have burnished the facade to a subtle glory, resurrecting the old instrument\u2019s virtues and adding new voices to its three manuals.", "paragraph_answer": "That was far from a simple task. When Monsignor Harrington started work at St. Joseph in 2008, the organ had not been played in nearly 50 years. Dust clogged the ranks and dirt marred the case. Plumbers found the pipes for the voix humaine stop, and joked that they didn\u2019t look as if they could carry water. But the Peragallos have burnished the facade to a subtle glory, resurrecting the old instrument\u2019s virtues and adding new voices to its three manuals.", "sentence_answer": " Plumbers found the pipes for the voix humaine stop, and joked that they didn\u2019t look as if they could carry water.", "paragraph_id": "5d7039f3c8e4820a9b66e1d0"} +{"question": "What did Dolan and Thomas accuse the jury of being?", "paragraph": "After the verdict, Dolan and Thomas made a show of suggesting that the jury was gullible and that they would appeal. \u201cI\u2019m very innocent,\u201d Thomas said immediately afterward, tapping his chest for emphasis. \u201cI will appeal.\u201d He did not. During the trial, Dolan took puffed-chest pride in testifying that he had decided to fire Browne all on his own, without talking to his corporate counsel. \u201cAll decisions at the Garden I make on my own,\u201d he said. Yes, well, that worked out, didn\u2019t it? The jury found that Dolan\u2019s decision constituted a retaliatory firing and violated federal law. Dolan\u2019s people vowed that the boss positively, absolutely would appeal. He did not. But he did assure New Yorkers that \u201cthe normal operations of M.S.G. and the New York Knicks will continue unabated.\u201d", "answer": "gullible", "sentence": "After the verdict, Dolan and Thomas made a show of suggesting that the jury was gullible and that they would appeal.", "paragraph_sentence": " After the verdict, Dolan and Thomas made a show of suggesting that the jury was gullible and that they would appeal. \u201cI\u2019m very innocent,\u201d Thomas said immediately afterward, tapping his chest for emphasis. \u201cI will appeal.\u201d He did not. During the trial, Dolan took puffed-chest pride in testifying that he had decided to fire Browne all on his own, without talking to his corporate counsel. \u201cAll decisions at the Garden I make on my own,\u201d he said. Yes, well, that worked out, didn\u2019t it? The jury found that Dolan\u2019s decision constituted a retaliatory firing and violated federal law. Dolan\u2019s people vowed that the boss positively, absolutely would appeal. He did not. But he did assure New Yorkers that \u201cthe normal operations of M.S.G. and the New York Knicks will continue unabated.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "After the verdict, Dolan and Thomas made a show of suggesting that the jury was gullible and that they would appeal. \u201cI\u2019m very innocent,\u201d Thomas said immediately afterward, tapping his chest for emphasis. \u201cI will appeal.\u201d He did not. During the trial, Dolan took puffed-chest pride in testifying that he had decided to fire Browne all on his own, without talking to his corporate counsel. \u201cAll decisions at the Garden I make on my own,\u201d he said. Yes, well, that worked out, didn\u2019t it? The jury found that Dolan\u2019s decision constituted a retaliatory firing and violated federal law. Dolan\u2019s people vowed that the boss positively, absolutely would appeal. He did not. But he did assure New Yorkers that \u201cthe normal operations of M.S.G. and the New York Knicks will continue unabated.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "After the verdict, Dolan and Thomas made a show of suggesting that the jury was gullible and that they would appeal.", "paragraph_id": "5d7045aac8e4820a9b66e7f1"} +{"question": "What natural event is threatening the state?", "paragraph": "Mr. Samson resigned as chairman of the Port Authority board in March 2014, and recently retired from his law firm, which adopted new leadership and a new name. Bill Baroni, the former deputy executive director of the Port Authority, who was also reportedly at the dinner, resigned as the Christie administration came under growing scrutiny over the lane closings. Mr. Christie\u2019s announcement about Mr. Fox\u2019s departure, which came shortly after 5 p.m. on Friday as state residents hunkered down for a weekend of heavy rain while watching the path of Hurricane Joaquin, was notably terse. Unlike the governor\u2019s statements about the resignations of Mr. Baroni, Mr. Samson and others involved in the federal investigation, it did not include words of praise for Mr. Fox\u2019s service.", "answer": "Hurricane Joaquin", "sentence": "Mr. Christie\u2019s announcement about Mr. Fox\u2019s departure, which came shortly after 5 p.m. on Friday as state residents hunkered down for a weekend of heavy rain while watching the path of Hurricane Joaquin , was notably terse.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Samson resigned as chairman of the Port Authority board in March 2014, and recently retired from his law firm, which adopted new leadership and a new name. Bill Baroni, the former deputy executive director of the Port Authority, who was also reportedly at the dinner, resigned as the Christie administration came under growing scrutiny over the lane closings. Mr. Christie\u2019s announcement about Mr. Fox\u2019s departure, which came shortly after 5 p.m. on Friday as state residents hunkered down for a weekend of heavy rain while watching the path of Hurricane Joaquin , was notably terse. Unlike the governor\u2019s statements about the resignations of Mr. Baroni, Mr. Samson and others involved in the federal investigation, it did not include words of praise for Mr. Fox\u2019s service.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Samson resigned as chairman of the Port Authority board in March 2014, and recently retired from his law firm, which adopted new leadership and a new name. Bill Baroni, the former deputy executive director of the Port Authority, who was also reportedly at the dinner, resigned as the Christie administration came under growing scrutiny over the lane closings. Mr. Christie\u2019s announcement about Mr. Fox\u2019s departure, which came shortly after 5 p.m. on Friday as state residents hunkered down for a weekend of heavy rain while watching the path of Hurricane Joaquin , was notably terse. Unlike the governor\u2019s statements about the resignations of Mr. Baroni, Mr. Samson and others involved in the federal investigation, it did not include words of praise for Mr. Fox\u2019s service.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Christie\u2019s announcement about Mr. Fox\u2019s departure, which came shortly after 5 p.m. on Friday as state residents hunkered down for a weekend of heavy rain while watching the path of Hurricane Joaquin , was notably terse.", "paragraph_id": "5d701cacc8e4820a9b66c830"} +{"question": "What does Andrew Papachristos do for a living?", "paragraph": "\u201cPeople see \u2018gang member,\u2019 and the words \u2018psycho killer\u2019 instantly pop in their head. But that isn\u2019t the case,\u201d Andrew Papachristos, a Chicago native and an associate professor of sociology at Yale, says. A majority of residents who claim sets in Chicago are more like Trey, my close friend of 17 years and a member of the 81st Street Black P. Stones in Auburn Gresham. Trey has no violent criminal record and works full time as a security guard. In areas like Gresham, a lot of young men don\u2019t have the luxury of opting out of affiliation with the local set; banding together in brotherhoods can be a survival strategy in neighborhoods where personal reputation is capital and walking the streets alone makes it more likely that you\u2019ll be seen as weak.", "answer": "associate professor of sociology at Yale", "sentence": "But that isn\u2019t the case,\u201d Andrew Papachristos, a Chicago native and an associate professor of sociology at Yale , says.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cPeople see \u2018gang member,\u2019 and the words \u2018psycho killer\u2019 instantly pop in their head. But that isn\u2019t the case,\u201d Andrew Papachristos, a Chicago native and an associate professor of sociology at Yale , says. A majority of residents who claim sets in Chicago are more like Trey, my close friend of 17 years and a member of the 81st Street Black P. Stones in Auburn Gresham. Trey has no violent criminal record and works full time as a security guard. In areas like Gresham, a lot of young men don\u2019t have the luxury of opting out of affiliation with the local set; banding together in brotherhoods can be a survival strategy in neighborhoods where personal reputation is capital and walking the streets alone makes it more likely that you\u2019ll be seen as weak.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cPeople see \u2018gang member,\u2019 and the words \u2018psycho killer\u2019 instantly pop in their head. But that isn\u2019t the case,\u201d Andrew Papachristos, a Chicago native and an associate professor of sociology at Yale , says. A majority of residents who claim sets in Chicago are more like Trey, my close friend of 17 years and a member of the 81st Street Black P. Stones in Auburn Gresham. Trey has no violent criminal record and works full time as a security guard. In areas like Gresham, a lot of young men don\u2019t have the luxury of opting out of affiliation with the local set; banding together in brotherhoods can be a survival strategy in neighborhoods where personal reputation is capital and walking the streets alone makes it more likely that you\u2019ll be seen as weak.", "sentence_answer": "But that isn\u2019t the case,\u201d Andrew Papachristos, a Chicago native and an associate professor of sociology at Yale , says.", "paragraph_id": "5d701517c8e4820a9b66c10a"} +{"question": "Answer is shortened down to what?", "paragraph": "A. Syncing files through Dropbox is one way to share them between computers, but if you bought the tracks you want to copy from Apple, you have an easier way to get them. You can freely download music and other content you have previously purchased from the iTunes Store to additional computers, as long as you are logged into iTunes with the same Apple ID account you used when you bought the items.", "answer": "A.", "sentence": "A. Syncing files through Dropbox is one way to share them between computers, but if you bought the tracks you want to copy from Apple, you have an easier way to get them.", "paragraph_sentence": " A. Syncing files through Dropbox is one way to share them between computers, but if you bought the tracks you want to copy from Apple, you have an easier way to get them. You can freely download music and other content you have previously purchased from the iTunes Store to additional computers, as long as you are logged into iTunes with the same Apple ID account you used when you bought the items.", "paragraph_answer": " A. Syncing files through Dropbox is one way to share them between computers, but if you bought the tracks you want to copy from Apple, you have an easier way to get them. You can freely download music and other content you have previously purchased from the iTunes Store to additional computers, as long as you are logged into iTunes with the same Apple ID account you used when you bought the items.", "sentence_answer": " A. Syncing files through Dropbox is one way to share them between computers, but if you bought the tracks you want to copy from Apple, you have an easier way to get them.", "paragraph_id": "5d702213c8e4820a9b66ce18"} +{"question": "In his own words, why does Mr. Rodham prefer to deal through the Clinton Foundation?", "paragraph": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "answer": "That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,", "sentence": "That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials, \u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony.", "paragraph_sentence": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials, \u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "paragraph_answer": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials, \u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "sentence_answer": " That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials, \u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony.", "paragraph_id": "5d705969c8e4820a9b66ee05"} +{"question": "what country is deprived by Harris' departure?", "paragraph": "\u201cI played 27 more tests than I ever thought I would,\u201d Harris said Saturday. \u201cI relished every single moment of them.\u201d His departure robs Australia of its one bowler who has proved effective in English conditions, as he was its leading wicket-taker in England in 2013. Harris, 35, was a subtle craftsmen among a clutch of flamethrowers, relying on control and variation. rather than sheer speed. His loss increases Australia\u2019s likely reliance on its two fearsome left-armers, Mitchell Starc and Mitchell Johnson, and it is also a reminder of one potential vulnerability of the defending champion \u2014 its age. Brad Haddin, the wicketkeeper, and Chris Rogers, an opening batsman, are both 37. Middle-order batsman Adam Voges is a 35-year-old test rookie. Johnson is 33, while captain Michael Clarke is 34 and has a history of back trouble. Much will depend on Clarke\u2019s heir apparent as captain, Steve Smith. The 26-year-old was once regarded as a \u201cbits and pieces\u201d player who was not quite good enough in any of his roles, but he has developed into a batting specialist who now tops the world rankings.", "answer": "Australia", "sentence": "His departure robs Australia of its one bowler who has proved effective in English conditions, as he was its leading wicket-taker in England in 2013.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI played 27 more tests than I ever thought I would,\u201d Harris said Saturday. \u201cI relished every single moment of them.\u201d His departure robs Australia of its one bowler who has proved effective in English conditions, as he was its leading wicket-taker in England in 2013. Harris, 35, was a subtle craftsmen among a clutch of flamethrowers, relying on control and variation. rather than sheer speed. His loss increases Australia\u2019s likely reliance on its two fearsome left-armers, Mitchell Starc and Mitchell Johnson, and it is also a reminder of one potential vulnerability of the defending champion \u2014 its age. Brad Haddin, the wicketkeeper, and Chris Rogers, an opening batsman, are both 37. Middle-order batsman Adam Voges is a 35-year-old test rookie. Johnson is 33, while captain Michael Clarke is 34 and has a history of back trouble. Much will depend on Clarke\u2019s heir apparent as captain, Steve Smith. The 26-year-old was once regarded as a \u201cbits and pieces\u201d player who was not quite good enough in any of his roles, but he has developed into a batting specialist who now tops the world rankings.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI played 27 more tests than I ever thought I would,\u201d Harris said Saturday. \u201cI relished every single moment of them.\u201d His departure robs Australia of its one bowler who has proved effective in English conditions, as he was its leading wicket-taker in England in 2013. Harris, 35, was a subtle craftsmen among a clutch of flamethrowers, relying on control and variation. rather than sheer speed. His loss increases Australia\u2019s likely reliance on its two fearsome left-armers, Mitchell Starc and Mitchell Johnson, and it is also a reminder of one potential vulnerability of the defending champion \u2014 its age. Brad Haddin, the wicketkeeper, and Chris Rogers, an opening batsman, are both 37. Middle-order batsman Adam Voges is a 35-year-old test rookie. Johnson is 33, while captain Michael Clarke is 34 and has a history of back trouble. Much will depend on Clarke\u2019s heir apparent as captain, Steve Smith. The 26-year-old was once regarded as a \u201cbits and pieces\u201d player who was not quite good enough in any of his roles, but he has developed into a batting specialist who now tops the world rankings.", "sentence_answer": "His departure robs Australia of its one bowler who has proved effective in English conditions, as he was its leading wicket-taker in England in 2013.", "paragraph_id": "5d701032c8e4820a9b66bc57"} +{"question": "Independent studies found what strikes had more of what than officials admitted?", "paragraph": "A front-page news analysis by Scott Shane, for example, included this memorable paragraph, not in a quote but in the author\u2019s own voice: \u201cEvery independent investigation of the strikes has found far more civilian casualties than administration officials admit. Gradually, it has become clear that when operators in Nevada fire missiles into remote tribal territories on the other side of the world, they often do not know who they are killing, but are making an imperfect best guess.\u201d (Mr. Shane\u2019s knowledge comes in part from his book, due for September publication, on the 2011 drone strike that killed Anwar al-Awlaki, the American-born imam.)", "answer": "civilian casualties", "sentence": "A front-page news analysis by Scott Shane, for example, included this memorable paragraph, not in a quote but in the author\u2019s own voice: \u201cEvery independent investigation of the strikes has found far more civilian casualties than administration officials admit.", "paragraph_sentence": " A front-page news analysis by Scott Shane, for example, included this memorable paragraph, not in a quote but in the author\u2019s own voice: \u201cEvery independent investigation of the strikes has found far more civilian casualties than administration officials admit. Gradually, it has become clear that when operators in Nevada fire missiles into remote tribal territories on the other side of the world, they often do not know who they are killing, but are making an imperfect best guess.\u201d (Mr. Shane\u2019s knowledge comes in part from his book, due for September publication, on the 2011 drone strike that killed Anwar al-Awlaki, the American-born imam.)", "paragraph_answer": "A front-page news analysis by Scott Shane, for example, included this memorable paragraph, not in a quote but in the author\u2019s own voice: \u201cEvery independent investigation of the strikes has found far more civilian casualties than administration officials admit. Gradually, it has become clear that when operators in Nevada fire missiles into remote tribal territories on the other side of the world, they often do not know who they are killing, but are making an imperfect best guess.\u201d (Mr. Shane\u2019s knowledge comes in part from his book, due for September publication, on the 2011 drone strike that killed Anwar al-Awlaki, the American-born imam.)", "sentence_answer": "A front-page news analysis by Scott Shane, for example, included this memorable paragraph, not in a quote but in the author\u2019s own voice: \u201cEvery independent investigation of the strikes has found far more civilian casualties than administration officials admit.", "paragraph_id": "5d703300c8e4820a9b66de2f"} +{"question": "Who makes a treatment for double chins?", "paragraph": "Allergan, the maker of Botox, said on Wednesday that it would pay about $2.1 billion in cash and shares for Kythera Biopharmaceuticals, which makes a treatment for double chins.", "answer": "Kythera Biopharmaceuticals", "sentence": "Allergan, the maker of Botox, said on Wednesday that it would pay about $2.1 billion in cash and shares for Kythera Biopharmaceuticals , which makes a treatment for double chins.", "paragraph_sentence": " Allergan, the maker of Botox, said on Wednesday that it would pay about $2.1 billion in cash and shares for Kythera Biopharmaceuticals , which makes a treatment for double chins. ", "paragraph_answer": "Allergan, the maker of Botox, said on Wednesday that it would pay about $2.1 billion in cash and shares for Kythera Biopharmaceuticals , which makes a treatment for double chins.", "sentence_answer": "Allergan, the maker of Botox, said on Wednesday that it would pay about $2.1 billion in cash and shares for Kythera Biopharmaceuticals , which makes a treatment for double chins.", "paragraph_id": "5d702b54c8e4820a9b66d8e3"} +{"question": "Who visited Washington to solidify the new relationship?", "paragraph": "WASHINGTON \u2014 After more than two years of perceived slights and supposed snubs, the new contours of a revitalized but evolving partnership between the United States and Saudi Arabia are beginning to take shape. This month\u2019s visit to Washington by King Salman solidified the defense and security aspects of this new version of an old relationship. The Saudis are also strongly pushing an economic agenda as the centerpiece of what King Salman identified as a \u201cnew strategic alliance for the 21st century.\u201d Last May, when President Obama hosted leaders of the Gulf Cooperation Council for a summit meeting at Camp David, the Saudi monarch was conspicuously absent. The talk then of a \u201csnub\u201d missed two crucial points. First, the Saudis were trying to ensure that the Camp David meeting was the beginning, not the end, of a new conversation. Second, King Salman did not want to share center stage in his first major trip abroad as king with figures like the deputy prime minister of Oman.", "answer": "King Salman", "sentence": "This month\u2019s visit to Washington by King Salman solidified the defense and security aspects of this new version of an old relationship.", "paragraph_sentence": "WASHINGTON \u2014 After more than two years of perceived slights and supposed snubs, the new contours of a revitalized but evolving partnership between the United States and Saudi Arabia are beginning to take shape. This month\u2019s visit to Washington by King Salman solidified the defense and security aspects of this new version of an old relationship. The Saudis are also strongly pushing an economic agenda as the centerpiece of what King Salman identified as a \u201cnew strategic alliance for the 21st century.\u201d Last May, when President Obama hosted leaders of the Gulf Cooperation Council for a summit meeting at Camp David, the Saudi monarch was conspicuously absent. The talk then of a \u201csnub\u201d missed two crucial points. First, the Saudis were trying to ensure that the Camp David meeting was the beginning, not the end, of a new conversation. Second, King Salman did not want to share center stage in his first major trip abroad as king with figures like the deputy prime minister of Oman.", "paragraph_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 After more than two years of perceived slights and supposed snubs, the new contours of a revitalized but evolving partnership between the United States and Saudi Arabia are beginning to take shape. This month\u2019s visit to Washington by King Salman solidified the defense and security aspects of this new version of an old relationship. The Saudis are also strongly pushing an economic agenda as the centerpiece of what King Salman identified as a \u201cnew strategic alliance for the 21st century.\u201d Last May, when President Obama hosted leaders of the Gulf Cooperation Council for a summit meeting at Camp David, the Saudi monarch was conspicuously absent. The talk then of a \u201csnub\u201d missed two crucial points. First, the Saudis were trying to ensure that the Camp David meeting was the beginning, not the end, of a new conversation. Second, King Salman did not want to share center stage in his first major trip abroad as king with figures like the deputy prime minister of Oman.", "sentence_answer": "This month\u2019s visit to Washington by King Salman solidified the defense and security aspects of this new version of an old relationship.", "paragraph_id": "5d7007a1c8e4820a9b66ae50"} +{"question": "when anne gary pannell retired ?", "paragraph": "\u201cI was filled with social reform zeal,\u201d she said. \u201cIt was a big thing for my parents, who had not gone to college, that I was going to college. It was really a shock to them, the change between how I was when I went in and when I came out. So we had some rough years.\u201d So did Sweet Briar\u2019s president at the time, Anne Gary Pannell, who Ms. English said was so worn out dealing with the strife on campus that she retired when the class of 1971 graduated.", "answer": "when the class of 1971 graduated.", "sentence": "So did Sweet Briar\u2019s president at the time, Anne Gary Pannell, who Ms. English said was so worn out dealing with the strife on campus that she retired when the class of 1971 graduated.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI was filled with social reform zeal,\u201d she said. \u201cIt was a big thing for my parents, who had not gone to college, that I was going to college. It was really a shock to them, the change between how I was when I went in and when I came out. So we had some rough years.\u201d So did Sweet Briar\u2019s president at the time, Anne Gary Pannell, who Ms. English said was so worn out dealing with the strife on campus that she retired when the class of 1971 graduated. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI was filled with social reform zeal,\u201d she said. \u201cIt was a big thing for my parents, who had not gone to college, that I was going to college. It was really a shock to them, the change between how I was when I went in and when I came out. So we had some rough years.\u201d So did Sweet Briar\u2019s president at the time, Anne Gary Pannell, who Ms. English said was so worn out dealing with the strife on campus that she retired when the class of 1971 graduated. ", "sentence_answer": "So did Sweet Briar\u2019s president at the time, Anne Gary Pannell, who Ms. English said was so worn out dealing with the strife on campus that she retired when the class of 1971 graduated. ", "paragraph_id": "5d702025c8e4820a9b66cbce"} +{"question": "The statements that Boulez made were what?", "paragraph": "ESA-PEKKA SALONEN, conductor and composer: Young people are attracted to black-and-white statements. At least I was. And Boulez was like a black-and-white statement machine. He said, \u201cThis is wrong, and this is right.\u201d The statements Boulez made were kind of refreshingly categorical. Like the famous one from the \u201950s: \u201cIf a composer has not experienced the necessity of dodecaphonic technique, he is useless.\u201d That\u2019s a good sentence because it tells you what is what. It takes the guessing out of the equation.", "answer": "refreshingly categorical", "sentence": "The statements Boulez made were kind of refreshingly categorical .", "paragraph_sentence": "ESA-PEKKA SALONEN, conductor and composer: Young people are attracted to black-and-white statements. At least I was. And Boulez was like a black-and-white statement machine. He said, \u201cThis is wrong, and this is right.\u201d The statements Boulez made were kind of refreshingly categorical . Like the famous one from the \u201950s: \u201cIf a composer has not experienced the necessity of dodecaphonic technique, he is useless.\u201d That\u2019s a good sentence because it tells you what is what. It takes the guessing out of the equation.", "paragraph_answer": "ESA-PEKKA SALONEN, conductor and composer: Young people are attracted to black-and-white statements. At least I was. And Boulez was like a black-and-white statement machine. He said, \u201cThis is wrong, and this is right.\u201d The statements Boulez made were kind of refreshingly categorical . Like the famous one from the \u201950s: \u201cIf a composer has not experienced the necessity of dodecaphonic technique, he is useless.\u201d That\u2019s a good sentence because it tells you what is what. It takes the guessing out of the equation.", "sentence_answer": "The statements Boulez made were kind of refreshingly categorical .", "paragraph_id": "5d705b5fc8e4820a9b66eec3"} +{"question": "What does giving people health insurance allow for?", "paragraph": "But what about prevention? In certain situations, early spending on someone\u2019s health will stop an expensive disease in its tracks, reducing future spending. Giving people health insurance often enables them to get just this sort of preventive care \u2014 and Obamacare requires insurers to offer most preventive services without charging any co-payments. You might expect health spending to jump initially, then slow in future years as people benefit from new prevention. But research shows that even preventive care rarely ends up saving money.", "answer": "enables them to get just this sort of preventive care", "sentence": "Giving people health insurance often enables them to get just this sort of preventive care \u2014 and Obamacare requires insurers to offer most preventive services without charging any co-payments.", "paragraph_sentence": "But what about prevention? In certain situations, early spending on someone\u2019s health will stop an expensive disease in its tracks, reducing future spending. Giving people health insurance often enables them to get just this sort of preventive care \u2014 and Obamacare requires insurers to offer most preventive services without charging any co-payments. You might expect health spending to jump initially, then slow in future years as people benefit from new prevention. But research shows that even preventive care rarely ends up saving money.", "paragraph_answer": "But what about prevention? In certain situations, early spending on someone\u2019s health will stop an expensive disease in its tracks, reducing future spending. Giving people health insurance often enables them to get just this sort of preventive care \u2014 and Obamacare requires insurers to offer most preventive services without charging any co-payments. You might expect health spending to jump initially, then slow in future years as people benefit from new prevention. But research shows that even preventive care rarely ends up saving money.", "sentence_answer": "Giving people health insurance often enables them to get just this sort of preventive care \u2014 and Obamacare requires insurers to offer most preventive services without charging any co-payments.", "paragraph_id": "5d705779c8e4820a9b66ed72"} +{"question": "Who is in charge of the US national team?", "paragraph": "The United States national team coach, Jurgen Klinsmann, has frequently said that he hopes his players push themselves to play in the best leagues \u2014 comments that have, at times, drawn the ire of M.L.S. officials. Despite those wishes, many prominent Americans have left European clubs to sign multimillion-dollar deals with M.L.S. Dempsey returned in 2013, and he was soon followed by Michael Bradley, Jermaine Jones, Altidore, Mix Diskerud and Sacha Kljestan. Johannsson\u2019s move, especially if he earns regular playing time and continues to score goals, could be good news for his national team career. In 2013, Johannsson, who was born in Alabama but raised in Iceland, changed his international allegiance to the United States after years of representing Iceland at the youth level. Since then, he has consistently been part of the national team, including the World Cup squad in 2014, when injuries limited him to one appearance. The move to the Bundesliga could signify a shift, and help Johannsson press Dempsey, 32, and Altidore, 25, on Klinsmann\u2019s depth chart heading into qualifying for the 2018 World Cup. Werder Bremen should be able to use Johannsson right away; it transferred the Argentine forward Franco Di Santo, its top scorer last season, with 13 goals, to Schalke on July 25.", "answer": "Jurgen Klinsmann", "sentence": "The United States national team coach, Jurgen Klinsmann , has frequently said that he hopes his players push themselves to play in the best leagues \u2014 comments that have, at times, drawn the ire of M.L.S. officials.", "paragraph_sentence": " The United States national team coach, Jurgen Klinsmann , has frequently said that he hopes his players push themselves to play in the best leagues \u2014 comments that have, at times, drawn the ire of M.L.S. officials. Despite those wishes, many prominent Americans have left European clubs to sign multimillion-dollar deals with M.L.S. Dempsey returned in 2013, and he was soon followed by Michael Bradley, Jermaine Jones, Altidore, Mix Diskerud and Sacha Kljestan. Johannsson\u2019s move, especially if he earns regular playing time and continues to score goals, could be good news for his national team career. In 2013, Johannsson, who was born in Alabama but raised in Iceland, changed his international allegiance to the United States after years of representing Iceland at the youth level. Since then, he has consistently been part of the national team, including the World Cup squad in 2014, when injuries limited him to one appearance. The move to the Bundesliga could signify a shift, and help Johannsson press Dempsey, 32, and Altidore, 25, on Klinsmann\u2019s depth chart heading into qualifying for the 2018 World Cup. Werder Bremen should be able to use Johannsson right away; it transferred the Argentine forward Franco Di Santo, its top scorer last season, with 13 goals, to Schalke on July 25.", "paragraph_answer": "The United States national team coach, Jurgen Klinsmann , has frequently said that he hopes his players push themselves to play in the best leagues \u2014 comments that have, at times, drawn the ire of M.L.S. officials. Despite those wishes, many prominent Americans have left European clubs to sign multimillion-dollar deals with M.L.S. Dempsey returned in 2013, and he was soon followed by Michael Bradley, Jermaine Jones, Altidore, Mix Diskerud and Sacha Kljestan. Johannsson\u2019s move, especially if he earns regular playing time and continues to score goals, could be good news for his national team career. In 2013, Johannsson, who was born in Alabama but raised in Iceland, changed his international allegiance to the United States after years of representing Iceland at the youth level. Since then, he has consistently been part of the national team, including the World Cup squad in 2014, when injuries limited him to one appearance. The move to the Bundesliga could signify a shift, and help Johannsson press Dempsey, 32, and Altidore, 25, on Klinsmann\u2019s depth chart heading into qualifying for the 2018 World Cup. Werder Bremen should be able to use Johannsson right away; it transferred the Argentine forward Franco Di Santo, its top scorer last season, with 13 goals, to Schalke on July 25.", "sentence_answer": "The United States national team coach, Jurgen Klinsmann , has frequently said that he hopes his players push themselves to play in the best leagues \u2014 comments that have, at times, drawn the ire of M.L.S. officials.", "paragraph_id": "5d702dd5c8e4820a9b66db2e"} +{"question": "Who is the director of Arizona's department of Water resources?", "paragraph": "If the connection between groundwater and surface water is considered, that time frame for running out of water altogether will almost certainly be even shorter. Arizona\u2019s top water official told ProPublica that it was both politically difficult and costly to properly account for the interconnection. But deep in a 685-page document that is part of Arizona\u2019s water plan, the state lists 42 groundwater basins that it says are connected to surface water, indicating a potential conflict over rights to those supplies. It\u2019s unclear how much water flows from one into the other, but the documents show that many of the water sources are heavily relied on as sources of both groundwater and surface supplies at the same time. Thomas Buschatzke, the director of Arizona\u2019s Department of Water Resources, acknowledged that pumping from wells could dry up streams, but said the current law kept the two resources separate, and \u201cit would be a huge upset to the economy to do away with that.\u201d", "answer": "Thomas Buschatzke", "sentence": "Thomas Buschatzke , the director of Arizona\u2019s Department of Water Resources, acknowledged that pumping from wells could dry up streams, but said the current law kept the two resources separate, and \u201cit would be a huge upset to the economy to do away with that.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "If the connection between groundwater and surface water is considered, that time frame for running out of water altogether will almost certainly be even shorter. Arizona\u2019s top water official told ProPublica that it was both politically difficult and costly to properly account for the interconnection. But deep in a 685-page document that is part of Arizona\u2019s water plan, the state lists 42 groundwater basins that it says are connected to surface water, indicating a potential conflict over rights to those supplies. It\u2019s unclear how much water flows from one into the other, but the documents show that many of the water sources are heavily relied on as sources of both groundwater and surface supplies at the same time. Thomas Buschatzke , the director of Arizona\u2019s Department of Water Resources, acknowledged that pumping from wells could dry up streams, but said the current law kept the two resources separate, and \u201cit would be a huge upset to the economy to do away with that.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "If the connection between groundwater and surface water is considered, that time frame for running out of water altogether will almost certainly be even shorter. Arizona\u2019s top water official told ProPublica that it was both politically difficult and costly to properly account for the interconnection. But deep in a 685-page document that is part of Arizona\u2019s water plan, the state lists 42 groundwater basins that it says are connected to surface water, indicating a potential conflict over rights to those supplies. It\u2019s unclear how much water flows from one into the other, but the documents show that many of the water sources are heavily relied on as sources of both groundwater and surface supplies at the same time. Thomas Buschatzke , the director of Arizona\u2019s Department of Water Resources, acknowledged that pumping from wells could dry up streams, but said the current law kept the two resources separate, and \u201cit would be a huge upset to the economy to do away with that.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Thomas Buschatzke , the director of Arizona\u2019s Department of Water Resources, acknowledged that pumping from wells could dry up streams, but said the current law kept the two resources separate, and \u201cit would be a huge upset to the economy to do away with that.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d7024bdc8e4820a9b66d122"} +{"question": "How much was the scholarship for that Ms. Harper applied for?", "paragraph": "The young woman\u2019s mother, who immigrated from the Philippines, said that she had shared Filipino meals with Ms. Harper, and that Ms. Harper had taught her how to drive. She wrote a letter of support when Ms. Harper was applying for a $1,500 scholarship to continue her nursing studies. The family still has Ms. Harper\u2019s thank you card. \u201cOnce again, thank you so very much for helping me with my scholarship application,\u201d the note says. \u201cNow I can attend the nursing program without having to stress out about tuition!\u201d", "answer": "$1,500", "sentence": "a $1,500 scholarship to continue her nursing studies.", "paragraph_sentence": "The young woman\u2019s mother, who immigrated from the Philippines, said that she had shared Filipino meals with Ms. Harper, and that Ms. Harper had taught her how to drive. She wrote a letter of support when Ms. Harper was applying for a $1,500 scholarship to continue her nursing studies. The family still has Ms. Harper\u2019s thank you card. \u201cOnce again, thank you so very much for helping me with my scholarship application,\u201d the note says. \u201cNow I can attend the nursing program without having to stress out about tuition!\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The young woman\u2019s mother, who immigrated from the Philippines, said that she had shared Filipino meals with Ms. Harper, and that Ms. Harper had taught her how to drive. She wrote a letter of support when Ms. Harper was applying for a $1,500 scholarship to continue her nursing studies. The family still has Ms. Harper\u2019s thank you card. \u201cOnce again, thank you so very much for helping me with my scholarship application,\u201d the note says. \u201cNow I can attend the nursing program without having to stress out about tuition!\u201d", "sentence_answer": "a $1,500 scholarship to continue her nursing studies.", "paragraph_id": "5d70449bc8e4820a9b66e791"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700957c8e4820a9b66b1d5"} +{"question": "Did Carey Price miss any games prior to the latest injury?", "paragraph": "Carey Price missed nine games earlier this season, but during his third game back, Wednesday against the Rangers, he aggravated the injury. He is expected to miss six weeks, putting the spotlight back on Mike Condon. A native of Needham, Mass., who played college hockey at Princeton, Condon started his journey to the Canadiens by trying out for an E.C.H.L. team during his spring break in 2013. After spending the past two seasons in the minor leagues, Condon beat out Dustin Tokarski in training camp for the backup job. Condon is 8-2-3 with a 2.19 goals-against and .916 save percentage, including a 5-2-2 record during Price\u2019s previous absence. He may be this season\u2019s Cam Talbot, the Rangers\u2019 late-blooming backup who held down the fort last season when Henrik Lundqvist missed almost two months.", "answer": "Price missed nine games", "sentence": "Carey Price missed nine games earlier this season, but during his third game back, Wednesday against the Rangers, he aggravated the injury.", "paragraph_sentence": " Carey Price missed nine games earlier this season, but during his third game back, Wednesday against the Rangers, he aggravated the injury. He is expected to miss six weeks, putting the spotlight back on Mike Condon. A native of Needham, Mass., who played college hockey at Princeton, Condon started his journey to the Canadiens by trying out for an E.C.H.L. team during his spring break in 2013. After spending the past two seasons in the minor leagues, Condon beat out Dustin Tokarski in training camp for the backup job. Condon is 8-2-3 with a 2.19 goals-against and .916 save percentage, including a 5-2-2 record during Price\u2019s previous absence. He may be this season\u2019s Cam Talbot, the Rangers\u2019 late-blooming backup who held down the fort last season when Henrik Lundqvist missed almost two months.", "paragraph_answer": "Carey Price missed nine games earlier this season, but during his third game back, Wednesday against the Rangers, he aggravated the injury. He is expected to miss six weeks, putting the spotlight back on Mike Condon. A native of Needham, Mass., who played college hockey at Princeton, Condon started his journey to the Canadiens by trying out for an E.C.H.L. team during his spring break in 2013. After spending the past two seasons in the minor leagues, Condon beat out Dustin Tokarski in training camp for the backup job. Condon is 8-2-3 with a 2.19 goals-against and .916 save percentage, including a 5-2-2 record during Price\u2019s previous absence. He may be this season\u2019s Cam Talbot, the Rangers\u2019 late-blooming backup who held down the fort last season when Henrik Lundqvist missed almost two months.", "sentence_answer": "Carey Price missed nine games earlier this season, but during his third game back, Wednesday against the Rangers, he aggravated the injury.", "paragraph_id": "5d7022a2c8e4820a9b66cec3"} +{"question": "Helles and Dortmunder lagers orginated where?", "paragraph": "Defining \u201cAmerican lager\u201d was difficult. American brewers like nothing better than bending and twisting beer styles, so vague terms like American lager bleed into more specific forms of lager like, say, pilsner. Our solution was to include golden and amber lagers, equivalent to German styles like Helles and Dortmunder, while excluding beers labeled pilsner. We also tried, not entirely successfully, to exclude lagers that used cereal adjuncts in the industrial style. As I said, it\u2019s hard to be precise. Almost all were 4.5 percent to 5.5 percent alcohol.", "answer": "German", "sentence": "Our solution was to include golden and amber lagers, equivalent to German styles like Helles and Dortmunder, while excluding beers labeled pilsner.", "paragraph_sentence": "Defining \u201cAmerican lager\u201d was difficult. American brewers like nothing better than bending and twisting beer styles, so vague terms like American lager bleed into more specific forms of lager like, say, pilsner. Our solution was to include golden and amber lagers, equivalent to German styles like Helles and Dortmunder, while excluding beers labeled pilsner. We also tried, not entirely successfully, to exclude lagers that used cereal adjuncts in the industrial style. As I said, it\u2019s hard to be precise. Almost all were 4.5 percent to 5.5 percent alcohol.", "paragraph_answer": "Defining \u201cAmerican lager\u201d was difficult. American brewers like nothing better than bending and twisting beer styles, so vague terms like American lager bleed into more specific forms of lager like, say, pilsner. Our solution was to include golden and amber lagers, equivalent to German styles like Helles and Dortmunder, while excluding beers labeled pilsner. We also tried, not entirely successfully, to exclude lagers that used cereal adjuncts in the industrial style. As I said, it\u2019s hard to be precise. Almost all were 4.5 percent to 5.5 percent alcohol.", "sentence_answer": "Our solution was to include golden and amber lagers, equivalent to German styles like Helles and Dortmunder, while excluding beers labeled pilsner.", "paragraph_id": "5d701632c8e4820a9b66c233"} +{"question": "Who designed shirts for LL Cool J's tour?", "paragraph": "Those jackets indicate membership on a greater team, but lack some of the ephemeral grace of the T-shirts. Keith Haring\u2019s artwork appears on the T-shirt for the first New York City Fresh Festival, a multi-artist concert, in 1984. Several iterations of shirts from a single LL Cool J tour are displayed: The designer, Cey Adams, talks about how he would work on the fly, creating new shirts in different cities as the old ones sold out. The politics of the day often made their way to these shirts. One for Queen Latifah screamed, \u201cWho U Callin a Bitch???\u201d The free-speech and free-love warriors 2 Live Crew used pointed political and sexual slogans. There are ugly relics as well, like the Beastie Boys T-shirt from 1986 with a gay slur on the back, which, all apologies aside, can\u2019t be erased from history. T-shirts were also sites of reaction, as seen in the countless pulpy memorial shirts for the Notorious B.I.G. and Tupac Shakur. These are done in what has become the definitive bootleg style: cut-and-paste graphics with text in loud, slightly corroded fonts, generally on a black T-shirt. That style is inescapable in this book\u2019s second half, whether it\u2019s done for New York street stalwarts like Mobb Deep or Southern titans like Master P. By the mid-1990s, the dominant design aesthetic no longer came from record-label graphic designers; it was this much more democratic clip-art style.", "answer": "Cey Adams", "sentence": "Several iterations of shirts from a single LL Cool J tour are displayed: The designer, Cey Adams , talks about how he would work on the fly, creating new shirts in different cities as the old ones sold out.", "paragraph_sentence": "Those jackets indicate membership on a greater team, but lack some of the ephemeral grace of the T-shirts. Keith Haring\u2019s artwork appears on the T-shirt for the first New York City Fresh Festival, a multi-artist concert, in 1984. Several iterations of shirts from a single LL Cool J tour are displayed: The designer, Cey Adams , talks about how he would work on the fly, creating new shirts in different cities as the old ones sold out. The politics of the day often made their way to these shirts. One for Queen Latifah screamed, \u201cWho U Callin a Bitch???\u201d The free-speech and free-love warriors 2 Live Crew used pointed political and sexual slogans. There are ugly relics as well, like the Beastie Boys T-shirt from 1986 with a gay slur on the back, which, all apologies aside, can\u2019t be erased from history. T-shirts were also sites of reaction, as seen in the countless pulpy memorial shirts for the Notorious B.I.G. and Tupac Shakur. These are done in what has become the definitive bootleg style: cut-and-paste graphics with text in loud, slightly corroded fonts, generally on a black T-shirt. That style is inescapable in this book\u2019s second half, whether it\u2019s done for New York street stalwarts like Mobb Deep or Southern titans like Master P. By the mid-1990s, the dominant design aesthetic no longer came from record-label graphic designers; it was this much more democratic clip-art style.", "paragraph_answer": "Those jackets indicate membership on a greater team, but lack some of the ephemeral grace of the T-shirts. Keith Haring\u2019s artwork appears on the T-shirt for the first New York City Fresh Festival, a multi-artist concert, in 1984. Several iterations of shirts from a single LL Cool J tour are displayed: The designer, Cey Adams , talks about how he would work on the fly, creating new shirts in different cities as the old ones sold out. The politics of the day often made their way to these shirts. One for Queen Latifah screamed, \u201cWho U Callin a Bitch???\u201d The free-speech and free-love warriors 2 Live Crew used pointed political and sexual slogans. There are ugly relics as well, like the Beastie Boys T-shirt from 1986 with a gay slur on the back, which, all apologies aside, can\u2019t be erased from history. T-shirts were also sites of reaction, as seen in the countless pulpy memorial shirts for the Notorious B.I.G. and Tupac Shakur. These are done in what has become the definitive bootleg style: cut-and-paste graphics with text in loud, slightly corroded fonts, generally on a black T-shirt. That style is inescapable in this book\u2019s second half, whether it\u2019s done for New York street stalwarts like Mobb Deep or Southern titans like Master P. By the mid-1990s, the dominant design aesthetic no longer came from record-label graphic designers; it was this much more democratic clip-art style.", "sentence_answer": "Several iterations of shirts from a single LL Cool J tour are displayed: The designer, Cey Adams , talks about how he would work on the fly, creating new shirts in different cities as the old ones sold out.", "paragraph_id": "5d70249ec8e4820a9b66d0df"} +{"question": "Allergan is paying for Kythera Biopharmaceuticals in cash and what?", "paragraph": "Allergan, the maker of Botox, said on Wednesday that it would pay about $2.1 billion in cash and shares for Kythera Biopharmaceuticals, which makes a treatment for double chins.", "answer": "shares", "sentence": "Allergan, the maker of Botox, said on Wednesday that it would pay about $2.1 billion in cash and shares for Kythera Biopharmaceuticals, which makes a treatment for double chins.", "paragraph_sentence": " Allergan, the maker of Botox, said on Wednesday that it would pay about $2.1 billion in cash and shares for Kythera Biopharmaceuticals, which makes a treatment for double chins. ", "paragraph_answer": "Allergan, the maker of Botox, said on Wednesday that it would pay about $2.1 billion in cash and shares for Kythera Biopharmaceuticals, which makes a treatment for double chins.", "sentence_answer": "Allergan, the maker of Botox, said on Wednesday that it would pay about $2.1 billion in cash and shares for Kythera Biopharmaceuticals, which makes a treatment for double chins.", "paragraph_id": "5d702b54c8e4820a9b66d8e4"} +{"question": "Who sought to draw an end to America's role in the Afghanistan war?", "paragraph": "Yet the shift in American plans is as much a result of the dire situation in Afghanistan as it is a broad lobbying effort by a powerful cross-section of the American foreign policy and national security establishment, including many of the dinner guests on Tuesday. In recent months, even as Mr. Obama has sought to draw an end to America\u2019s role in Afghanistan\u2019s war, a number of influential figures in Washington have pressed hard in public and in private to keep the United States involved. To help make their case, they repeatedly cited the election of Mr. Ghani, a Columbia graduate who lived in Washington for 15 years, as a central reason to stay in Afghanistan, despite the relative weakness of his government. Ahead of Tuesday\u2019s meeting at the White House, for instance, a group of 23 former American ambassadors and senior officials released an open letter urging the United States to keep troops in Afghanistan.", "answer": "Mr. Obama", "sentence": "In recent months, even as Mr. Obama has sought to draw an end to America\u2019s role in Afghanistan\u2019s war, a number of influential figures in Washington have pressed hard in public and in private to keep the United States involved.", "paragraph_sentence": "Yet the shift in American plans is as much a result of the dire situation in Afghanistan as it is a broad lobbying effort by a powerful cross-section of the American foreign policy and national security establishment, including many of the dinner guests on Tuesday. In recent months, even as Mr. Obama has sought to draw an end to America\u2019s role in Afghanistan\u2019s war, a number of influential figures in Washington have pressed hard in public and in private to keep the United States involved. To help make their case, they repeatedly cited the election of Mr. Ghani, a Columbia graduate who lived in Washington for 15 years, as a central reason to stay in Afghanistan, despite the relative weakness of his government. Ahead of Tuesday\u2019s meeting at the White House, for instance, a group of 23 former American ambassadors and senior officials released an open letter urging the United States to keep troops in Afghanistan.", "paragraph_answer": "Yet the shift in American plans is as much a result of the dire situation in Afghanistan as it is a broad lobbying effort by a powerful cross-section of the American foreign policy and national security establishment, including many of the dinner guests on Tuesday. In recent months, even as Mr. Obama has sought to draw an end to America\u2019s role in Afghanistan\u2019s war, a number of influential figures in Washington have pressed hard in public and in private to keep the United States involved. To help make their case, they repeatedly cited the election of Mr. Ghani, a Columbia graduate who lived in Washington for 15 years, as a central reason to stay in Afghanistan, despite the relative weakness of his government. Ahead of Tuesday\u2019s meeting at the White House, for instance, a group of 23 former American ambassadors and senior officials released an open letter urging the United States to keep troops in Afghanistan.", "sentence_answer": "In recent months, even as Mr. Obama has sought to draw an end to America\u2019s role in Afghanistan\u2019s war, a number of influential figures in Washington have pressed hard in public and in private to keep the United States involved.", "paragraph_id": "5d7025a3c8e4820a9b66d1e5"} +{"question": "The visitors that described the scent as Italian sausage were in which city?", "paragraph": "Visitors in the Chicago crowd didn\u2019t get outright stench, but they did get a hands-on experience: Dr. Still and Mr. Pollak began passing around pieces of Spike\u2019s spathe to the visitors. On Tuesday, they said that Spike was beginning to emit a more putrid odor \u2014 a bad sign regarding nearly anything else in the world, but a good sign for this plant \u2014 and that visiting hours would be extended until Thursday. In Denver, the visitors who had been hoping for a stinky celebration had gotten luckier. They described the scent as rotting cabbage, dead mice and, oddly, Italian sausage when they stepped close to lean into the blooming flower, named Stinky. Stinky lasted a few days before it crumpled and entered a dormant phase.", "answer": "Denver", "sentence": "In Denver , the visitors who had been hoping for a stinky celebration had gotten luckier.", "paragraph_sentence": "Visitors in the Chicago crowd didn\u2019t get outright stench, but they did get a hands-on experience: Dr. Still and Mr. Pollak began passing around pieces of Spike\u2019s spathe to the visitors. On Tuesday, they said that Spike was beginning to emit a more putrid odor \u2014 a bad sign regarding nearly anything else in the world, but a good sign for this plant \u2014 and that visiting hours would be extended until Thursday. In Denver , the visitors who had been hoping for a stinky celebration had gotten luckier. They described the scent as rotting cabbage, dead mice and, oddly, Italian sausage when they stepped close to lean into the blooming flower, named Stinky. Stinky lasted a few days before it crumpled and entered a dormant phase.", "paragraph_answer": "Visitors in the Chicago crowd didn\u2019t get outright stench, but they did get a hands-on experience: Dr. Still and Mr. Pollak began passing around pieces of Spike\u2019s spathe to the visitors. On Tuesday, they said that Spike was beginning to emit a more putrid odor \u2014 a bad sign regarding nearly anything else in the world, but a good sign for this plant \u2014 and that visiting hours would be extended until Thursday. In Denver , the visitors who had been hoping for a stinky celebration had gotten luckier. They described the scent as rotting cabbage, dead mice and, oddly, Italian sausage when they stepped close to lean into the blooming flower, named Stinky. Stinky lasted a few days before it crumpled and entered a dormant phase.", "sentence_answer": "In Denver , the visitors who had been hoping for a stinky celebration had gotten luckier.", "paragraph_id": "5d704419c8e4820a9b66e74b"} +{"question": "How much did the value of an estate have to exceed for couples?", "paragraph": "An amendment by Senator Tim Kaine, Democrat of Virginia, called for a lifting of the spending limits, paid for by changes to entitlement programs other than Social Security, a re-examination of other programs and the ending of some tax loopholes. It passed, 50 to 48. Senate Republicans did set some policy stakes in the ground, some of them surprising. The Senate voted, 54 to 46, to fully repeal the estate tax, even though next year, the value of estates subject to it will have to exceed $5.43 million, or nearly $11 million for a couple. Only about 3,700 estates, or 0.12 percent of the total, were expected to owe any federal estate tax last year.", "answer": "$11 million", "sentence": "The Senate voted, 54 to 46, to fully repeal the estate tax, even though next year, the value of estates subject to it will have to exceed $5.43 million, or nearly $11 million for a couple.", "paragraph_sentence": "An amendment by Senator Tim Kaine, Democrat of Virginia, called for a lifting of the spending limits, paid for by changes to entitlement programs other than Social Security, a re-examination of other programs and the ending of some tax loopholes. It passed, 50 to 48. Senate Republicans did set some policy stakes in the ground, some of them surprising. The Senate voted, 54 to 46, to fully repeal the estate tax, even though next year, the value of estates subject to it will have to exceed $5.43 million, or nearly $11 million for a couple. Only about 3,700 estates, or 0.12 percent of the total, were expected to owe any federal estate tax last year.", "paragraph_answer": "An amendment by Senator Tim Kaine, Democrat of Virginia, called for a lifting of the spending limits, paid for by changes to entitlement programs other than Social Security, a re-examination of other programs and the ending of some tax loopholes. It passed, 50 to 48. Senate Republicans did set some policy stakes in the ground, some of them surprising. The Senate voted, 54 to 46, to fully repeal the estate tax, even though next year, the value of estates subject to it will have to exceed $5.43 million, or nearly $11 million for a couple. Only about 3,700 estates, or 0.12 percent of the total, were expected to owe any federal estate tax last year.", "sentence_answer": "The Senate voted, 54 to 46, to fully repeal the estate tax, even though next year, the value of estates subject to it will have to exceed $5.43 million, or nearly $11 million for a couple.", "paragraph_id": "5d7028d8c8e4820a9b66d69c"} +{"question": "Ms. Klum was attending the event with whom?", "paragraph": "She was joined by a sizable crew of socialites, designers, models and do-gooding stars like Dakota Johnson and Michelle Rodriguez, many of whom opened their own wallets once the bidding began. (In a Milan season largely absent major front-row star power, it was the most celebrity-fueled gathering so far.) Isabeli Fontana, the Brazilian supermodel who was called onstage to hawk a six-liter bottle of Mo\u00ebt & Chandon (as well as a trip to \u00c9pernay, in France\u2019s Champagne country), was herself the winner of a 14-day vacation in the Maldives. Ms. Klum, auctioning an 11-foot-tall polyurethane snail sculpture by a collective called the Cracking Art Group, decided it must be hers. \u201cVito, I want the snail!\u201d she called to Vito Schnabel, her art-dealer and -curator boyfriend. Twenty thousand euros (about $22,383) later, it was hers. Altogether, the evening raised $1.6 million.", "answer": "Vito Schnabel", "sentence": "she called to Vito Schnabel , her art-dealer and -curator boyfriend.", "paragraph_sentence": "She was joined by a sizable crew of socialites, designers, models and do-gooding stars like Dakota Johnson and Michelle Rodriguez, many of whom opened their own wallets once the bidding began. (In a Milan season largely absent major front-row star power, it was the most celebrity-fueled gathering so far.) Isabeli Fontana, the Brazilian supermodel who was called onstage to hawk a six-liter bottle of Mo\u00ebt & Chandon (as well as a trip to \u00c9pernay, in France\u2019s Champagne country), was herself the winner of a 14-day vacation in the Maldives. Ms. Klum, auctioning an 11-foot-tall polyurethane snail sculpture by a collective called the Cracking Art Group, decided it must be hers. \u201cVito, I want the snail!\u201d she called to Vito Schnabel , her art-dealer and -curator boyfriend. Twenty thousand euros (about $22,383) later, it was hers. Altogether, the evening raised $1.6 million.", "paragraph_answer": "She was joined by a sizable crew of socialites, designers, models and do-gooding stars like Dakota Johnson and Michelle Rodriguez, many of whom opened their own wallets once the bidding began. (In a Milan season largely absent major front-row star power, it was the most celebrity-fueled gathering so far.) Isabeli Fontana, the Brazilian supermodel who was called onstage to hawk a six-liter bottle of Mo\u00ebt & Chandon (as well as a trip to \u00c9pernay, in France\u2019s Champagne country), was herself the winner of a 14-day vacation in the Maldives. Ms. Klum, auctioning an 11-foot-tall polyurethane snail sculpture by a collective called the Cracking Art Group, decided it must be hers. \u201cVito, I want the snail!\u201d she called to Vito Schnabel , her art-dealer and -curator boyfriend. Twenty thousand euros (about $22,383) later, it was hers. Altogether, the evening raised $1.6 million.", "sentence_answer": "she called to Vito Schnabel , her art-dealer and -curator boyfriend.", "paragraph_id": "5d70204dc8e4820a9b66cc13"} +{"question": "what does bottom and bread was considered to be?", "paragraph": "If you think bell bottoms and beads were the beginning and end of 1960s countercultural design, \u201cHippie Modernism: The Struggle for Utopia\u201d at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis has news. This was the decade, shading into the 1970s, whose architects created the Relaxation Cube, the walk-in Knowledge Box, inflatable Instant Cities and Microhouses for the masses. The Canadian designer Evelyn Roth crocheted heat-repelling car covers from discarded videotape film; the Italian Ettore Sottsass cooked up a tabletop dispenser for incense, LSD, opium and laughing gas.", "answer": "the beginning and end of 1960s countercultural design", "sentence": "If you think bell bottoms and beads were the beginning and end of 1960s countercultural design , \u201cHippie Modernism: The Struggle for Utopia\u201d at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis has news.", "paragraph_sentence": " If you think bell bottoms and beads were the beginning and end of 1960s countercultural design , \u201cHippie Modernism: The Struggle for Utopia\u201d at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis has news. This was the decade, shading into the 1970s, whose architects created the Relaxation Cube, the walk-in Knowledge Box, inflatable Instant Cities and Microhouses for the masses. The Canadian designer Evelyn Roth crocheted heat-repelling car covers from discarded videotape film; the Italian Ettore Sottsass cooked up a tabletop dispenser for incense, LSD, opium and laughing gas.", "paragraph_answer": "If you think bell bottoms and beads were the beginning and end of 1960s countercultural design , \u201cHippie Modernism: The Struggle for Utopia\u201d at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis has news. This was the decade, shading into the 1970s, whose architects created the Relaxation Cube, the walk-in Knowledge Box, inflatable Instant Cities and Microhouses for the masses. The Canadian designer Evelyn Roth crocheted heat-repelling car covers from discarded videotape film; the Italian Ettore Sottsass cooked up a tabletop dispenser for incense, LSD, opium and laughing gas.", "sentence_answer": "If you think bell bottoms and beads were the beginning and end of 1960s countercultural design , \u201cHippie Modernism: The Struggle for Utopia\u201d at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis has news.", "paragraph_id": "5d702b75c8e4820a9b66d906"} +{"question": "What is Bruno's nearest approach to a classic pizza pie?", "paragraph": "Rave reviews of items that have yet to be sold to a paying customer are less rare than you may think. A restaurant that hopes to get a respectable P.R. push out of the gate will often make a few of its more striking dishes available for advance photographs and tastings. As soon as the doors open, waves of impressions from bloggers, Yelpers, Instagrammers and others begin to pound the shoreline. Two critics from Eater were among the earliest customers of David Chang\u2019s Fuku, and their \u201cfirst reactions\u201d were posted about three hours after the first chicken sandwich was sold. There are reasons, though, for paid critics to give a new place like Bruno time to settle in. Pizza is not as simple as it appears. Getting it right takes time. Bruno\u2019s chefs, Justin Slojkowski and Dave Gulino, mill the flour in the basement from whole New York State wheat berries, and ferment it slowly with a sourdough starter. I don\u2019t know another local pizzeria that goes to these lengths, and you won\u2019t taste a crust like Bruno\u2019s anywhere else. What the raised perimeter lacks in crunch it makes up for in earthy, whole-grain flavor. But the crust has been slightly different each time I\u2019ve tried it. Most recently, it had a uniform fluffiness, a cushiony yet chewy softness, without big air pockets or blisters. When it comes to toppings, Mr. Slojkowski and Mr. Gulino don\u2019t play it safe, either. Their nearest approach to a classic pie is their margherita, with a sauce that incorporates sweet, juicy garlic and some fermented tomatoes. These give it a fizzy tang along with a slight saltiness. It takes some getting used to, but it interacts energetically with the white slicks of dense, rich mozzarella.", "answer": "margherita", "sentence": "Their nearest approach to a classic pie is their margherita , with a sauce that incorporates sweet, juicy garlic and some fermented tomatoes.", "paragraph_sentence": "Rave reviews of items that have yet to be sold to a paying customer are less rare than you may think. A restaurant that hopes to get a respectable P.R. push out of the gate will often make a few of its more striking dishes available for advance photographs and tastings. As soon as the doors open, waves of impressions from bloggers, Yelpers, Instagrammers and others begin to pound the shoreline. Two critics from Eater were among the earliest customers of David Chang\u2019s Fuku, and their \u201cfirst reactions\u201d were posted about three hours after the first chicken sandwich was sold. There are reasons, though, for paid critics to give a new place like Bruno time to settle in. Pizza is not as simple as it appears. Getting it right takes time. Bruno\u2019s chefs, Justin Slojkowski and Dave Gulino, mill the flour in the basement from whole New York State wheat berries, and ferment it slowly with a sourdough starter. I don\u2019t know another local pizzeria that goes to these lengths, and you won\u2019t taste a crust like Bruno\u2019s anywhere else. What the raised perimeter lacks in crunch it makes up for in earthy, whole-grain flavor. But the crust has been slightly different each time I\u2019ve tried it. Most recently, it had a uniform fluffiness, a cushiony yet chewy softness, without big air pockets or blisters. When it comes to toppings, Mr. Slojkowski and Mr. Gulino don\u2019t play it safe, either. Their nearest approach to a classic pie is their margherita , with a sauce that incorporates sweet, juicy garlic and some fermented tomatoes. These give it a fizzy tang along with a slight saltiness. It takes some getting used to, but it interacts energetically with the white slicks of dense, rich mozzarella.", "paragraph_answer": "Rave reviews of items that have yet to be sold to a paying customer are less rare than you may think. A restaurant that hopes to get a respectable P.R. push out of the gate will often make a few of its more striking dishes available for advance photographs and tastings. As soon as the doors open, waves of impressions from bloggers, Yelpers, Instagrammers and others begin to pound the shoreline. Two critics from Eater were among the earliest customers of David Chang\u2019s Fuku, and their \u201cfirst reactions\u201d were posted about three hours after the first chicken sandwich was sold. There are reasons, though, for paid critics to give a new place like Bruno time to settle in. Pizza is not as simple as it appears. Getting it right takes time. Bruno\u2019s chefs, Justin Slojkowski and Dave Gulino, mill the flour in the basement from whole New York State wheat berries, and ferment it slowly with a sourdough starter. I don\u2019t know another local pizzeria that goes to these lengths, and you won\u2019t taste a crust like Bruno\u2019s anywhere else. What the raised perimeter lacks in crunch it makes up for in earthy, whole-grain flavor. But the crust has been slightly different each time I\u2019ve tried it. Most recently, it had a uniform fluffiness, a cushiony yet chewy softness, without big air pockets or blisters. When it comes to toppings, Mr. Slojkowski and Mr. Gulino don\u2019t play it safe, either. Their nearest approach to a classic pie is their margherita , with a sauce that incorporates sweet, juicy garlic and some fermented tomatoes. These give it a fizzy tang along with a slight saltiness. It takes some getting used to, but it interacts energetically with the white slicks of dense, rich mozzarella.", "sentence_answer": "Their nearest approach to a classic pie is their margherita , with a sauce that incorporates sweet, juicy garlic and some fermented tomatoes.", "paragraph_id": "5d701e5bc8e4820a9b66c9e4"} +{"question": "what time of year did Mimi visit Sweet Briar?", "paragraph": "As a high school student in Battle Creek, Mich., Mimi Fahs dreamed of Wellesley, but it was freezing cold the day she visited. She saw Sweet Briar in the spring, \u201cand, oh my God, what a contrast,\u201d she said. Dr. Fahs, now 65 and a professor at the CUNY School of Public Health at Hunter College, was in Sweet Briar\u2019s class of \u201971. Her first day, she plastered her freshman dorm room with anti-Vietnam War posters. As it happened, her roommate, who was from North Carolina, had friends who were fighting there.", "answer": "in the spring", "sentence": "She saw Sweet Briar in the spring , \u201cand, oh my God, what a contrast,\u201d she said.", "paragraph_sentence": "As a high school student in Battle Creek, Mich., Mimi Fahs dreamed of Wellesley, but it was freezing cold the day she visited. She saw Sweet Briar in the spring , \u201cand, oh my God, what a contrast,\u201d she said. Dr. Fahs, now 65 and a professor at the CUNY School of Public Health at Hunter College, was in Sweet Briar\u2019s class of \u201971. Her first day, she plastered her freshman dorm room with anti-Vietnam War posters. As it happened, her roommate, who was from North Carolina, had friends who were fighting there.", "paragraph_answer": "As a high school student in Battle Creek, Mich., Mimi Fahs dreamed of Wellesley, but it was freezing cold the day she visited. She saw Sweet Briar in the spring , \u201cand, oh my God, what a contrast,\u201d she said. Dr. Fahs, now 65 and a professor at the CUNY School of Public Health at Hunter College, was in Sweet Briar\u2019s class of \u201971. Her first day, she plastered her freshman dorm room with anti-Vietnam War posters. As it happened, her roommate, who was from North Carolina, had friends who were fighting there.", "sentence_answer": "She saw Sweet Briar in the spring , \u201cand, oh my God, what a contrast,\u201d she said.", "paragraph_id": "5d703364c8e4820a9b66de5a"} +{"question": "Who describes Mr. Abbott's proposed carbon emission reduction targets as inadequate?", "paragraph": "Mr. Turnbull, who once used an expletive to describe Mr. Abbott\u2019s climate-change policies, said that carbon emissions reduction targets Mr. Abbott recently proposed, which have been criticized as inadequate by scientists and environmentalists, were \u201cvery substantial.\u201d", "answer": "scientists and environmentalists", "sentence": "Mr. Turnbull, who once used an expletive to describe Mr. Abbott\u2019s climate-change policies, said that carbon emissions reduction targets Mr. Abbott recently proposed, which have been criticized as inadequate by scientists and environmentalists , were \u201cvery substantial.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Turnbull, who once used an expletive to describe Mr. Abbott\u2019s climate-change policies, said that carbon emissions reduction targets Mr. Abbott recently proposed, which have been criticized as inadequate by scientists and environmentalists , were \u201cvery substantial.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Turnbull, who once used an expletive to describe Mr. Abbott\u2019s climate-change policies, said that carbon emissions reduction targets Mr. Abbott recently proposed, which have been criticized as inadequate by scientists and environmentalists , were \u201cvery substantial.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Turnbull, who once used an expletive to describe Mr. Abbott\u2019s climate-change policies, said that carbon emissions reduction targets Mr. Abbott recently proposed, which have been criticized as inadequate by scientists and environmentalists , were \u201cvery substantial.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d7011a5c8e4820a9b66be2b"} +{"question": "What does Boko Haram mean in English?", "paragraph": "But as our military pushes Boko Haram back, as it will, we must be ready to focus on what else must be done to counter the terrorists. We must address why it is that young people join Boko Haram. There are many reasons why vulnerable young people join militant groups, but among them are poverty and ignorance. Indeed Boko Haram \u2014 which translates in English, roughly, as \u201cWestern Education Is Sinful\u201d \u2014 preys on the perverted belief that the opportunities that education brings are sinful. If you are starving and young, and in search of answers as to why your life is so difficult, fundamentalism can be alluring. We know this for a fact because former members of Boko Haram have admitted it: They offer impressionable young people money and the promise of food, while the group\u2019s mentors twist their minds with fanaticism.", "answer": "\u201cWestern Education Is Sinful\u201d", "sentence": "Indeed Boko Haram \u2014 which translates in English, roughly, as \u201cWestern Education Is Sinful\u201d \u2014 preys on the perverted belief that the opportunities that education brings are sinful.", "paragraph_sentence": "But as our military pushes Boko Haram back, as it will, we must be ready to focus on what else must be done to counter the terrorists. We must address why it is that young people join Boko Haram. There are many reasons why vulnerable young people join militant groups, but among them are poverty and ignorance. Indeed Boko Haram \u2014 which translates in English, roughly, as \u201cWestern Education Is Sinful\u201d \u2014 preys on the perverted belief that the opportunities that education brings are sinful. If you are starving and young, and in search of answers as to why your life is so difficult, fundamentalism can be alluring. We know this for a fact because former members of Boko Haram have admitted it: They offer impressionable young people money and the promise of food, while the group\u2019s mentors twist their minds with fanaticism.", "paragraph_answer": "But as our military pushes Boko Haram back, as it will, we must be ready to focus on what else must be done to counter the terrorists. We must address why it is that young people join Boko Haram. There are many reasons why vulnerable young people join militant groups, but among them are poverty and ignorance. Indeed Boko Haram \u2014 which translates in English, roughly, as \u201cWestern Education Is Sinful\u201d \u2014 preys on the perverted belief that the opportunities that education brings are sinful. If you are starving and young, and in search of answers as to why your life is so difficult, fundamentalism can be alluring. We know this for a fact because former members of Boko Haram have admitted it: They offer impressionable young people money and the promise of food, while the group\u2019s mentors twist their minds with fanaticism.", "sentence_answer": "Indeed Boko Haram \u2014 which translates in English, roughly, as \u201cWestern Education Is Sinful\u201d \u2014 preys on the perverted belief that the opportunities that education brings are sinful.", "paragraph_id": "5d705d8cc8e4820a9b66ef8b"} +{"question": "The line has been made unclear between sportswear and what?", "paragraph": "The blurring of lines between sports and ready-to-wear via that hybrid known as athleisure wear has only exacerbated the situation. Indeed, brands increasingly unveil their \u201ccollections\u201d weeks in advance so consumers can Get the Look. Athletic brands, that is. Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon, where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open, in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most nontennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach.", "answer": "athleisure", "sentence": "The blurring of lines between sports and ready-to-wear via that hybrid known as athleisure wear has only exacerbated the situation.", "paragraph_sentence": " The blurring of lines between sports and ready-to-wear via that hybrid known as athleisure wear has only exacerbated the situation. Indeed, brands increasingly unveil their \u201ccollections\u201d weeks in advance so consumers can Get the Look. Athletic brands, that is. Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon, where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open, in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most nontennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach.", "paragraph_answer": "The blurring of lines between sports and ready-to-wear via that hybrid known as athleisure wear has only exacerbated the situation. Indeed, brands increasingly unveil their \u201ccollections\u201d weeks in advance so consumers can Get the Look. Athletic brands, that is. Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon, where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open, in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most nontennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach.", "sentence_answer": "The blurring of lines between sports and ready-to-wear via that hybrid known as athleisure wear has only exacerbated the situation.", "paragraph_id": "5d701892c8e4820a9b66c4af"} +{"question": "What beers seemed to be imitations of American beers?", "paragraph": "My two days in Leeds included a number of modern taverns and extremely up-to-date craft brews, but I wanted to find out more about Yorkshire\u2019s most traditional breweries, and what it was that made the half-pints of old-style bitter and mild so delicious. Magic Rock\u2019s IPAs were good, but I could hardly tell one from the other, and all of them seemed to be imitations of American beers, while the bitters and milds felt as much a part of the region as the moors and the old textile mills. When I had emailed Timothy Taylor to request a tour, the response came back that they do not offer tours, instead suggesting that I visit the Black Sheep brewery in the remote North Yorkshire village of Masham. And so, after 42 minutes on a high-speed train to the town of Thirsk and a 15-minute taxi ride across beautiful North Yorkshire farmland, I arrived at the Black Sheep brewery just as a tour was beginning. The brewery, I learned, had opened in 1992, when one of the Theakstons had split from the local Theakston brewery, starting a second major beer producer in a town of just over a thousand inhabitants.", "answer": "Magic Rock\u2019s IPAs", "sentence": "Magic Rock\u2019s IPAs were good, but I could hardly tell one from the other, and all of them seemed to be imitations of American beers, while the bitters and milds felt as much a part of the region as the moors and the old textile mills.", "paragraph_sentence": "My two days in Leeds included a number of modern taverns and extremely up-to-date craft brews, but I wanted to find out more about Yorkshire\u2019s most traditional breweries, and what it was that made the half-pints of old-style bitter and mild so delicious. Magic Rock\u2019s IPAs were good, but I could hardly tell one from the other, and all of them seemed to be imitations of American beers, while the bitters and milds felt as much a part of the region as the moors and the old textile mills. When I had emailed Timothy Taylor to request a tour, the response came back that they do not offer tours, instead suggesting that I visit the Black Sheep brewery in the remote North Yorkshire village of Masham. And so, after 42 minutes on a high-speed train to the town of Thirsk and a 15-minute taxi ride across beautiful North Yorkshire farmland, I arrived at the Black Sheep brewery just as a tour was beginning. The brewery, I learned, had opened in 1992, when one of the Theakstons had split from the local Theakston brewery, starting a second major beer producer in a town of just over a thousand inhabitants.", "paragraph_answer": "My two days in Leeds included a number of modern taverns and extremely up-to-date craft brews, but I wanted to find out more about Yorkshire\u2019s most traditional breweries, and what it was that made the half-pints of old-style bitter and mild so delicious. Magic Rock\u2019s IPAs were good, but I could hardly tell one from the other, and all of them seemed to be imitations of American beers, while the bitters and milds felt as much a part of the region as the moors and the old textile mills. When I had emailed Timothy Taylor to request a tour, the response came back that they do not offer tours, instead suggesting that I visit the Black Sheep brewery in the remote North Yorkshire village of Masham. And so, after 42 minutes on a high-speed train to the town of Thirsk and a 15-minute taxi ride across beautiful North Yorkshire farmland, I arrived at the Black Sheep brewery just as a tour was beginning. The brewery, I learned, had opened in 1992, when one of the Theakstons had split from the local Theakston brewery, starting a second major beer producer in a town of just over a thousand inhabitants.", "sentence_answer": " Magic Rock\u2019s IPAs were good, but I could hardly tell one from the other, and all of them seemed to be imitations of American beers, while the bitters and milds felt as much a part of the region as the moors and the old textile mills.", "paragraph_id": "5d703751c8e4820a9b66e09e"} +{"question": "Analysts do not expect a quick decision concerning what?", "paragraph": "Replacing the cardinal will be one of Francis\u2019 most complicated and important tasks. He will travel throughout the island, meeting different bishops and church figures. It should allow him to make a personal evaluation of the next potential leader of the Cuban church, though analysts do not expect a decision soon. \u201cThere are not a lot of bishops in Cuba,\u201d said Gianni La Bella, an expert in Latin American Catholicism and a member of the Community of Sant\u2019Egidio, a liberal Catholic group active in international affairs. \u201cIt is not easy to choose the right man for the place.\u201d", "answer": "the next potential leader of the Cuban church", "sentence": "It should allow him to make a personal evaluation of the next potential leader of the Cuban church , though analysts do not expect a decision soon.", "paragraph_sentence": "Replacing the cardinal will be one of Francis\u2019 most complicated and important tasks. He will travel throughout the island, meeting different bishops and church figures. It should allow him to make a personal evaluation of the next potential leader of the Cuban church , though analysts do not expect a decision soon. \u201cThere are not a lot of bishops in Cuba,\u201d said Gianni La Bella, an expert in Latin American Catholicism and a member of the Community of Sant\u2019Egidio, a liberal Catholic group active in international affairs. \u201cIt is not easy to choose the right man for the place.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Replacing the cardinal will be one of Francis\u2019 most complicated and important tasks. He will travel throughout the island, meeting different bishops and church figures. It should allow him to make a personal evaluation of the next potential leader of the Cuban church , though analysts do not expect a decision soon. \u201cThere are not a lot of bishops in Cuba,\u201d said Gianni La Bella, an expert in Latin American Catholicism and a member of the Community of Sant\u2019Egidio, a liberal Catholic group active in international affairs. \u201cIt is not easy to choose the right man for the place.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "It should allow him to make a personal evaluation of the next potential leader of the Cuban church , though analysts do not expect a decision soon.", "paragraph_id": "5d701801c8e4820a9b66c402"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700b0fc8e4820a9b66b563"} +{"question": "What team did James play for Tuesday night?", "paragraph": "For that reason, Brown\u2019s task in 1964 seems a little easier than the one James faces now. James\u2019s group, defying the odds, turned back Golden State in Games 2 and 3 to give Cleveland a two-games-to-one series lead, when few people were giving them much of a chance to actually take four games against the Warriors and win the N.B.A. title. Still, to have any shot, James, who had 40 points, 12 rebounds and 8 assists in the Cavaliers\u2019 96-91 win Tuesday night, will do well to keep to Brown\u2019s blueprint.", "answer": "Cavaliers", "sentence": "Still, to have any shot, James, who had 40 points, 12 rebounds and 8 assists in the Cavaliers \u2019 96-91 win Tuesday night, will do well to keep to Brown\u2019s blueprint.", "paragraph_sentence": "For that reason, Brown\u2019s task in 1964 seems a little easier than the one James faces now. James\u2019s group, defying the odds, turned back Golden State in Games 2 and 3 to give Cleveland a two-games-to-one series lead, when few people were giving them much of a chance to actually take four games against the Warriors and win the N.B.A. title. Still, to have any shot, James, who had 40 points, 12 rebounds and 8 assists in the Cavaliers \u2019 96-91 win Tuesday night, will do well to keep to Brown\u2019s blueprint. ", "paragraph_answer": "For that reason, Brown\u2019s task in 1964 seems a little easier than the one James faces now. James\u2019s group, defying the odds, turned back Golden State in Games 2 and 3 to give Cleveland a two-games-to-one series lead, when few people were giving them much of a chance to actually take four games against the Warriors and win the N.B.A. title. Still, to have any shot, James, who had 40 points, 12 rebounds and 8 assists in the Cavaliers \u2019 96-91 win Tuesday night, will do well to keep to Brown\u2019s blueprint.", "sentence_answer": "Still, to have any shot, James, who had 40 points, 12 rebounds and 8 assists in the Cavaliers \u2019 96-91 win Tuesday night, will do well to keep to Brown\u2019s blueprint.", "paragraph_id": "5d702607c8e4820a9b66d24d"} +{"question": "Which movie did Mr. Williams earn his first Academy Award nomination for?", "paragraph": "Mr. Brezner, who began his professional life as a New York City public-school teacher, managed a stable of artists that over the years also included Bette Midler, David Letterman, Robert Klein and Martin Short. He produced more than a dozen feature films, including \u201cThrow Momma From the Train\u201d (1987), starring Mr. Crystal and Danny DeVito, and \u201cGood Morning, Vietnam\u201d (1987), for which Mr. Williams earned his first Academy Award nomination. (The best actor Oscar that year went to Michael Douglas for \u201cWall Street.\u201d) At his death a principal in Brezner Steinberg Partners, based in Beverly Hills, Calif., Mr. Brezner was known throughout his career as an astute handicapper of comic talent.", "answer": "Good Morning, Vietnam", "sentence": "He produced more than a dozen feature films, including \u201cThrow Momma From the Train\u201d (1987), starring Mr. Crystal and Danny DeVito, and \u201c Good Morning, Vietnam \u201d (1987), for which Mr. Williams earned his first Academy Award nomination.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Brezner, who began his professional life as a New York City public-school teacher, managed a stable of artists that over the years also included Bette Midler, David Letterman, Robert Klein and Martin Short. He produced more than a dozen feature films, including \u201cThrow Momma From the Train\u201d (1987), starring Mr. Crystal and Danny DeVito, and \u201c Good Morning, Vietnam \u201d (1987), for which Mr. Williams earned his first Academy Award nomination. (The best actor Oscar that year went to Michael Douglas for \u201cWall Street.\u201d) At his death a principal in Brezner Steinberg Partners, based in Beverly Hills, Calif., Mr. Brezner was known throughout his career as an astute handicapper of comic talent.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Brezner, who began his professional life as a New York City public-school teacher, managed a stable of artists that over the years also included Bette Midler, David Letterman, Robert Klein and Martin Short. He produced more than a dozen feature films, including \u201cThrow Momma From the Train\u201d (1987), starring Mr. Crystal and Danny DeVito, and \u201c Good Morning, Vietnam \u201d (1987), for which Mr. Williams earned his first Academy Award nomination. (The best actor Oscar that year went to Michael Douglas for \u201cWall Street.\u201d) At his death a principal in Brezner Steinberg Partners, based in Beverly Hills, Calif., Mr. Brezner was known throughout his career as an astute handicapper of comic talent.", "sentence_answer": "He produced more than a dozen feature films, including \u201cThrow Momma From the Train\u201d (1987), starring Mr. Crystal and Danny DeVito, and \u201c Good Morning, Vietnam \u201d (1987), for which Mr. Williams earned his first Academy Award nomination.", "paragraph_id": "5d700db7c8e4820a9b66b955"} +{"question": "What do criminals use to file fraudulent returns?", "paragraph": "Last week\u2019s suspension of some electronic state tax filings because of a sudden increase in fraudulent returns highlights the need for consumers to track potential misuse of their personal information, especially at tax time. In tax-refund fraud, criminals file a tax return using someone else\u2019s Social Security number to collect a refund. Taxpayers often learn of the fraud when they file a legitimate return, only to find one has already been processed in their name. It can take weeks or months before the situation is resolved and taxpayers receive their rightful refund.", "answer": "someone else\u2019s Social Security number", "sentence": "In tax-refund fraud, criminals file a tax return using someone else\u2019s Social Security number to collect a refund.", "paragraph_sentence": "Last week\u2019s suspension of some electronic state tax filings because of a sudden increase in fraudulent returns highlights the need for consumers to track potential misuse of their personal information, especially at tax time. In tax-refund fraud, criminals file a tax return using someone else\u2019s Social Security number to collect a refund. Taxpayers often learn of the fraud when they file a legitimate return, only to find one has already been processed in their name. It can take weeks or months before the situation is resolved and taxpayers receive their rightful refund.", "paragraph_answer": "Last week\u2019s suspension of some electronic state tax filings because of a sudden increase in fraudulent returns highlights the need for consumers to track potential misuse of their personal information, especially at tax time. In tax-refund fraud, criminals file a tax return using someone else\u2019s Social Security number to collect a refund. Taxpayers often learn of the fraud when they file a legitimate return, only to find one has already been processed in their name. It can take weeks or months before the situation is resolved and taxpayers receive their rightful refund.", "sentence_answer": "In tax-refund fraud, criminals file a tax return using someone else\u2019s Social Security number to collect a refund.", "paragraph_id": "5d703f3fc8e4820a9b66e45e"} +{"question": "Who hosted the KPFA radio show where Mr. Shoemaker first heard Mr. Connell?", "paragraph": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "answer": "Kenneth Rexroth", "sentence": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth .", "paragraph_sentence": " Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth . \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth . \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth .", "paragraph_id": "5d701b9ac8e4820a9b66c700"} +{"question": "What country needed instructions from the Americans?", "paragraph": "In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians\u2019 soldierly skills lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction. \u201cI came into it expecting them not to know much of the basics,\u201d said Sgt. Michael Faranda, who is teaching maneuvers. He was correct. Things \u201cevery soldier should know,\u201d he said, they did not. Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises. Still, Sergeant Faranda said, the Ukrainians\u2019 willingness to go into combat was all the more notable for their lack of preparation for it.", "answer": "Ukrainians", "sentence": "In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians \u2019 soldierly skills lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction.", "paragraph_sentence": " In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians \u2019 soldierly skills lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction. \u201cI came into it expecting them not to know much of the basics,\u201d said Sgt. Michael Faranda, who is teaching maneuvers. He was correct. Things \u201cevery soldier should know,\u201d he said, they did not. Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises. Still, Sergeant Faranda said, the Ukrainians\u2019 willingness to go into combat was all the more notable for their lack of preparation for it.", "paragraph_answer": "In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians \u2019 soldierly skills lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction. \u201cI came into it expecting them not to know much of the basics,\u201d said Sgt. Michael Faranda, who is teaching maneuvers. He was correct. Things \u201cevery soldier should know,\u201d he said, they did not. Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises. Still, Sergeant Faranda said, the Ukrainians\u2019 willingness to go into combat was all the more notable for their lack of preparation for it.", "sentence_answer": "In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians \u2019 soldierly skills lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026e8c8e4820a9b66d40b"} +{"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 .", "paragraph_id": "5d700c65c8e4820a9b66b782"} +{"question": "What do some soldiers forget on their first day of excercise", "paragraph": "In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians\u2019 soldierly skills lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction. \u201cI came into it expecting them not to know much of the basics,\u201d said Sgt. Michael Faranda, who is teaching maneuvers. He was correct. Things \u201cevery soldier should know,\u201d he said, they did not. Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises. Still, Sergeant Faranda said, the Ukrainians\u2019 willingness to go into combat was all the more notable for their lack of preparation for it.", "answer": "helmets", "sentence": "Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises.", "paragraph_sentence": "In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians\u2019 soldierly skills lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction. \u201cI came into it expecting them not to know much of the basics,\u201d said Sgt. Michael Faranda, who is teaching maneuvers. He was correct. Things \u201cevery soldier should know,\u201d he said, they did not. Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises. Still, Sergeant Faranda said, the Ukrainians\u2019 willingness to go into combat was all the more notable for their lack of preparation for it.", "paragraph_answer": "In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians\u2019 soldierly skills lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction. \u201cI came into it expecting them not to know much of the basics,\u201d said Sgt. Michael Faranda, who is teaching maneuvers. He was correct. Things \u201cevery soldier should know,\u201d he said, they did not. Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises. Still, Sergeant Faranda said, the Ukrainians\u2019 willingness to go into combat was all the more notable for their lack of preparation for it.", "sentence_answer": "Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026e9c8e4820a9b66d438"} +{"question": "After Seattle led by 24-14, how many touchdowns did New England score?", "paragraph": "But the Super Bowl was full of drama minus the courtroom. The game had all the classic ingredients, including a contrast in coaching styles, with the dour and opaque Belichick in charge of the Patriots and the animated chatterbox Pete Carroll directing the Seahawks. It was 14-14 at halftime, then 24-14 in favor of Seattle in the fourth quarter, and then it really got good: Brady and New England rallied to score two touchdowns and take a 28-24 lead, only to see Seattle and the quarterback Russell Wilson move the ball back down the field in a beautiful hurry.", "answer": "two", "sentence": "It was 14-14 at halftime, then 24-14 in favor of Seattle in the fourth quarter, and then it really got good: Brady and New England rallied to score two touchdowns and take a 28-24 lead, only to see Seattle and the quarterback Russell Wilson move the ball back down the field in a beautiful hurry.", "paragraph_sentence": "But the Super Bowl was full of drama minus the courtroom. The game had all the classic ingredients, including a contrast in coaching styles, with the dour and opaque Belichick in charge of the Patriots and the animated chatterbox Pete Carroll directing the Seahawks. It was 14-14 at halftime, then 24-14 in favor of Seattle in the fourth quarter, and then it really got good: Brady and New England rallied to score two touchdowns and take a 28-24 lead, only to see Seattle and the quarterback Russell Wilson move the ball back down the field in a beautiful hurry. ", "paragraph_answer": "But the Super Bowl was full of drama minus the courtroom. The game had all the classic ingredients, including a contrast in coaching styles, with the dour and opaque Belichick in charge of the Patriots and the animated chatterbox Pete Carroll directing the Seahawks. It was 14-14 at halftime, then 24-14 in favor of Seattle in the fourth quarter, and then it really got good: Brady and New England rallied to score two touchdowns and take a 28-24 lead, only to see Seattle and the quarterback Russell Wilson move the ball back down the field in a beautiful hurry.", "sentence_answer": "It was 14-14 at halftime, then 24-14 in favor of Seattle in the fourth quarter, and then it really got good: Brady and New England rallied to score two touchdowns and take a 28-24 lead, only to see Seattle and the quarterback Russell Wilson move the ball back down the field in a beautiful hurry.", "paragraph_id": "5d70124ac8e4820a9b66bead"} +{"question": "how well did Flanagan do in the event in the prior year?", "paragraph": "BOSTON \u2014 The American men ended their slump in the Boston Marathon when Meb Keflezighi won in 2014, a cathartic victory that enabled \u201cThe Star-Spangled Banner\u201d to play over Boylston Street one year after bombs had exploded there. This year, the United States women are hoping to end a drought that has lasted 30 years. \u201cThe marathon gods blessed Meb with that run; it was electric,\u201d said Shalane Flanagan, a native of Marblehead, Mass., who grew up following the race as the daughter of two marathoners. Flanagan finished fourth in 2013 and seventh last year in 2 hours 22 minutes 2 seconds \u2014 the career best for an American woman on the Boston course. \u201cLast year was extremely special, just being an American,\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s a run I\u2019ll never, ever forget.\u201d The 119th edition of the Boston Marathon is scheduled to leave Hopkinton, Mass., on Monday morning, and this year\u2019s field gives the United States two chances for its first women\u2019s victory since Lisa Weidenbach won in 1985. Joining Flanagan is Desiree Linden, who finished second in Boston in 2011.", "answer": "Flanagan finished fourth", "sentence": "Flanagan finished fourth in 2013 and seventh last year in 2 hours 22 minutes 2 seconds \u2014 the career best for an American woman on the Boston course.", "paragraph_sentence": "BOSTON \u2014 The American men ended their slump in the Boston Marathon when Meb Keflezighi won in 2014, a cathartic victory that enabled \u201cThe Star-Spangled Banner\u201d to play over Boylston Street one year after bombs had exploded there. This year, the United States women are hoping to end a drought that has lasted 30 years. \u201cThe marathon gods blessed Meb with that run; it was electric,\u201d said Shalane Flanagan, a native of Marblehead, Mass., who grew up following the race as the daughter of two marathoners. Flanagan finished fourth in 2013 and seventh last year in 2 hours 22 minutes 2 seconds \u2014 the career best for an American woman on the Boston course. \u201cLast year was extremely special, just being an American,\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s a run I\u2019ll never, ever forget.\u201d The 119th edition of the Boston Marathon is scheduled to leave Hopkinton, Mass., on Monday morning, and this year\u2019s field gives the United States two chances for its first women\u2019s victory since Lisa Weidenbach won in 1985. Joining Flanagan is Desiree Linden, who finished second in Boston in 2011.", "paragraph_answer": "BOSTON \u2014 The American men ended their slump in the Boston Marathon when Meb Keflezighi won in 2014, a cathartic victory that enabled \u201cThe Star-Spangled Banner\u201d to play over Boylston Street one year after bombs had exploded there. This year, the United States women are hoping to end a drought that has lasted 30 years. \u201cThe marathon gods blessed Meb with that run; it was electric,\u201d said Shalane Flanagan, a native of Marblehead, Mass., who grew up following the race as the daughter of two marathoners. Flanagan finished fourth in 2013 and seventh last year in 2 hours 22 minutes 2 seconds \u2014 the career best for an American woman on the Boston course. \u201cLast year was extremely special, just being an American,\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s a run I\u2019ll never, ever forget.\u201d The 119th edition of the Boston Marathon is scheduled to leave Hopkinton, Mass., on Monday morning, and this year\u2019s field gives the United States two chances for its first women\u2019s victory since Lisa Weidenbach won in 1985. Joining Flanagan is Desiree Linden, who finished second in Boston in 2011.", "sentence_answer": " Flanagan finished fourth in 2013 and seventh last year in 2 hours 22 minutes 2 seconds \u2014 the career best for an American woman on the Boston course.", "paragraph_id": "5d702992c8e4820a9b66d727"} +{"question": "What factors contribute Tupperware's rise in these countries.", "paragraph": "Once a fixture in middle-class American kitchens, Tupperware has become a bit of an afterthought in its home country even as its popularity has risen abroad. (Germany was the top marketplace until Indonesia slid past it two years ago.) Indonesia is, in many ways, in Tupperware\u2019s sweet spot. As the economy has taken off in recent years, an expanding middle class now has more disposable income for containers of all shapes and sizes that are sturdier than those found in local markets. And, as in 1960s America, many women stay at home to keep house and raise their children, creating a captive audience for parties run by saleswomen who have begun to sidle past conservative social mores and into the work force.", "answer": "economy has taken off in recent years, an expanding middle class now has more disposable income", "sentence": "As the economy has taken off in recent years, an expanding middle class now has more disposable income for containers of all shapes and sizes that are sturdier than those found in local markets.", "paragraph_sentence": "Once a fixture in middle-class American kitchens, Tupperware has become a bit of an afterthought in its home country even as its popularity has risen abroad. (Germany was the top marketplace until Indonesia slid past it two years ago.) Indonesia is, in many ways, in Tupperware\u2019s sweet spot. As the economy has taken off in recent years, an expanding middle class now has more disposable income for containers of all shapes and sizes that are sturdier than those found in local markets. And, as in 1960s America, many women stay at home to keep house and raise their children, creating a captive audience for parties run by saleswomen who have begun to sidle past conservative social mores and into the work force.", "paragraph_answer": "Once a fixture in middle-class American kitchens, Tupperware has become a bit of an afterthought in its home country even as its popularity has risen abroad. (Germany was the top marketplace until Indonesia slid past it two years ago.) Indonesia is, in many ways, in Tupperware\u2019s sweet spot. As the economy has taken off in recent years, an expanding middle class now has more disposable income for containers of all shapes and sizes that are sturdier than those found in local markets. And, as in 1960s America, many women stay at home to keep house and raise their children, creating a captive audience for parties run by saleswomen who have begun to sidle past conservative social mores and into the work force.", "sentence_answer": "As the economy has taken off in recent years, an expanding middle class now has more disposable income for containers of all shapes and sizes that are sturdier than those found in local markets.", "paragraph_id": "5d700eb0c8e4820a9b66ba9c"} +{"question": "Which large national company changed its position on Hutchinson's plan?", "paragraph": "Some critics of the bill welcomed Mr. Hutchinson\u2019s plan. Walmart, which had denounced the law, commended the governor in a brief statement, while Chad Griffin, the president of the Human Rights Campaign, who was at the Capitol on Wednesday, expressed \u201ccautious optimism.\u201d Proponents of the bill were less positive. In the immediate aftermath of Mr. Hutchinson\u2019s statement, Jerry Cox, the president of the Arkansas-based Family Council, a conservative lobbing group, was more succinct: \u201cNo bill or no amendment, that\u2019s our position right now.\u201d Already in his young term, Mr. Hutchinson, who was previously a United States representative and a federal official, has navigated such partisan topics as Medicaid expansion and Common Core and arrived at solutions that, at least in the short term, left most people satisfied. \u201cHe\u2019s the MacGyver of American politics,\u201d said Bill Vickery, a lobbyist in Little Rock, referring to the television character famous for his ability to defuse bombs. The governor was flanked at the news conference by Jonathan Dismang, the president pro tem of the Senate, and Jeremy Gillam, the House speaker, both Republicans who have reputations for moderate pragmatism. Both expressed support for the governor but acknowledged the work it would take for the members of their chambers, which have Republican majorities, to go along.", "answer": "Walmart", "sentence": "Walmart , which had denounced the law, commended the governor in a brief statement, while Chad Griffin, the president of the Human Rights Campaign, who was at the Capitol on Wednesday, expressed \u201ccautious optimism.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Some critics of the bill welcomed Mr. Hutchinson\u2019s plan. Walmart , which had denounced the law, commended the governor in a brief statement, while Chad Griffin, the president of the Human Rights Campaign, who was at the Capitol on Wednesday, expressed \u201ccautious optimism.\u201d Proponents of the bill were less positive. In the immediate aftermath of Mr. Hutchinson\u2019s statement, Jerry Cox, the president of the Arkansas-based Family Council, a conservative lobbing group, was more succinct: \u201cNo bill or no amendment, that\u2019s our position right now.\u201d Already in his young term, Mr. Hutchinson, who was previously a United States representative and a federal official, has navigated such partisan topics as Medicaid expansion and Common Core and arrived at solutions that, at least in the short term, left most people satisfied. \u201cHe\u2019s the MacGyver of American politics,\u201d said Bill Vickery, a lobbyist in Little Rock, referring to the television character famous for his ability to defuse bombs. The governor was flanked at the news conference by Jonathan Dismang, the president pro tem of the Senate, and Jeremy Gillam, the House speaker, both Republicans who have reputations for moderate pragmatism. Both expressed support for the governor but acknowledged the work it would take for the members of their chambers, which have Republican majorities, to go along.", "paragraph_answer": "Some critics of the bill welcomed Mr. Hutchinson\u2019s plan. Walmart , which had denounced the law, commended the governor in a brief statement, while Chad Griffin, the president of the Human Rights Campaign, who was at the Capitol on Wednesday, expressed \u201ccautious optimism.\u201d Proponents of the bill were less positive. In the immediate aftermath of Mr. Hutchinson\u2019s statement, Jerry Cox, the president of the Arkansas-based Family Council, a conservative lobbing group, was more succinct: \u201cNo bill or no amendment, that\u2019s our position right now.\u201d Already in his young term, Mr. Hutchinson, who was previously a United States representative and a federal official, has navigated such partisan topics as Medicaid expansion and Common Core and arrived at solutions that, at least in the short term, left most people satisfied. \u201cHe\u2019s the MacGyver of American politics,\u201d said Bill Vickery, a lobbyist in Little Rock, referring to the television character famous for his ability to defuse bombs. The governor was flanked at the news conference by Jonathan Dismang, the president pro tem of the Senate, and Jeremy Gillam, the House speaker, both Republicans who have reputations for moderate pragmatism. Both expressed support for the governor but acknowledged the work it would take for the members of their chambers, which have Republican majorities, to go along.", "sentence_answer": " Walmart , which had denounced the law, commended the governor in a brief statement, while Chad Griffin, the president of the Human Rights Campaign, who was at the Capitol on Wednesday, expressed \u201ccautious optimism.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d700d16c8e4820a9b66b8a7"} +{"question": "To which state was the wolverine being sent to?", "paragraph": "If there were a manual for transporting wolverines, Rule No. 1 would probably go something like this: Make sure the wolverine cannot get out of the cage. At Newark Liberty International Airport on Tuesday, it became clear that this precaution had not been taken. A 40-pound male wolverine named Kasper was being shipped from a zoo in Norway to a conservation park in Alaska. At around 3:30 p.m., he arrived in Newark to change planes and go through United States Customs. It was there that the animal\u2019s handler, Sarah Howard, noticed there was a hole in Kasper\u2019s cage. \u201cHis head was sticking out,\u201d said Ms. Howard, a curator for the Alaska Wildlife Conservation Center, the wolverine\u2019s intended new home. She had flown to Newark to meet him. The cage was made of metal, said Joseph Pentangelo, a spokesman for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which runs the airport. \u201cIt\u2019s believed he chewed a hole in it.\u201d", "answer": "Alaska", "sentence": "A 40-pound male wolverine named Kasper was being shipped from a zoo in Norway to a conservation park in Alaska .", "paragraph_sentence": "If there were a manual for transporting wolverines, Rule No. 1 would probably go something like this: Make sure the wolverine cannot get out of the cage. At Newark Liberty International Airport on Tuesday, it became clear that this precaution had not been taken. A 40-pound male wolverine named Kasper was being shipped from a zoo in Norway to a conservation park in Alaska . At around 3:30 p.m., he arrived in Newark to change planes and go through United States Customs. It was there that the animal\u2019s handler, Sarah Howard, noticed there was a hole in Kasper\u2019s cage. \u201cHis head was sticking out,\u201d said Ms. Howard, a curator for the Alaska Wildlife Conservation Center, the wolverine\u2019s intended new home. She had flown to Newark to meet him. The cage was made of metal, said Joseph Pentangelo, a spokesman for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which runs the airport. \u201cIt\u2019s believed he chewed a hole in it.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "If there were a manual for transporting wolverines, Rule No. 1 would probably go something like this: Make sure the wolverine cannot get out of the cage. At Newark Liberty International Airport on Tuesday, it became clear that this precaution had not been taken. A 40-pound male wolverine named Kasper was being shipped from a zoo in Norway to a conservation park in Alaska . At around 3:30 p.m., he arrived in Newark to change planes and go through United States Customs. It was there that the animal\u2019s handler, Sarah Howard, noticed there was a hole in Kasper\u2019s cage. \u201cHis head was sticking out,\u201d said Ms. Howard, a curator for the Alaska Wildlife Conservation Center, the wolverine\u2019s intended new home. She had flown to Newark to meet him. The cage was made of metal, said Joseph Pentangelo, a spokesman for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which runs the airport. \u201cIt\u2019s believed he chewed a hole in it.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "A 40-pound male wolverine named Kasper was being shipped from a zoo in Norway to a conservation park in Alaska .", "paragraph_id": "5d702ce9c8e4820a9b66da6d"} +{"question": "What is Boire's plan to change Barnes and Noble's image?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe didn\u2019t have any money, and my mother was a voracious reader,\u201d he said. \u201cI remember telling a friend, when I grow up, I want to be able to afford hardcover books.\u201d Mr. Boire, who took the helm as chief executive of Barnes & Noble in September, still seems to have a soft spot for physical books. Walking through the first floor of a Barnes & Noble store in Union Square in Manhattan recently, Mr. Boire couldn\u2019t help himself from reflexively straightening the jagged piles of books on the display tables so that the spines lined up neatly. Now Mr. Boire, 54, the former chief executive of Sears Canada and a retail veteran who has worked at Brookstone, Best Buy and Toys \u201cR\u201d Us, is under pressure to reverse the fortunes of the beleaguered bookstore chain, which has been stung in recent years by the rise of Amazon, steep losses from its Nook e-reader division and a string of store closings. To that end, Mr. Boire is leading a push to rebrand Barnes & Noble as more than just a bookstore by expanding its offerings of toys, games, gadgets and other gifts and reshaping the nation\u2019s largest bookstore chain into a \u201clifestyle brand.\u201d \u201cEverything we do around learning, personal growth and development fits our brand,\u201d Mr. Boire said. \u201cThere\u2019s a lot of opportunity.\u201d", "answer": "reshaping the nation\u2019s largest bookstore chain into a \u201clifestyle brand.\u201d", "sentence": "To that end, Mr. Boire is leading a push to rebrand Barnes & Noble as more than just a bookstore by expanding its offerings of toys, games, gadgets and other gifts and reshaping the nation\u2019s largest bookstore chain into a \u201clifestyle brand.\u201d \u201cEverything we do around learning, personal growth and development fits our brand,\u201d Mr. Boire said.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe didn\u2019t have any money, and my mother was a voracious reader,\u201d he said. \u201cI remember telling a friend, when I grow up, I want to be able to afford hardcover books.\u201d Mr. Boire, who took the helm as chief executive of Barnes & Noble in September, still seems to have a soft spot for physical books. Walking through the first floor of a Barnes & Noble store in Union Square in Manhattan recently, Mr. Boire couldn\u2019t help himself from reflexively straightening the jagged piles of books on the display tables so that the spines lined up neatly. Now Mr. Boire, 54, the former chief executive of Sears Canada and a retail veteran who has worked at Brookstone, Best Buy and Toys \u201cR\u201d Us, is under pressure to reverse the fortunes of the beleaguered bookstore chain, which has been stung in recent years by the rise of Amazon, steep losses from its Nook e-reader division and a string of store closings. To that end, Mr. Boire is leading a push to rebrand Barnes & Noble as more than just a bookstore by expanding its offerings of toys, games, gadgets and other gifts and reshaping the nation\u2019s largest bookstore chain into a \u201clifestyle brand.\u201d \u201cEverything we do around learning, personal growth and development fits our brand,\u201d Mr. Boire said. \u201cThere\u2019s a lot of opportunity.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe didn\u2019t have any money, and my mother was a voracious reader,\u201d he said. \u201cI remember telling a friend, when I grow up, I want to be able to afford hardcover books.\u201d Mr. Boire, who took the helm as chief executive of Barnes & Noble in September, still seems to have a soft spot for physical books. Walking through the first floor of a Barnes & Noble store in Union Square in Manhattan recently, Mr. Boire couldn\u2019t help himself from reflexively straightening the jagged piles of books on the display tables so that the spines lined up neatly. Now Mr. Boire, 54, the former chief executive of Sears Canada and a retail veteran who has worked at Brookstone, Best Buy and Toys \u201cR\u201d Us, is under pressure to reverse the fortunes of the beleaguered bookstore chain, which has been stung in recent years by the rise of Amazon, steep losses from its Nook e-reader division and a string of store closings. To that end, Mr. Boire is leading a push to rebrand Barnes & Noble as more than just a bookstore by expanding its offerings of toys, games, gadgets and other gifts and reshaping the nation\u2019s largest bookstore chain into a \u201clifestyle brand.\u201d \u201cEverything we do around learning, personal growth and development fits our brand,\u201d Mr. Boire said. \u201cThere\u2019s a lot of opportunity.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "To that end, Mr. Boire is leading a push to rebrand Barnes & Noble as more than just a bookstore by expanding its offerings of toys, games, gadgets and other gifts and reshaping the nation\u2019s largest bookstore chain into a \u201clifestyle brand.\u201d \u201cEverything we do around learning, personal growth and development fits our brand,\u201d Mr. Boire said.", "paragraph_id": "5d702036c8e4820a9b66cbf7"} +{"question": "What is the market value of NXP as of Friday?", "paragraph": "NXP Semiconductors, a big chip manufacturer, is near a deal to acquire a smaller peer, Freescale Semiconductor, in a cash-and-stock transaction, people briefed on the matter said on Sunday. An agreement could be announced as soon as Sunday evening, one of these people said, while cautioning that the talks could still collapse. If completed, the combination would unite two big makers of chips for industries ranging from automobiles to networking to mobile payments. As of Friday evening, NXP had a market value of about $21 billion, while Freescale had a market capitalization of about $11 billion.", "answer": "$21 billion", "sentence": "As of Friday evening, NXP had a market value of about $21 billion , while Freescale had a market capitalization of about $11 billion.", "paragraph_sentence": "NXP Semiconductors, a big chip manufacturer, is near a deal to acquire a smaller peer, Freescale Semiconductor, in a cash-and-stock transaction, people briefed on the matter said on Sunday. An agreement could be announced as soon as Sunday evening, one of these people said, while cautioning that the talks could still collapse. If completed, the combination would unite two big makers of chips for industries ranging from automobiles to networking to mobile payments. As of Friday evening, NXP had a market value of about $21 billion , while Freescale had a market capitalization of about $11 billion. ", "paragraph_answer": "NXP Semiconductors, a big chip manufacturer, is near a deal to acquire a smaller peer, Freescale Semiconductor, in a cash-and-stock transaction, people briefed on the matter said on Sunday. An agreement could be announced as soon as Sunday evening, one of these people said, while cautioning that the talks could still collapse. If completed, the combination would unite two big makers of chips for industries ranging from automobiles to networking to mobile payments. As of Friday evening, NXP had a market value of about $21 billion , while Freescale had a market capitalization of about $11 billion.", "sentence_answer": "As of Friday evening, NXP had a market value of about $21 billion , while Freescale had a market capitalization of about $11 billion.", "paragraph_id": "5d7045c2c8e4820a9b66e810"} +{"question": "Where did the people come from to gain advice?", "paragraph": "People inside Intel often come to me for advice, and they might say, \u201cI\u2019ve got these two job offers inside the company. I don\u2019t know which one to take.\u201d I\u2019ll say, \u201cWhich do you want to do?\u201d They\u2019ll say, \u201cI want to do this one, but the other one is the next step up.\u201d And I\u2019ll say: \u201cThe thing I learned is that if you\u2019re not doing the job you want to do, it will reflect on your performance. You\u2019re better off to take a job you\u2019re excited about than to do the one you think somebody wants you to do.\u201d People are successful when they\u2019re intellectually and emotionally engaged as opposed to when they\u2019re checking the box.", "answer": "inside Intel", "sentence": "People inside Intel often come to me for advice, and they might say, \u201cI\u2019ve got these two job offers inside the company.", "paragraph_sentence": " People inside Intel often come to me for advice, and they might say, \u201cI\u2019ve got these two job offers inside the company. I don\u2019t know which one to take.\u201d I\u2019ll say, \u201cWhich do you want to do?\u201d They\u2019ll say, \u201cI want to do this one, but the other one is the next step up.\u201d And I\u2019ll say: \u201cThe thing I learned is that if you\u2019re not doing the job you want to do, it will reflect on your performance. You\u2019re better off to take a job you\u2019re excited about than to do the one you think somebody wants you to do.\u201d People are successful when they\u2019re intellectually and emotionally engaged as opposed to when they\u2019re checking the box.", "paragraph_answer": "People inside Intel often come to me for advice, and they might say, \u201cI\u2019ve got these two job offers inside the company. I don\u2019t know which one to take.\u201d I\u2019ll say, \u201cWhich do you want to do?\u201d They\u2019ll say, \u201cI want to do this one, but the other one is the next step up.\u201d And I\u2019ll say: \u201cThe thing I learned is that if you\u2019re not doing the job you want to do, it will reflect on your performance. You\u2019re better off to take a job you\u2019re excited about than to do the one you think somebody wants you to do.\u201d People are successful when they\u2019re intellectually and emotionally engaged as opposed to when they\u2019re checking the box.", "sentence_answer": "People inside Intel often come to me for advice, and they might say, \u201cI\u2019ve got these two job offers inside the company.", "paragraph_id": "5d705ba2c8e4820a9b66eef2"} +{"question": "Why does this writer travel frequently?", "paragraph": "As someone who flew more than 400,000/year internationally for work, I can definitely echo other travelers\u2019 sentiments. My friends all think it\u2019s a great glamorous thing, but it\u2019s a miserable experience, and I flew on Virgin, which is heads and shoulders above anything mentioned in this article. At the end of these trips, I couldn\u2019t wait to sit on my couch and sleep in my bed. As far as I\u2019m concerned, the people who equate their self-worth with their airline status can have it! I ended up giving the miles to family members and friends. Rick of Summit, N.J.: On my United statement, I get a Rodney Dangerfield. It says \u201cStatus: No status.\u201d", "answer": "for work", "sentence": "As someone who flew more than 400,000/year internationally for work , I can definitely echo other travelers\u2019 sentiments.", "paragraph_sentence": " As someone who flew more than 400,000/year internationally for work , I can definitely echo other travelers\u2019 sentiments. My friends all think it\u2019s a great glamorous thing, but it\u2019s a miserable experience, and I flew on Virgin, which is heads and shoulders above anything mentioned in this article. At the end of these trips, I couldn\u2019t wait to sit on my couch and sleep in my bed. As far as I\u2019m concerned, the people who equate their self-worth with their airline status can have it! I ended up giving the miles to family members and friends. Rick of Summit, N.J.: On my United statement, I get a Rodney Dangerfield. It says \u201cStatus: No status.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "As someone who flew more than 400,000/year internationally for work , I can definitely echo other travelers\u2019 sentiments. My friends all think it\u2019s a great glamorous thing, but it\u2019s a miserable experience, and I flew on Virgin, which is heads and shoulders above anything mentioned in this article. At the end of these trips, I couldn\u2019t wait to sit on my couch and sleep in my bed. As far as I\u2019m concerned, the people who equate their self-worth with their airline status can have it! I ended up giving the miles to family members and friends. Rick of Summit, N.J.: On my United statement, I get a Rodney Dangerfield. It says \u201cStatus: No status.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "As someone who flew more than 400,000/year internationally for work , I can definitely echo other travelers\u2019 sentiments.", "paragraph_id": "5d7032b7c8e4820a9b66ddf6"} +{"question": "What kind of technology do Europe and Asia mainly rely on for transport?", "paragraph": "The development of United States infrastructure, meanwhile, was centered on road transport. \u201cIn a way, it is a kind of historical accident,\u201d Mr. Perkins said. \u201cIf you have the lines there already from an earlier period, you can just carry on supporting and improving them. \u201cBut putting that kind of rail access in retroactively is very expensive.\u201d Their more consistent upkeep of rail systems has allowed European and Asian countries to devote a growing share of spending to state-of-the-art high-speed trains that run on dedicated rail lines fitted with sophisticated sensors and signal technology.", "answer": "sophisticated sensors and signal technology", "sentence": "Their more consistent upkeep of rail systems has allowed European and Asian countries to devote a growing share of spending to state-of-the-art high-speed trains that run on dedicated rail lines fitted with sophisticated sensors and signal technology .", "paragraph_sentence": "The development of United States infrastructure, meanwhile, was centered on road transport. \u201cIn a way, it is a kind of historical accident,\u201d Mr. Perkins said. \u201cIf you have the lines there already from an earlier period, you can just carry on supporting and improving them. \u201cBut putting that kind of rail access in retroactively is very expensive.\u201d Their more consistent upkeep of rail systems has allowed European and Asian countries to devote a growing share of spending to state-of-the-art high-speed trains that run on dedicated rail lines fitted with sophisticated sensors and signal technology . ", "paragraph_answer": "The development of United States infrastructure, meanwhile, was centered on road transport. \u201cIn a way, it is a kind of historical accident,\u201d Mr. Perkins said. \u201cIf you have the lines there already from an earlier period, you can just carry on supporting and improving them. \u201cBut putting that kind of rail access in retroactively is very expensive.\u201d Their more consistent upkeep of rail systems has allowed European and Asian countries to devote a growing share of spending to state-of-the-art high-speed trains that run on dedicated rail lines fitted with sophisticated sensors and signal technology .", "sentence_answer": "Their more consistent upkeep of rail systems has allowed European and Asian countries to devote a growing share of spending to state-of-the-art high-speed trains that run on dedicated rail lines fitted with sophisticated sensors and signal technology .", "paragraph_id": "5d703859c8e4820a9b66e10b"} +{"question": "Who performed research?", "paragraph": "Conducted by the Cooperative Institutional Research Program at the University of California, Los Angeles\u2019s Higher Education Research Institute for almost 50 years, the survey assesses hundreds of matters ranging from political views to exercise habits. It is considered one of the most comprehensive snapshots of trends among recent high school seniors and is of particular interest to people involved in mental well-being. \u201cIt\u2019s a public health issue,\u201d said Dr. Anthony L. Rostain, a psychiatrist and co-chairman of a University of Pennsylvania task force on students\u2019 emotional health. \u201cWe\u2019re expecting more of students: There\u2019s a sense of having to compete in a global economy, and they think they have to be on top of their game all the time. It\u2019s no wonder they feel overwhelmed.\u201d", "answer": "the Cooperative Institutional Research Program at the University of California,", "sentence": "Conducted by the Cooperative Institutional Research Program at the University of California, Los Angeles\u2019s Higher Education Research Institute for almost 50 years, the survey assesses hundreds of matters ranging from political views to exercise habits.", "paragraph_sentence": " Conducted by the Cooperative Institutional Research Program at the University of California, Los Angeles\u2019s Higher Education Research Institute for almost 50 years, the survey assesses hundreds of matters ranging from political views to exercise habits. It is considered one of the most comprehensive snapshots of trends among recent high school seniors and is of particular interest to people involved in mental well-being. \u201cIt\u2019s a public health issue,\u201d said Dr. Anthony L. Rostain, a psychiatrist and co-chairman of a University of Pennsylvania task force on students\u2019 emotional health. \u201cWe\u2019re expecting more of students: There\u2019s a sense of having to compete in a global economy, and they think they have to be on top of their game all the time. It\u2019s no wonder they feel overwhelmed.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Conducted by the Cooperative Institutional Research Program at the University of California, Los Angeles\u2019s Higher Education Research Institute for almost 50 years, the survey assesses hundreds of matters ranging from political views to exercise habits. It is considered one of the most comprehensive snapshots of trends among recent high school seniors and is of particular interest to people involved in mental well-being. \u201cIt\u2019s a public health issue,\u201d said Dr. Anthony L. Rostain, a psychiatrist and co-chairman of a University of Pennsylvania task force on students\u2019 emotional health. \u201cWe\u2019re expecting more of students: There\u2019s a sense of having to compete in a global economy, and they think they have to be on top of their game all the time. It\u2019s no wonder they feel overwhelmed.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Conducted by the Cooperative Institutional Research Program at the University of California, Los Angeles\u2019s Higher Education Research Institute for almost 50 years, the survey assesses hundreds of matters ranging from political views to exercise habits.", "paragraph_id": "5d70055bc8e4820a9b66a8c1"} +{"question": "What type of craft has crashed?", "paragraph": "Lex van Horssen, a spokesman at FloraHolland, the Netherlands\u2019 largest flower auction house, declined to speculate on the coincidence of the flower burning in Russia and Dutch progress in investigating the plane crash. \u201cTo be quite honest, we have a business to run, and that is something different than the political situation,\u201d Mr. van Horssen said. \u201cWe will not mix our business with this political issue. That\u2019s not a good idea.\u201d", "answer": "plane", "sentence": "Lex van Horssen, a spokesman at FloraHolland, the Netherlands\u2019 largest flower auction house, declined to speculate on the coincidence of the flower burning in Russia and Dutch progress in investigating the plane crash.", "paragraph_sentence": " Lex van Horssen, a spokesman at FloraHolland, the Netherlands\u2019 largest flower auction house, declined to speculate on the coincidence of the flower burning in Russia and Dutch progress in investigating the plane crash. \u201cTo be quite honest, we have a business to run, and that is something different than the political situation,\u201d Mr. van Horssen said. \u201cWe will not mix our business with this political issue. That\u2019s not a good idea.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Lex van Horssen, a spokesman at FloraHolland, the Netherlands\u2019 largest flower auction house, declined to speculate on the coincidence of the flower burning in Russia and Dutch progress in investigating the plane crash. \u201cTo be quite honest, we have a business to run, and that is something different than the political situation,\u201d Mr. van Horssen said. \u201cWe will not mix our business with this political issue. That\u2019s not a good idea.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Lex van Horssen, a spokesman at FloraHolland, the Netherlands\u2019 largest flower auction house, declined to speculate on the coincidence of the flower burning in Russia and Dutch progress in investigating the plane crash.", "paragraph_id": "5d700f5cc8e4820a9b66bb61"} +{"question": "Who is Anna Swenson?", "paragraph": "On a boat ride in July through one of the delta\u2019s channels, Anna Swenson, co-director of a community group called North Delta Cares, spoke of William Mulholland, the famed Los Angeles water boss who, in the early 20th century, purloined the water of the distant Owens Valley on behalf of his city. \u201cWilliam Mulholland is in the grave, and so should his ideas be,\u201d Ms. Swenson said. \u201cThe days when you could come up here and stick your straw in to satisfy your insatiable demands \u2014 those days are over.\u201d", "answer": "co-director of a community group", "sentence": "On a boat ride in July through one of the delta\u2019s channels, Anna Swenson, co-director of a community group called North Delta Cares, spoke of William Mulholland, the famed Los Angeles water boss who, in the early 20th century, purloined the water of the distant Owens Valley on behalf of his city.", "paragraph_sentence": " On a boat ride in July through one of the delta\u2019s channels, Anna Swenson, co-director of a community group called North Delta Cares, spoke of William Mulholland, the famed Los Angeles water boss who, in the early 20th century, purloined the water of the distant Owens Valley on behalf of his city. \u201cWilliam Mulholland is in the grave, and so should his ideas be,\u201d Ms. Swenson said. \u201cThe days when you could come up here and stick your straw in to satisfy your insatiable demands \u2014 those days are over.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "On a boat ride in July through one of the delta\u2019s channels, Anna Swenson, co-director of a community group called North Delta Cares, spoke of William Mulholland, the famed Los Angeles water boss who, in the early 20th century, purloined the water of the distant Owens Valley on behalf of his city. \u201cWilliam Mulholland is in the grave, and so should his ideas be,\u201d Ms. Swenson said. \u201cThe days when you could come up here and stick your straw in to satisfy your insatiable demands \u2014 those days are over.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "On a boat ride in July through one of the delta\u2019s channels, Anna Swenson, co-director of a community group called North Delta Cares, spoke of William Mulholland, the famed Los Angeles water boss who, in the early 20th century, purloined the water of the distant Owens Valley on behalf of his city.", "paragraph_id": "5d700cc7c8e4820a9b66b821"} +{"question": "What presumption is greater when people think of black people?", "paragraph": "Still, black Americans suffer disproportionate police violence. \u201cAnd there is no doubt that police violence has racial dimensions, because communities of color are so much more heavily patrolled than white communities,\u201d and because many officers \u2014 and many people generally \u2014 believe there is a greater presumption of danger with African-Americans, Mr. Cohen said.", "answer": "danger", "sentence": "\u201cAnd there is no doubt that police violence has racial dimensions, because communities of color are so much more heavily patrolled than white communities,\u201d and because many officers \u2014 and many people generally \u2014 believe there is a greater presumption of danger with African-Americans", "paragraph_sentence": "Still, black Americans suffer disproportionate police violence. \u201cAnd there is no doubt that police violence has racial dimensions, because communities of color are so much more heavily patrolled than white communities,\u201d and because many officers \u2014 and many people generally \u2014 believe there is a greater presumption of danger with African-Americans , Mr. Cohen said.", "paragraph_answer": "Still, black Americans suffer disproportionate police violence. \u201cAnd there is no doubt that police violence has racial dimensions, because communities of color are so much more heavily patrolled than white communities,\u201d and because many officers \u2014 and many people generally \u2014 believe there is a greater presumption of danger with African-Americans, Mr. Cohen said.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cAnd there is no doubt that police violence has racial dimensions, because communities of color are so much more heavily patrolled than white communities,\u201d and because many officers \u2014 and many people generally \u2014 believe there is a greater presumption of danger with African-Americans", "paragraph_id": "5d701deec8e4820a9b66c971"} +{"question": "When a statue is accepted, what key term is used described the accepted bill?", "paragraph": "\u201cI think we\u2019ll give it a serious look,\u201d said Representative Kenneth Bragg, the House majority leader. \u201cI think they just want assurance that adopting the federal statue isn\u2019t going to weaken too much of what we did in our state version. That\u2019s the key.\u201d", "answer": "adopting", "sentence": "\u201cI think they just want assurance that adopting the federal statue isn\u2019t going to weaken too much of what we did in our state version.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI think we\u2019ll give it a serious look,\u201d said Representative Kenneth Bragg, the House majority leader. \u201cI think they just want assurance that adopting the federal statue isn\u2019t going to weaken too much of what we did in our state version. That\u2019s the key.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI think we\u2019ll give it a serious look,\u201d said Representative Kenneth Bragg, the House majority leader. \u201cI think they just want assurance that adopting the federal statue isn\u2019t going to weaken too much of what we did in our state version. That\u2019s the key.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI think they just want assurance that adopting the federal statue isn\u2019t going to weaken too much of what we did in our state version.", "paragraph_id": "5d700eedc8e4820a9b66bb0b"} +{"question": "Who believed that the group died with Jerry Garcia?", "paragraph": "\u201cWhen I agreed to do Dead 50, my stipulation was, \u2018That\u2019s it,\u2019 \u201d he said this week by phone from his home in Marin. Touring with the rest of the group \u201cwas a nonstarter from the beginning,\u201d he added. \u201cIt was just understood. They were all ready before we even started rehearsals, talking about going out themselves. I\u2019m just not into touring, and those guys are.\u201d (Citing rehearsal obligations, the members of Dead & Company declined to comment.) Still, the anniversary shows demonstrated that the Dead\u2019s music was still vibrant \u2014 and could find a seemingly endless audience, despite the protestations of some hard-line fans who believe the group died with its de facto frontman, Jerry Garcia.", "answer": "some hard-line fans", "sentence": "Still, the anniversary shows demonstrated that the Dead\u2019s music was still vibrant \u2014 and could find a seemingly endless audience, despite the protestations of some hard-line fans who believe the group died with its de facto frontman, Jerry Garcia.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWhen I agreed to do Dead 50, my stipulation was, \u2018That\u2019s it,\u2019 \u201d he said this week by phone from his home in Marin. Touring with the rest of the group \u201cwas a nonstarter from the beginning,\u201d he added. \u201cIt was just understood. They were all ready before we even started rehearsals, talking about going out themselves. I\u2019m just not into touring, and those guys are.\u201d (Citing rehearsal obligations, the members of Dead & Company declined to comment.) Still, the anniversary shows demonstrated that the Dead\u2019s music was still vibrant \u2014 and could find a seemingly endless audience, despite the protestations of some hard-line fans who believe the group died with its de facto frontman, Jerry Garcia. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWhen I agreed to do Dead 50, my stipulation was, \u2018That\u2019s it,\u2019 \u201d he said this week by phone from his home in Marin. Touring with the rest of the group \u201cwas a nonstarter from the beginning,\u201d he added. \u201cIt was just understood. They were all ready before we even started rehearsals, talking about going out themselves. I\u2019m just not into touring, and those guys are.\u201d (Citing rehearsal obligations, the members of Dead & Company declined to comment.) Still, the anniversary shows demonstrated that the Dead\u2019s music was still vibrant \u2014 and could find a seemingly endless audience, despite the protestations of some hard-line fans who believe the group died with its de facto frontman, Jerry Garcia.", "sentence_answer": "Still, the anniversary shows demonstrated that the Dead\u2019s music was still vibrant \u2014 and could find a seemingly endless audience, despite the protestations of some hard-line fans who believe the group died with its de facto frontman, Jerry Garcia.", "paragraph_id": "5d70073ec8e4820a9b66ad26"} +{"question": "what did Flanagan think about the upcoming event?", "paragraph": "Deba\u2019s 2:19:59 last year was 62 seconds behind Jeptoo\u2019s course record and also beat the old mark. In all, nine women in the 2015 field have personal bests of 2:22:38 or better. \u201cThis is a field with a lot of women who have the same capabilities,\u201d Flanagan said. \u201cIt will be exciting.\u201d", "answer": "It will be exciting.", "sentence": "\u201c It will be exciting. \u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Deba\u2019s 2:19:59 last year was 62 seconds behind Jeptoo\u2019s course record and also beat the old mark. In all, nine women in the 2015 field have personal bests of 2:22:38 or better. \u201cThis is a field with a lot of women who have the same capabilities,\u201d Flanagan said. \u201c It will be exciting. \u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Deba\u2019s 2:19:59 last year was 62 seconds behind Jeptoo\u2019s course record and also beat the old mark. In all, nine women in the 2015 field have personal bests of 2:22:38 or better. \u201cThis is a field with a lot of women who have the same capabilities,\u201d Flanagan said. \u201c It will be exciting. \u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201c It will be exciting. \u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d702b75c8e4820a9b66d8fe"} +{"question": "What day of the week did the church seek to pressure Israel?", "paragraph": "The church\u2019s boycott resolution reflects what supporters call the growing momentum of the Boycott, Divest and Sanction movement, which seeks to pressure Israel economically over the long-paralyzed Middle East peace process. The church said in a statement that it \u201cconsiders Tuesday\u2019s actions a next step in the U.C.C.\u2019s involvement with peace in the Middle East.\u201d The Rev. John Deckenback, conference minister of the church\u2019s Central Atlantic Conference, which submitted the boycott resolution, called the outcome a reflection of the church\u2019s \u201cspirit of love for both Israelis and Palestinians.\u201d", "answer": "Tuesday", "sentence": "The church said in a statement that it \u201cconsiders Tuesday \u2019s actions a next step in the U.C.C.\u2019s involvement with peace in the Middle East.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "The church\u2019s boycott resolution reflects what supporters call the growing momentum of the Boycott, Divest and Sanction movement, which seeks to pressure Israel economically over the long-paralyzed Middle East peace process. The church said in a statement that it \u201cconsiders Tuesday \u2019s actions a next step in the U.C.C.\u2019s involvement with peace in the Middle East.\u201d The Rev. John Deckenback, conference minister of the church\u2019s Central Atlantic Conference, which submitted the boycott resolution, called the outcome a reflection of the church\u2019s \u201cspirit of love for both Israelis and Palestinians.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The church\u2019s boycott resolution reflects what supporters call the growing momentum of the Boycott, Divest and Sanction movement, which seeks to pressure Israel economically over the long-paralyzed Middle East peace process. The church said in a statement that it \u201cconsiders Tuesday \u2019s actions a next step in the U.C.C.\u2019s involvement with peace in the Middle East.\u201d The Rev. John Deckenback, conference minister of the church\u2019s Central Atlantic Conference, which submitted the boycott resolution, called the outcome a reflection of the church\u2019s \u201cspirit of love for both Israelis and Palestinians.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The church said in a statement that it \u201cconsiders Tuesday \u2019s actions a next step in the U.C.C.\u2019s involvement with peace in the Middle East.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d70083fc8e4820a9b66afa4"} +{"question": "What year did Latvia national team win the first European championship?", "paragraph": "It was during his time in Spain that Porzingis developed the mechanics of his game and caught the attention of N.B.A. executives and scouts, many of whom flocked to watch him on the European circuit and came away impressed by his shooting and mobility. Although Latvia has produced only a few basketball players who have played in the United States, the sport has had a following there since 1935, when the national team won the first-ever Eurobasket European championship. When Porzingis was drafted by the Knicks, he instantly became the country\u2019s best-known athlete and a hero.", "answer": "1935", "sentence": "Although Latvia has produced only a few basketball players who have played in the United States, the sport has had a following there since 1935 , when the national team won the first-ever Eurobasket European championship.", "paragraph_sentence": "It was during his time in Spain that Porzingis developed the mechanics of his game and caught the attention of N.B.A. executives and scouts, many of whom flocked to watch him on the European circuit and came away impressed by his shooting and mobility. Although Latvia has produced only a few basketball players who have played in the United States, the sport has had a following there since 1935 , when the national team won the first-ever Eurobasket European championship. When Porzingis was drafted by the Knicks, he instantly became the country\u2019s best-known athlete and a hero.", "paragraph_answer": "It was during his time in Spain that Porzingis developed the mechanics of his game and caught the attention of N.B.A. executives and scouts, many of whom flocked to watch him on the European circuit and came away impressed by his shooting and mobility. Although Latvia has produced only a few basketball players who have played in the United States, the sport has had a following there since 1935 , when the national team won the first-ever Eurobasket European championship. When Porzingis was drafted by the Knicks, he instantly became the country\u2019s best-known athlete and a hero.", "sentence_answer": "Although Latvia has produced only a few basketball players who have played in the United States, the sport has had a following there since 1935 , when the national team won the first-ever Eurobasket European championship.", "paragraph_id": "5d7023b2c8e4820a9b66cfe6"} +{"question": "How much rise in income do economists believe can be expected for personal income in October?", "paragraph": "On Wednesday, at 8:30 a.m., the Commerce Department will release the latest figures on personal income and spending in October. Economists are looking for a solid 0.4 percentage point increase in income, with spending up 0.3 percent. If that is correct, it suggests growth in the final quarter of the year may be reasonably strong and also provides another piece of evidence for policy makers at the Federal Reserve who believe the economy is strong enough to withstand an increase in interest rates. \u2014Nelson D. Schwartz", "answer": "Economists are looking for a solid 0.4 percentage point increase in income", "sentence": "Economists are looking for a solid 0.4 percentage point increase in income , with spending up 0.3 percent.", "paragraph_sentence": "On Wednesday, at 8:30 a.m., the Commerce Department will release the latest figures on personal income and spending in October. Economists are looking for a solid 0.4 percentage point increase in income , with spending up 0.3 percent. If that is correct, it suggests growth in the final quarter of the year may be reasonably strong and also provides another piece of evidence for policy makers at the Federal Reserve who believe the economy is strong enough to withstand an increase in interest rates. \u2014Nelson D. Schwartz", "paragraph_answer": "On Wednesday, at 8:30 a.m., the Commerce Department will release the latest figures on personal income and spending in October. Economists are looking for a solid 0.4 percentage point increase in income , with spending up 0.3 percent. If that is correct, it suggests growth in the final quarter of the year may be reasonably strong and also provides another piece of evidence for policy makers at the Federal Reserve who believe the economy is strong enough to withstand an increase in interest rates. \u2014Nelson D. Schwartz", "sentence_answer": " Economists are looking for a solid 0.4 percentage point increase in income , with spending up 0.3 percent.", "paragraph_id": "5d702b8ac8e4820a9b66d921"} +{"question": "Who were referred to as little green men?", "paragraph": "The training aims to remold the Ukrainian units by increasing the responsibilities of noncommissioned officers, fixing a Soviet legacy of an officer-heavy infantry. Without sergeants paying attention, basic mistakes were being made, the trainers said. Capt. Nicholas Salimbene, an American trainer, noticed with alarm that the Ukrainians were carrying their rifles with the safeties off. \u201cIt\u2019s about the professionalism of the force,\u201d he said. \u201cWe want them to look like soldiers.\u201d \u201cYou see reports about the little green men,\u201d he said, referring to the Russian soldiers who invaded the Crimean Peninsula last year in unmarked uniforms, \u201cand they all walk around professionally, and carry their weapons professionally.\u201d The Ukrainians should, too, Captain Salimbene said. The United States is also providing advanced courses for military professionals known as forward observers \u2014 the ones who call in targets \u2014 to improve the accuracy of artillery fire, making it more lethal for the enemy and less so for civilians. Oleksandr I. Leshchenko, the deputy director for training in the National Guard, was somewhat skeptical about the value of the training, saying that \u201c99 percent\u201d of the men in the course had already been in combat.", "answer": "Russian soldiers", "sentence": "\u201cYou see reports about the little green men,\u201d he said, referring to the Russian soldiers who invaded the Crimean Peninsula last year in unmarked uniforms, \u201cand they all walk around professionally, and carry their weapons professionally.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "The training aims to remold the Ukrainian units by increasing the responsibilities of noncommissioned officers, fixing a Soviet legacy of an officer-heavy infantry. Without sergeants paying attention, basic mistakes were being made, the trainers said. Capt. Nicholas Salimbene, an American trainer, noticed with alarm that the Ukrainians were carrying their rifles with the safeties off. \u201cIt\u2019s about the professionalism of the force,\u201d he said. \u201cWe want them to look like soldiers.\u201d \u201cYou see reports about the little green men,\u201d he said, referring to the Russian soldiers who invaded the Crimean Peninsula last year in unmarked uniforms, \u201cand they all walk around professionally, and carry their weapons professionally.\u201d The Ukrainians should, too, Captain Salimbene said. The United States is also providing advanced courses for military professionals known as forward observers \u2014 the ones who call in targets \u2014 to improve the accuracy of artillery fire, making it more lethal for the enemy and less so for civilians. Oleksandr I. Leshchenko, the deputy director for training in the National Guard, was somewhat skeptical about the value of the training, saying that \u201c99 percent\u201d of the men in the course had already been in combat.", "paragraph_answer": "The training aims to remold the Ukrainian units by increasing the responsibilities of noncommissioned officers, fixing a Soviet legacy of an officer-heavy infantry. Without sergeants paying attention, basic mistakes were being made, the trainers said. Capt. Nicholas Salimbene, an American trainer, noticed with alarm that the Ukrainians were carrying their rifles with the safeties off. \u201cIt\u2019s about the professionalism of the force,\u201d he said. \u201cWe want them to look like soldiers.\u201d \u201cYou see reports about the little green men,\u201d he said, referring to the Russian soldiers who invaded the Crimean Peninsula last year in unmarked uniforms, \u201cand they all walk around professionally, and carry their weapons professionally.\u201d The Ukrainians should, too, Captain Salimbene said. The United States is also providing advanced courses for military professionals known as forward observers \u2014 the ones who call in targets \u2014 to improve the accuracy of artillery fire, making it more lethal for the enemy and less so for civilians. Oleksandr I. Leshchenko, the deputy director for training in the National Guard, was somewhat skeptical about the value of the training, saying that \u201c99 percent\u201d of the men in the course had already been in combat.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cYou see reports about the little green men,\u201d he said, referring to the Russian soldiers who invaded the Crimean Peninsula last year in unmarked uniforms, \u201cand they all walk around professionally, and carry their weapons professionally.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d7026fec8e4820a9b66d476"} +{"question": "Where did the correspondence (if it exists) likely take place?", "paragraph": "Reports of Mrs. Clinton\u2019s use of only a private email account while she was secretary of state, meanwhile, have cast a new light on efforts by outside groups to obtain access to her correspondence with the Clinton Foundation during her tenure at the State Department \u2014 about donations or anything else. That correspondence, if it exists, would most likely have taken place on Mrs. Clinton\u2019s private email address, putting its accessibility \u2014 to journalists, scholars or political adversaries \u2014 in doubt. Already, Citizens United, a conservative advocacy group, has made 16 appeals under the Freedom of Information Act for State Department correspondence mostly related to Mrs. Clinton and foundation donors.", "answer": "Mrs. Clinton\u2019s private email address", "sentence": "That correspondence, if it exists, would most likely have taken place on Mrs. Clinton\u2019s private email address , putting its accessibility \u2014 to journalists, scholars or political adversaries \u2014 in doubt.", "paragraph_sentence": "Reports of Mrs. Clinton\u2019s use of only a private email account while she was secretary of state, meanwhile, have cast a new light on efforts by outside groups to obtain access to her correspondence with the Clinton Foundation during her tenure at the State Department \u2014 about donations or anything else. That correspondence, if it exists, would most likely have taken place on Mrs. Clinton\u2019s private email address , putting its accessibility \u2014 to journalists, scholars or political adversaries \u2014 in doubt. Already, Citizens United, a conservative advocacy group, has made 16 appeals under the Freedom of Information Act for State Department correspondence mostly related to Mrs. Clinton and foundation donors.", "paragraph_answer": "Reports of Mrs. Clinton\u2019s use of only a private email account while she was secretary of state, meanwhile, have cast a new light on efforts by outside groups to obtain access to her correspondence with the Clinton Foundation during her tenure at the State Department \u2014 about donations or anything else. That correspondence, if it exists, would most likely have taken place on Mrs. Clinton\u2019s private email address , putting its accessibility \u2014 to journalists, scholars or political adversaries \u2014 in doubt. Already, Citizens United, a conservative advocacy group, has made 16 appeals under the Freedom of Information Act for State Department correspondence mostly related to Mrs. Clinton and foundation donors.", "sentence_answer": "That correspondence, if it exists, would most likely have taken place on Mrs. Clinton\u2019s private email address , putting its accessibility \u2014 to journalists, scholars or political adversaries \u2014 in doubt.", "paragraph_id": "5d705262c8e4820a9b66ebcf"} +{"question": "What is the amout of money the Premier League is expecting to receive for selling the rights to international broadcasters.?", "paragraph": "That split is the same as the broadcasters now hold for the British rights to televise the Premier League, whose teams, including Manchester United, Liverpool and Arsenal, play in games that can attract a global audience of about three billion each week. The league is expected to receive at least an additional $3 billion when it sells the rights to international broadcasters, including those in the United States, later this year. The battle to broadcast the English soccer games had set Sky, which is partly owned by Rupert Murdoch\u2019s 21st Century Fox, against BT, the former British telecommunications monopoly that has aggressively expanded into live sports programming as a way to promote its array of cable television and Internet services.", "answer": "$3 billion", "sentence": "The league is expected to receive at least an additional $3 billion when it sells the rights to international broadcasters, including those in the United States, later this year.", "paragraph_sentence": "That split is the same as the broadcasters now hold for the British rights to televise the Premier League, whose teams, including Manchester United, Liverpool and Arsenal, play in games that can attract a global audience of about three billion each week. The league is expected to receive at least an additional $3 billion when it sells the rights to international broadcasters, including those in the United States, later this year. The battle to broadcast the English soccer games had set Sky, which is partly owned by Rupert Murdoch\u2019s 21st Century Fox, against BT, the former British telecommunications monopoly that has aggressively expanded into live sports programming as a way to promote its array of cable television and Internet services.", "paragraph_answer": "That split is the same as the broadcasters now hold for the British rights to televise the Premier League, whose teams, including Manchester United, Liverpool and Arsenal, play in games that can attract a global audience of about three billion each week. The league is expected to receive at least an additional $3 billion when it sells the rights to international broadcasters, including those in the United States, later this year. The battle to broadcast the English soccer games had set Sky, which is partly owned by Rupert Murdoch\u2019s 21st Century Fox, against BT, the former British telecommunications monopoly that has aggressively expanded into live sports programming as a way to promote its array of cable television and Internet services.", "sentence_answer": "The league is expected to receive at least an additional $3 billion when it sells the rights to international broadcasters, including those in the United States, later this year.", "paragraph_id": "5d703938c8e4820a9b66e189"} +{"question": "When did Vanity Fair begin advertising?", "paragraph": "96 YEARS AGO Prehistory \u2014 before the Kardashians and Caitlyn with a C, before even the naked and pregnant Demi Moore \u2014 Vanity Fair knew how to strike with an image. It boasted as much in advertisements published in The New York Times in 1919, during the magazine\u2019s first heyday. \u201cVanity Fair prides itself on knowing every lovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman in the world and printing her photograph in its pages,\u201d the ad copy read. This was \u201cthe magazine of leisure interests for men who know enough to have them,\u201d or so its tagline declared in a series of wittily wordy ads that ran in The Times. The image that struck hardest in those early years was not a photograph of a \u201clovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman,\u201d however. It was a cartoon that depicted Emperor Hirohito of Japan, and it was the subject of an international incident.", "answer": "1919", "sentence": "It boasted as much in advertisements published in The New York Times in 1919 , during the magazine\u2019s first heyday.", "paragraph_sentence": "96 YEARS AGO Prehistory \u2014 before the Kardashians and Caitlyn with a C, before even the naked and pregnant Demi Moore \u2014 Vanity Fair knew how to strike with an image. It boasted as much in advertisements published in The New York Times in 1919 , during the magazine\u2019s first heyday. \u201cVanity Fair prides itself on knowing every lovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman in the world and printing her photograph in its pages,\u201d the ad copy read. This was \u201cthe magazine of leisure interests for men who know enough to have them,\u201d or so its tagline declared in a series of wittily wordy ads that ran in The Times. The image that struck hardest in those early years was not a photograph of a \u201clovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman,\u201d however. It was a cartoon that depicted Emperor Hirohito of Japan, and it was the subject of an international incident.", "paragraph_answer": "96 YEARS AGO Prehistory \u2014 before the Kardashians and Caitlyn with a C, before even the naked and pregnant Demi Moore \u2014 Vanity Fair knew how to strike with an image. It boasted as much in advertisements published in The New York Times in 1919 , during the magazine\u2019s first heyday. \u201cVanity Fair prides itself on knowing every lovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman in the world and printing her photograph in its pages,\u201d the ad copy read. This was \u201cthe magazine of leisure interests for men who know enough to have them,\u201d or so its tagline declared in a series of wittily wordy ads that ran in The Times. The image that struck hardest in those early years was not a photograph of a \u201clovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman,\u201d however. It was a cartoon that depicted Emperor Hirohito of Japan, and it was the subject of an international incident.", "sentence_answer": "It boasted as much in advertisements published in The New York Times in 1919 , during the magazine\u2019s first heyday.", "paragraph_id": "5d7054e9c8e4820a9b66ec9f"} +{"question": "How long is the yield on the U.S Treasury note?", "paragraph": "Markets started the day higher, propelled by a jump in energy stocks, but then quickly gave up the gains. A comment by the chairwoman of the Federal Reserve, Janet L. Yellen, suggesting that stocks were generally overvalued added to the selling pressure. Uncertainty over how quickly interest rates will climb also weighed on markets as yields on bonds continued to rise. Some market experts say they think the Fed will have to increase its short-term rate relatively soon to fight inflation. The yield on the 10-year United States Treasury note rose to 2.25 percent, its highest level in two months.", "answer": "10-year", "sentence": "The yield on the 10-year United States Treasury note rose to 2.25 percent, its highest level in two months.", "paragraph_sentence": "Markets started the day higher, propelled by a jump in energy stocks, but then quickly gave up the gains. A comment by the chairwoman of the Federal Reserve, Janet L. Yellen, suggesting that stocks were generally overvalued added to the selling pressure. Uncertainty over how quickly interest rates will climb also weighed on markets as yields on bonds continued to rise. Some market experts say they think the Fed will have to increase its short-term rate relatively soon to fight inflation. The yield on the 10-year United States Treasury note rose to 2.25 percent, its highest level in two months. ", "paragraph_answer": "Markets started the day higher, propelled by a jump in energy stocks, but then quickly gave up the gains. A comment by the chairwoman of the Federal Reserve, Janet L. Yellen, suggesting that stocks were generally overvalued added to the selling pressure. Uncertainty over how quickly interest rates will climb also weighed on markets as yields on bonds continued to rise. Some market experts say they think the Fed will have to increase its short-term rate relatively soon to fight inflation. The yield on the 10-year United States Treasury note rose to 2.25 percent, its highest level in two months.", "sentence_answer": "The yield on the 10-year United States Treasury note rose to 2.25 percent, its highest level in two months.", "paragraph_id": "5d703a24c8e4820a9b66e1ff"} +{"question": "How much of the grain in coming from aquifer depleted areas?", "paragraph": "Over the long term, Dr. Hanak believes, the state should not only encourage farmers to store water in the ground, but also consider creating a market to allow them to buy and sell their allotments. Megan Konar, an engineer at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, is among the experts eager to see California lead the world toward more sustainable methods. Recent research she did with a graduate student, Landon Marston, found that 18.5 percent of the American grain supply, an essential link in the food chain, is coming from parts of the country where the aquifers are being depleted. Other research suggests that overpumping of water is even more severe in parts of India and Africa, a long-term risk to the global food supply. As climate change forces farmers to grow crops in hotter conditions, water demand is only going to rise.", "answer": "18.5 percent", "sentence": "Recent research she did with a graduate student, Landon Marston, found that 18.5 percent of the American grain supply, an essential link in the food chain, is coming from parts of the country where the aquifers are being depleted.", "paragraph_sentence": "Over the long term, Dr. Hanak believes, the state should not only encourage farmers to store water in the ground, but also consider creating a market to allow them to buy and sell their allotments. Megan Konar, an engineer at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, is among the experts eager to see California lead the world toward more sustainable methods. Recent research she did with a graduate student, Landon Marston, found that 18.5 percent of the American grain supply, an essential link in the food chain, is coming from parts of the country where the aquifers are being depleted. Other research suggests that overpumping of water is even more severe in parts of India and Africa, a long-term risk to the global food supply. As climate change forces farmers to grow crops in hotter conditions, water demand is only going to rise.", "paragraph_answer": "Over the long term, Dr. Hanak believes, the state should not only encourage farmers to store water in the ground, but also consider creating a market to allow them to buy and sell their allotments. Megan Konar, an engineer at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, is among the experts eager to see California lead the world toward more sustainable methods. Recent research she did with a graduate student, Landon Marston, found that 18.5 percent of the American grain supply, an essential link in the food chain, is coming from parts of the country where the aquifers are being depleted. Other research suggests that overpumping of water is even more severe in parts of India and Africa, a long-term risk to the global food supply. As climate change forces farmers to grow crops in hotter conditions, water demand is only going to rise.", "sentence_answer": "Recent research she did with a graduate student, Landon Marston, found that 18.5 percent of the American grain supply, an essential link in the food chain, is coming from parts of the country where the aquifers are being depleted.", "paragraph_id": "5d700eaac8e4820a9b66ba92"} +{"question": "What is Jeremy Corbyn the leader of?", "paragraph": "The run-up to the vote also amounted to a low point for Jeremy Corbyn, the new leader of the opposition Labour Party. While Mr. Corbyn opposes British military action over Syria, some of Labour\u2019s senior figures, including the party\u2019s spokesman on foreign affairs, Hilary Benn, supported it, and Mr. Corbyn was forced to allow his lawmakers to vote freely on the issue in an effort to avoid a intraparty clash amid threatened resignations. In an impassioned speech that won a rousing reception Wednesday night, Mr. Benn argued that \u201cevery state has the right to defend itself\u201d and asked \u201cwhy would we not uphold the settled will of the United Nations?\u201d", "answer": "the opposition Labour Party", "sentence": "The run-up to the vote also amounted to a low point for Jeremy Corbyn, the new leader of the opposition Labour Party .", "paragraph_sentence": " The run-up to the vote also amounted to a low point for Jeremy Corbyn, the new leader of the opposition Labour Party . While Mr. Corbyn opposes British military action over Syria, some of Labour\u2019s senior figures, including the party\u2019s spokesman on foreign affairs, Hilary Benn, supported it, and Mr. Corbyn was forced to allow his lawmakers to vote freely on the issue in an effort to avoid a intraparty clash amid threatened resignations. In an impassioned speech that won a rousing reception Wednesday night, Mr. Benn argued that \u201cevery state has the right to defend itself\u201d and asked \u201cwhy would we not uphold the settled will of the United Nations?\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The run-up to the vote also amounted to a low point for Jeremy Corbyn, the new leader of the opposition Labour Party . While Mr. Corbyn opposes British military action over Syria, some of Labour\u2019s senior figures, including the party\u2019s spokesman on foreign affairs, Hilary Benn, supported it, and Mr. Corbyn was forced to allow his lawmakers to vote freely on the issue in an effort to avoid a intraparty clash amid threatened resignations. In an impassioned speech that won a rousing reception Wednesday night, Mr. Benn argued that \u201cevery state has the right to defend itself\u201d and asked \u201cwhy would we not uphold the settled will of the United Nations?\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The run-up to the vote also amounted to a low point for Jeremy Corbyn, the new leader of the opposition Labour Party .", "paragraph_id": "5d704242c8e4820a9b66e620"} +{"question": "Why does the older generation feel that 1912 was important?", "paragraph": "Mr. Huang was inspired to build the museum after seeing the impressive Kuomintang history museum in Santikhiri, in Chiang Rai Province, the country\u2019s most prominent Kuomintang village. \u201cWe can\u2019t forget the history,\u201d he said. \u201cWe can\u2019t throw our forebears away. Regardless of what happens with China and Taiwan in the future, we are all Chinese people. We can\u2019t forget our Chinese roots.\u201d It is a sentiment shared by much of the older generation in Ban Rak Thai, who still speak of the past in terms of the traditional minguo calendar, which takes 1912 \u2014 the year the Republic of China was founded \u2014 as year one.", "answer": "the year the Republic of China was founded", "sentence": "It is a sentiment shared by much of the older generation in Ban Rak Thai, who still speak of the past in terms of the traditional minguo calendar, which takes 1912 \u2014 the year the Republic of China was founded \u2014 as year one.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Huang was inspired to build the museum after seeing the impressive Kuomintang history museum in Santikhiri, in Chiang Rai Province, the country\u2019s most prominent Kuomintang village. \u201cWe can\u2019t forget the history,\u201d he said. \u201cWe can\u2019t throw our forebears away. Regardless of what happens with China and Taiwan in the future, we are all Chinese people. We can\u2019t forget our Chinese roots.\u201d It is a sentiment shared by much of the older generation in Ban Rak Thai, who still speak of the past in terms of the traditional minguo calendar, which takes 1912 \u2014 the year the Republic of China was founded \u2014 as year one. ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Huang was inspired to build the museum after seeing the impressive Kuomintang history museum in Santikhiri, in Chiang Rai Province, the country\u2019s most prominent Kuomintang village. \u201cWe can\u2019t forget the history,\u201d he said. \u201cWe can\u2019t throw our forebears away. Regardless of what happens with China and Taiwan in the future, we are all Chinese people. We can\u2019t forget our Chinese roots.\u201d It is a sentiment shared by much of the older generation in Ban Rak Thai, who still speak of the past in terms of the traditional minguo calendar, which takes 1912 \u2014 the year the Republic of China was founded \u2014 as year one.", "sentence_answer": "It is a sentiment shared by much of the older generation in Ban Rak Thai, who still speak of the past in terms of the traditional minguo calendar, which takes 1912 \u2014 the year the Republic of China was founded \u2014 as year one.", "paragraph_id": "5d702f61c8e4820a9b66dc33"} +{"question": "What is the phone number for the Powell Fine Art center?", "paragraph": "LITCHFIELD Wisdom House \u201cEphemera: Holding a Moment in Your Hand,\u201d Jean Linville. Through Sept. 12. Mondays through Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wisdom House, 229 East Litchfield Road. 860-567-3163; wisdomhouse.org. MADISON Susan Powell Fine Art \u201cRealistically Speaking,\u201d group show. Through July 6. Tuesdays through Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.; and by appointment. Susan Powell Fine Art, 679 Boston Post Road. susanpowellfineart.com; 203-318-0616. MYSTIC Maritime Art Gallery, at Mystic Seaport \u201cModern Marine Masters,\u201d group show. Through July 19. Daily, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Maritime Art Gallery, at Mystic Seaport, 47 Greenmanville Avenue. mysticseaport.org/gallery; 860-572-5388.", "answer": "203-318-0616", "sentence": "susanpowellfineart.com; 203-318-0616 .", "paragraph_sentence": "LITCHFIELD Wisdom House \u201cEphemera: Holding a Moment in Your Hand,\u201d Jean Linville. Through Sept. 12. Mondays through Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wisdom House, 229 East Litchfield Road. 860-567-3163; wisdomhouse.org. MADISON Susan Powell Fine Art \u201cRealistically Speaking,\u201d group show. Through July 6. Tuesdays through Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.; and by appointment. Susan Powell Fine Art, 679 Boston Post Road. susanpowellfineart.com; 203-318-0616 . MYSTIC Maritime Art Gallery, at Mystic Seaport \u201cModern Marine Masters,\u201d group show. Through July 19. Daily, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Maritime Art Gallery, at Mystic Seaport, 47 Greenmanville Avenue. mysticseaport.org/gallery; 860-572-5388.", "paragraph_answer": "LITCHFIELD Wisdom House \u201cEphemera: Holding a Moment in Your Hand,\u201d Jean Linville. Through Sept. 12. Mondays through Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wisdom House, 229 East Litchfield Road. 860-567-3163; wisdomhouse.org. MADISON Susan Powell Fine Art \u201cRealistically Speaking,\u201d group show. Through July 6. Tuesdays through Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.; and by appointment. Susan Powell Fine Art, 679 Boston Post Road. susanpowellfineart.com; 203-318-0616 . MYSTIC Maritime Art Gallery, at Mystic Seaport \u201cModern Marine Masters,\u201d group show. Through July 19. Daily, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Maritime Art Gallery, at Mystic Seaport, 47 Greenmanville Avenue. mysticseaport.org/gallery; 860-572-5388.", "sentence_answer": "susanpowellfineart.com; 203-318-0616 .", "paragraph_id": "5d704285c8e4820a9b66e63e"} +{"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", "paragraph_id": "5d702996c8e4820a9b66d739"} +{"question": "What countries are African allies?", "paragraph": "That is why the answer to defeating Boko Haram begins and ends with Nigeria. That is not to say that allies cannot help us. My administration would welcome the resumption of a military training agreement with the United States, which was halted during the previous administration. We must, of course, have better coordination with the military campaigns our African allies, like Chad and Niger, are waging in the struggle against Boko Haram. But, in the end, the answer to this threat must come from within Nigeria.", "answer": "Chad and Niger", "sentence": "We must, of course, have better coordination with the military campaigns our African allies, like Chad and Niger , are waging in the struggle against Boko Haram.", "paragraph_sentence": "That is why the answer to defeating Boko Haram begins and ends with Nigeria. That is not to say that allies cannot help us. My administration would welcome the resumption of a military training agreement with the United States, which was halted during the previous administration. We must, of course, have better coordination with the military campaigns our African allies, like Chad and Niger , are waging in the struggle against Boko Haram. But, in the end, the answer to this threat must come from within Nigeria.", "paragraph_answer": "That is why the answer to defeating Boko Haram begins and ends with Nigeria. That is not to say that allies cannot help us. My administration would welcome the resumption of a military training agreement with the United States, which was halted during the previous administration. We must, of course, have better coordination with the military campaigns our African allies, like Chad and Niger , are waging in the struggle against Boko Haram. But, in the end, the answer to this threat must come from within Nigeria.", "sentence_answer": "We must, of course, have better coordination with the military campaigns our African allies, like Chad and Niger , are waging in the struggle against Boko Haram.", "paragraph_id": "5d705d9dc8e4820a9b66ef93"} +{"question": "What was the reason for Adrian Peterson's recent absence from the playing field?", "paragraph": "Here are the best games to watch in N.F.L. Week 4: Vikings (2-1) at Broncos (3-0) 4:25 p.m. Line: Broncos by 7 \u201cWho is a better running back than me?\u201d Vikings running back Adrian Peterson asked a group of reporters last week. He may have a point. Peterson, 30, is at an age when running backs tend to wear down, but after being suspended for 15 games last season, he has emerged as an example of how an extended break from the rigors of competition can rejuvenate an aging star. Through three games, he leads the N.F.L. with 291 rushing yards, and last week he uncorked a 43-yard touchdown run that had fans checking their calendars to see if they had traveled back to 2012. One could argue for Jamaal Charles, Le\u2019Veon Bell or Matt Forte as the game\u2019s best running back, but Peterson is certainly in the discussion. The question now is whether Peterson\u2019s two-week outburst, in which he shredded the Lions and the Chargers, is a fluke or a sign that he and the Vikings are back.", "answer": "suspended for 15 games", "sentence": "Peterson, 30, is at an age when running backs tend to wear down, but after being suspended for 15 games last season, he has emerged as an example of how an extended break from the rigors of competition can rejuvenate an aging star.", "paragraph_sentence": "Here are the best games to watch in N.F.L. Week 4: Vikings (2-1) at Broncos (3-0) 4:25 p.m. Line: Broncos by 7 \u201cWho is a better running back than me?\u201d Vikings running back Adrian Peterson asked a group of reporters last week. He may have a point. Peterson, 30, is at an age when running backs tend to wear down, but after being suspended for 15 games last season, he has emerged as an example of how an extended break from the rigors of competition can rejuvenate an aging star. Through three games, he leads the N.F.L. with 291 rushing yards, and last week he uncorked a 43-yard touchdown run that had fans checking their calendars to see if they had traveled back to 2012. One could argue for Jamaal Charles, Le\u2019Veon Bell or Matt Forte as the game\u2019s best running back, but Peterson is certainly in the discussion. The question now is whether Peterson\u2019s two-week outburst, in which he shredded the Lions and the Chargers, is a fluke or a sign that he and the Vikings are back.", "paragraph_answer": "Here are the best games to watch in N.F.L. Week 4: Vikings (2-1) at Broncos (3-0) 4:25 p.m. Line: Broncos by 7 \u201cWho is a better running back than me?\u201d Vikings running back Adrian Peterson asked a group of reporters last week. He may have a point. Peterson, 30, is at an age when running backs tend to wear down, but after being suspended for 15 games last season, he has emerged as an example of how an extended break from the rigors of competition can rejuvenate an aging star. Through three games, he leads the N.F.L. with 291 rushing yards, and last week he uncorked a 43-yard touchdown run that had fans checking their calendars to see if they had traveled back to 2012. One could argue for Jamaal Charles, Le\u2019Veon Bell or Matt Forte as the game\u2019s best running back, but Peterson is certainly in the discussion. The question now is whether Peterson\u2019s two-week outburst, in which he shredded the Lions and the Chargers, is a fluke or a sign that he and the Vikings are back.", "sentence_answer": "Peterson, 30, is at an age when running backs tend to wear down, but after being suspended for 15 games last season, he has emerged as an example of how an extended break from the rigors of competition can rejuvenate an aging star.", "paragraph_id": "5d702237c8e4820a9b66ce44"} +{"question": "What is the analogy used to describe the people mentioned in the passage?", "paragraph": "Since the days of slavery, they argued, blacks had adopted an outward style of ingratiating deference that masked a seething anger. \u201cAs a sapling bent low stores energy for a violent backswing,\u201d they wrote, \u201cblacks bent double by oppression have stored energy which will be released in the form of rage \u2014 black rage, apocalyptic and final.\u201d The book was unremittingly bleak by design. \u201cThis dismal tone has been deliberate,\u201d the authors wrote in the final pages. \u201cIt has been an attempt to evoke a certain quality of depression and hopelessness in the reader and to stir these feelings. These are the most common feelings tasted by black people in America.\u201d", "answer": "As a sapling bent low stores energy for a violent backswing", "sentence": "\u201c As a sapling bent low stores energy for a violent backswing ,\u201d they wrote, \u201cblacks bent double by oppression have stored energy which will be released in the form of rage \u2014 black rage, apocalyptic and final.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Since the days of slavery, they argued, blacks had adopted an outward style of ingratiating deference that masked a seething anger. \u201c As a sapling bent low stores energy for a violent backswing ,\u201d they wrote, \u201cblacks bent double by oppression have stored energy which will be released in the form of rage \u2014 black rage, apocalyptic and final.\u201d The book was unremittingly bleak by design. \u201cThis dismal tone has been deliberate,\u201d the authors wrote in the final pages. \u201cIt has been an attempt to evoke a certain quality of depression and hopelessness in the reader and to stir these feelings. These are the most common feelings tasted by black people in America.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Since the days of slavery, they argued, blacks had adopted an outward style of ingratiating deference that masked a seething anger. \u201c As a sapling bent low stores energy for a violent backswing ,\u201d they wrote, \u201cblacks bent double by oppression have stored energy which will be released in the form of rage \u2014 black rage, apocalyptic and final.\u201d The book was unremittingly bleak by design. \u201cThis dismal tone has been deliberate,\u201d the authors wrote in the final pages. \u201cIt has been an attempt to evoke a certain quality of depression and hopelessness in the reader and to stir these feelings. These are the most common feelings tasted by black people in America.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201c As a sapling bent low stores energy for a violent backswing ,\u201d they wrote, \u201cblacks bent double by oppression have stored energy which will be released in the form of rage \u2014 black rage, apocalyptic and final.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d701cfdc8e4820a9b66c873"} +{"question": "What is the setting of the event mentioned in the passage?", "paragraph": "CHANTILLY, Va. \u2014 On a recent Wednesday morning, 100 intelligence analysts crammed into a nondescript conference room here and dialed into a group call with 100 counterparts in Argentina, Brazil, Cyprus, India, the Netherlands, Romania, Spain, Taiwan and Ukraine.", "answer": "a nondescript conference room", "sentence": "CHANTILLY, Va. \u2014 On a recent Wednesday morning, 100 intelligence analysts crammed into a nondescript conference room here and dialed into a group call with 100 counterparts in Argentina, Brazil, Cyprus, India, the Netherlands, Romania, Spain, Taiwan and Ukraine.", "paragraph_sentence": " CHANTILLY, Va. \u2014 On a recent Wednesday morning, 100 intelligence analysts crammed into a nondescript conference room here and dialed into a group call with 100 counterparts in Argentina, Brazil, Cyprus, India, the Netherlands, Romania, Spain, Taiwan and Ukraine. ", "paragraph_answer": "CHANTILLY, Va. \u2014 On a recent Wednesday morning, 100 intelligence analysts crammed into a nondescript conference room here and dialed into a group call with 100 counterparts in Argentina, Brazil, Cyprus, India, the Netherlands, Romania, Spain, Taiwan and Ukraine.", "sentence_answer": "CHANTILLY, Va. \u2014 On a recent Wednesday morning, 100 intelligence analysts crammed into a nondescript conference room here and dialed into a group call with 100 counterparts in Argentina, Brazil, Cyprus, India, the Netherlands, Romania, Spain, Taiwan and Ukraine.", "paragraph_id": "5d7020d5c8e4820a9b66ccc7"} +{"question": "Who plays a Dominican immigrant in Show Me a Hero?", "paragraph": "Equally fine on the other side of the story, which is dominated by women, are Ilfenesh Hadera as a Dominican immigrant, Dominique Fishback as a young black mother, and Natalie Paul as a budding community organizer. They all contribute to making \u201cShow Me a Hero\u201d more than worthwhile, and certainly as grounded and authentically textured as any television drama you\u2019re likely to come across. It may not have the visceral pull that mystery and violence gave \u201cThe Wire,\u201d or the emotional highs that music gave \u201cTreme,\u201d but you could do worse than a good lecture on civility, tolerance and the virtues of good government.", "answer": "Ilfenesh Hadera", "sentence": "Equally fine on the other side of the story, which is dominated by women, are Ilfenesh Hadera as a Dominican immigrant, Dominique Fishback as a young black mother, and Natalie Paul as a budding community organizer.", "paragraph_sentence": " Equally fine on the other side of the story, which is dominated by women, are Ilfenesh Hadera as a Dominican immigrant, Dominique Fishback as a young black mother, and Natalie Paul as a budding community organizer. They all contribute to making \u201cShow Me a Hero\u201d more than worthwhile, and certainly as grounded and authentically textured as any television drama you\u2019re likely to come across. It may not have the visceral pull that mystery and violence gave \u201cThe Wire,\u201d or the emotional highs that music gave \u201cTreme,\u201d but you could do worse than a good lecture on civility, tolerance and the virtues of good government.", "paragraph_answer": "Equally fine on the other side of the story, which is dominated by women, are Ilfenesh Hadera as a Dominican immigrant, Dominique Fishback as a young black mother, and Natalie Paul as a budding community organizer. They all contribute to making \u201cShow Me a Hero\u201d more than worthwhile, and certainly as grounded and authentically textured as any television drama you\u2019re likely to come across. It may not have the visceral pull that mystery and violence gave \u201cThe Wire,\u201d or the emotional highs that music gave \u201cTreme,\u201d but you could do worse than a good lecture on civility, tolerance and the virtues of good government.", "sentence_answer": "Equally fine on the other side of the story, which is dominated by women, are Ilfenesh Hadera as a Dominican immigrant, Dominique Fishback as a young black mother, and Natalie Paul as a budding community organizer.", "paragraph_id": "5d705b8ac8e4820a9b66eedf"} +{"question": "What language are some of Poles' work in?", "paragraph": "Third, Begley makes no mention of the many complex attempts by Polish gentiles to come to terms with the country\u2019s responsibility, which would include the novels of Jerzy Andrzejewski and Andrzej Szczypiorski and films by Andrzej Wajda, Jerzy Kawalerowicz and Wanda Jakubowska. There is also a great deal of important historical work by Poles on the Holocaust, some of which is now available in English. Many countries involved in the Holocaust acknowledged their collective responsibility only after considerable delay: France did not begin to question its myth of heroic Resistance until the 1980s and 1990s. Poles are now \u201cworking through the past\u201d \u2014 as Theodor Adorno put it \u2014 in a way comparable to the collective memory work of Germans since the 1960s. Last year\u2019s opening of a Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw is only the most visible sign of this.", "answer": "English", "sentence": "There is also a great deal of important historical work by Poles on the Holocaust, some of which is now available in English .", "paragraph_sentence": "Third, Begley makes no mention of the many complex attempts by Polish gentiles to come to terms with the country\u2019s responsibility, which would include the novels of Jerzy Andrzejewski and Andrzej Szczypiorski and films by Andrzej Wajda, Jerzy Kawalerowicz and Wanda Jakubowska. There is also a great deal of important historical work by Poles on the Holocaust, some of which is now available in English . Many countries involved in the Holocaust acknowledged their collective responsibility only after considerable delay: France did not begin to question its myth of heroic Resistance until the 1980s and 1990s. Poles are now \u201cworking through the past\u201d \u2014 as Theodor Adorno put it \u2014 in a way comparable to the collective memory work of Germans since the 1960s. Last year\u2019s opening of a Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw is only the most visible sign of this.", "paragraph_answer": "Third, Begley makes no mention of the many complex attempts by Polish gentiles to come to terms with the country\u2019s responsibility, which would include the novels of Jerzy Andrzejewski and Andrzej Szczypiorski and films by Andrzej Wajda, Jerzy Kawalerowicz and Wanda Jakubowska. There is also a great deal of important historical work by Poles on the Holocaust, some of which is now available in English . Many countries involved in the Holocaust acknowledged their collective responsibility only after considerable delay: France did not begin to question its myth of heroic Resistance until the 1980s and 1990s. Poles are now \u201cworking through the past\u201d \u2014 as Theodor Adorno put it \u2014 in a way comparable to the collective memory work of Germans since the 1960s. Last year\u2019s opening of a Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw is only the most visible sign of this.", "sentence_answer": "There is also a great deal of important historical work by Poles on the Holocaust, some of which is now available in English .", "paragraph_id": "5d7051a1c8e4820a9b66eb95"} +{"question": "Which of the 12 largest banks generated returns above their cost of capital last year?", "paragraph": "Of the world\u2019s 12 largest banks, only Wells Fargo and Goldman Sachs generated returns above their cost of capital last year, according to an analysis in Financial News by Roy Smith and Brad Hintz, professors at NYU Stern School of Business. Investment banking is the main drag on performance. The average return on equity produced by Goldman Sachs and the capital markets divisions of eight big American and European groups was 6.6 percent last year, according to Breakingviews calculations. That\u2019s barely over half what McKinsey estimates is the industry\u2019s long-term average 12 percent cost of capital. But the picture is not as bleak as it looks. Fines and settlements pulled down the figure. Exclude these and apply a 30 percent tax rate, and the combined return was just in double digits, at 10.7 percent.", "answer": "only Wells Fargo and Goldman Sachs", "sentence": "Of the world\u2019s 12 largest banks, only Wells Fargo and Goldman Sachs generated returns above their cost of capital last year, according to an analysis in Financial News by Roy Smith and Brad Hintz, professors at NYU Stern School of Business.", "paragraph_sentence": " Of the world\u2019s 12 largest banks, only Wells Fargo and Goldman Sachs generated returns above their cost of capital last year, according to an analysis in Financial News by Roy Smith and Brad Hintz, professors at NYU Stern School of Business. Investment banking is the main drag on performance. The average return on equity produced by Goldman Sachs and the capital markets divisions of eight big American and European groups was 6.6 percent last year, according to Breakingviews calculations. That\u2019s barely over half what McKinsey estimates is the industry\u2019s long-term average 12 percent cost of capital. But the picture is not as bleak as it looks. Fines and settlements pulled down the figure. Exclude these and apply a 30 percent tax rate, and the combined return was just in double digits, at 10.7 percent.", "paragraph_answer": "Of the world\u2019s 12 largest banks, only Wells Fargo and Goldman Sachs generated returns above their cost of capital last year, according to an analysis in Financial News by Roy Smith and Brad Hintz, professors at NYU Stern School of Business. Investment banking is the main drag on performance. The average return on equity produced by Goldman Sachs and the capital markets divisions of eight big American and European groups was 6.6 percent last year, according to Breakingviews calculations. That\u2019s barely over half what McKinsey estimates is the industry\u2019s long-term average 12 percent cost of capital. But the picture is not as bleak as it looks. Fines and settlements pulled down the figure. Exclude these and apply a 30 percent tax rate, and the combined return was just in double digits, at 10.7 percent.", "sentence_answer": "Of the world\u2019s 12 largest banks, only Wells Fargo and Goldman Sachs generated returns above their cost of capital last year, according to an analysis in Financial News by Roy Smith and Brad Hintz, professors at NYU Stern School of Business.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026bac8e4820a9b66d31f"} +{"question": "How many games in a row have the Rangers lost?", "paragraph": "For the second straight afternoon, McIlrath got into a fight that he won decisively, knocking off Schenn\u2019s helmet and pounding him with uppercuts. The fight stirred the Madison Square Garden crowd and might have launched the Rangers to a victory. But they suddenly have other problems. After the fight, which unfolded 11 minutes into the game, the Rangers were outshot, 31-21, and the Flyers, who remain the league\u2019s lowest-scoring team, rolled to a 3-0 victory. The Rangers (16-6-2) have lost three games in a row in regulation for the first time this season.", "answer": "three", "sentence": "The Rangers (16-6-2) have lost three games in a row in regulation for the first time this season.", "paragraph_sentence": "For the second straight afternoon, McIlrath got into a fight that he won decisively, knocking off Schenn\u2019s helmet and pounding him with uppercuts. The fight stirred the Madison Square Garden crowd and might have launched the Rangers to a victory. But they suddenly have other problems. After the fight, which unfolded 11 minutes into the game, the Rangers were outshot, 31-21, and the Flyers, who remain the league\u2019s lowest-scoring team, rolled to a 3-0 victory. The Rangers (16-6-2) have lost three games in a row in regulation for the first time this season. ", "paragraph_answer": "For the second straight afternoon, McIlrath got into a fight that he won decisively, knocking off Schenn\u2019s helmet and pounding him with uppercuts. The fight stirred the Madison Square Garden crowd and might have launched the Rangers to a victory. But they suddenly have other problems. After the fight, which unfolded 11 minutes into the game, the Rangers were outshot, 31-21, and the Flyers, who remain the league\u2019s lowest-scoring team, rolled to a 3-0 victory. The Rangers (16-6-2) have lost three games in a row in regulation for the first time this season.", "sentence_answer": "The Rangers (16-6-2) have lost three games in a row in regulation for the first time this season.", "paragraph_id": "5d7021cbc8e4820a9b66cde0"} +{"question": "What type of film was \"The Displaced?\"", "paragraph": "In the weeks since New York Times Magazine readers had the opportunity to experience the magazine\u2019s \u201cThe Displaced\u201d virtual-reality film with Google Cardboard V.R. viewers delivered to subscribers, the film has been shown around the world. Before a screening in New Delhi on Friday, Women in the World, a live-event series associated with The Times, hosted a discussion on the global refugee and migrant crisis moderated by the actress Cate Blanchett and featuring the photojournalist and frequent Times Magazine contributor Lynsey Addario among its guests.", "answer": "virtual-reality", "sentence": "In the weeks since New York Times Magazine readers had the opportunity to experience the magazine\u2019s \u201cThe Displaced\u201d virtual-reality film with Google Cardboard V.R. viewers delivered to subscribers, the film has been shown around the world.", "paragraph_sentence": " In the weeks since New York Times Magazine readers had the opportunity to experience the magazine\u2019s \u201cThe Displaced\u201d virtual-reality film with Google Cardboard V.R. viewers delivered to subscribers, the film has been shown around the world. Before a screening in New Delhi on Friday, Women in the World, a live-event series associated with The Times, hosted a discussion on the global refugee and migrant crisis moderated by the actress Cate Blanchett and featuring the photojournalist and frequent Times Magazine contributor Lynsey Addario among its guests.", "paragraph_answer": "In the weeks since New York Times Magazine readers had the opportunity to experience the magazine\u2019s \u201cThe Displaced\u201d virtual-reality film with Google Cardboard V.R. viewers delivered to subscribers, the film has been shown around the world. Before a screening in New Delhi on Friday, Women in the World, a live-event series associated with The Times, hosted a discussion on the global refugee and migrant crisis moderated by the actress Cate Blanchett and featuring the photojournalist and frequent Times Magazine contributor Lynsey Addario among its guests.", "sentence_answer": "In the weeks since New York Times Magazine readers had the opportunity to experience the magazine\u2019s \u201cThe Displaced\u201d virtual-reality film with Google Cardboard V.R. viewers delivered to subscribers, the film has been shown around the world.", "paragraph_id": "5d7031cbc8e4820a9b66dd71"} +{"question": "when they set sail?", "paragraph": "Mary Morris Gamble Booth, class of \u201950, traveled to Paris with Sweet Briar\u2019s first junior-year program, which drew students of both sexes from across the country, including, that year, 15 Yale men. It was 1948 when they set sail, and Ms. Booth recounted how one of the Yale men kept trying to sneak up to the first-class deck from third class. \u201cHe was wearing white bucks and the British crew did not approve of white buck shoes, so he gave himself away,\u201d she recalled. She said she was not quite paying attention when Secretary of State George Marshall articulated his Marshall Plan at Reid Hall, Sweet Briar\u2019s Left Bank headquarters. Nevertheless, she ended up working for the program in Washington. \u201cThis year, I\u2019m chairman of our 65th reunion,\u201d Ms. Booth, 87, said sadly. \u201cWhen they asked me last year, I said: \u2018Sure, how hard can that be? Last year I think four people showed up for their 65th.\u2019 Of course, this year is going to be a mob scene. It\u2019s sort of an alpha and omega. Our reunion, and the last graduation.\u201d", "answer": "1948", "sentence": "It was 1948 when they set sail, and Ms. Booth recounted how one of the Yale men kept trying to sneak up to the first-class deck from third class.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mary Morris Gamble Booth, class of \u201950, traveled to Paris with Sweet Briar\u2019s first junior-year program, which drew students of both sexes from across the country, including, that year, 15 Yale men. It was 1948 when they set sail, and Ms. Booth recounted how one of the Yale men kept trying to sneak up to the first-class deck from third class. \u201cHe was wearing white bucks and the British crew did not approve of white buck shoes, so he gave himself away,\u201d she recalled. She said she was not quite paying attention when Secretary of State George Marshall articulated his Marshall Plan at Reid Hall, Sweet Briar\u2019s Left Bank headquarters. Nevertheless, she ended up working for the program in Washington. \u201cThis year, I\u2019m chairman of our 65th reunion,\u201d Ms. Booth, 87, said sadly. \u201cWhen they asked me last year, I said: \u2018Sure, how hard can that be? Last year I think four people showed up for their 65th.\u2019 Of course, this year is going to be a mob scene. It\u2019s sort of an alpha and omega. Our reunion, and the last graduation.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Mary Morris Gamble Booth, class of \u201950, traveled to Paris with Sweet Briar\u2019s first junior-year program, which drew students of both sexes from across the country, including, that year, 15 Yale men. It was 1948 when they set sail, and Ms. Booth recounted how one of the Yale men kept trying to sneak up to the first-class deck from third class. \u201cHe was wearing white bucks and the British crew did not approve of white buck shoes, so he gave himself away,\u201d she recalled. She said she was not quite paying attention when Secretary of State George Marshall articulated his Marshall Plan at Reid Hall, Sweet Briar\u2019s Left Bank headquarters. Nevertheless, she ended up working for the program in Washington. \u201cThis year, I\u2019m chairman of our 65th reunion,\u201d Ms. Booth, 87, said sadly. \u201cWhen they asked me last year, I said: \u2018Sure, how hard can that be? Last year I think four people showed up for their 65th.\u2019 Of course, this year is going to be a mob scene. It\u2019s sort of an alpha and omega. Our reunion, and the last graduation.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "It was 1948 when they set sail, and Ms. Booth recounted how one of the Yale men kept trying to sneak up to the first-class deck from third class.", "paragraph_id": "5d70229fc8e4820a9b66ceb7"} +{"question": "When were the appliances replaced?", "paragraph": "INDOORS: The house was built in 1928 and renovated within the last 10 years, at which point a wing was added. The exterior is limestone, likely quarried in the region, and the style is a subset of Tudor revival called Cotswold, known for steeply pitched gables and prominent front chimneys. The new wing was designed by Stock & Stone Architecture of Columbus, which the listing agent says is known for its work on older houses. Through the front door, there\u2019s a foyer that leads to a living room with a high pitched ceiling and a fireplace flanked by large windows. The exposed ceiling beams are original, as is much of the chestnut woodwork, complemented by stone floors laid during renovations. On one side of the foyer are a breakfast room and a kitchen, with appliances updated over the last 10 years. On the other side of the foyer is a wing with three bedrooms and two bathrooms; another bedroom and bathroom are upstairs.", "answer": "over the last 10 years", "sentence": "On one side of the foyer are a breakfast room and a kitchen, with appliances updated over the last 10 years .", "paragraph_sentence": "INDOORS: The house was built in 1928 and renovated within the last 10 years, at which point a wing was added. The exterior is limestone, likely quarried in the region, and the style is a subset of Tudor revival called Cotswold, known for steeply pitched gables and prominent front chimneys. The new wing was designed by Stock & Stone Architecture of Columbus, which the listing agent says is known for its work on older houses. Through the front door, there\u2019s a foyer that leads to a living room with a high pitched ceiling and a fireplace flanked by large windows. The exposed ceiling beams are original, as is much of the chestnut woodwork, complemented by stone floors laid during renovations. On one side of the foyer are a breakfast room and a kitchen, with appliances updated over the last 10 years . On the other side of the foyer is a wing with three bedrooms and two bathrooms; another bedroom and bathroom are upstairs.", "paragraph_answer": "INDOORS: The house was built in 1928 and renovated within the last 10 years, at which point a wing was added. The exterior is limestone, likely quarried in the region, and the style is a subset of Tudor revival called Cotswold, known for steeply pitched gables and prominent front chimneys. The new wing was designed by Stock & Stone Architecture of Columbus, which the listing agent says is known for its work on older houses. Through the front door, there\u2019s a foyer that leads to a living room with a high pitched ceiling and a fireplace flanked by large windows. The exposed ceiling beams are original, as is much of the chestnut woodwork, complemented by stone floors laid during renovations. On one side of the foyer are a breakfast room and a kitchen, with appliances updated over the last 10 years . On the other side of the foyer is a wing with three bedrooms and two bathrooms; another bedroom and bathroom are upstairs.", "sentence_answer": "On one side of the foyer are a breakfast room and a kitchen, with appliances updated over the last 10 years .", "paragraph_id": "5d701c7fc8e4820a9b66c7f0"} +{"question": "Who was Jeb Bush's campaign manager?", "paragraph": "Mr. Atwater managed George Bush\u2019s 1988 campaign against Michael S. Dukakis, the Massachusetts governor, a race that featured one of the most devastating political ads in American history. It discussed Willie Horton, a black murderer who escaped from the Massachusetts prison system while on a weekend furlough and raped a white woman and stabbed her husband. Mr. Atwater denied having a role in the ad, which was sponsored by a political action committee. But he said part of his plan to defeat Mr. Dukakis was to \u201cmake Willie Horton his running mate.\u201d \u201cIt is certainly true the Bushes like to win, and have never kept their Lee Atwaters and their Karl Roves on a short leash, when anything and everything was required,\u201d Mr. Draper said. Jeb Bush\u2019s team, led by his pugnacious campaign manager, Danny Diaz, can also be feisty.", "answer": "Danny Diaz", "sentence": "Jeb Bush\u2019s team, led by his pugnacious campaign manager, Danny Diaz , can also be feisty.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Atwater managed George Bush\u2019s 1988 campaign against Michael S. Dukakis, the Massachusetts governor, a race that featured one of the most devastating political ads in American history. It discussed Willie Horton, a black murderer who escaped from the Massachusetts prison system while on a weekend furlough and raped a white woman and stabbed her husband. Mr. Atwater denied having a role in the ad, which was sponsored by a political action committee. But he said part of his plan to defeat Mr. Dukakis was to \u201cmake Willie Horton his running mate.\u201d \u201cIt is certainly true the Bushes like to win, and have never kept their Lee Atwaters and their Karl Roves on a short leash, when anything and everything was required,\u201d Mr. Draper said. Jeb Bush\u2019s team, led by his pugnacious campaign manager, Danny Diaz , can also be feisty. ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Atwater managed George Bush\u2019s 1988 campaign against Michael S. Dukakis, the Massachusetts governor, a race that featured one of the most devastating political ads in American history. It discussed Willie Horton, a black murderer who escaped from the Massachusetts prison system while on a weekend furlough and raped a white woman and stabbed her husband. Mr. Atwater denied having a role in the ad, which was sponsored by a political action committee. But he said part of his plan to defeat Mr. Dukakis was to \u201cmake Willie Horton his running mate.\u201d \u201cIt is certainly true the Bushes like to win, and have never kept their Lee Atwaters and their Karl Roves on a short leash, when anything and everything was required,\u201d Mr. Draper said. Jeb Bush\u2019s team, led by his pugnacious campaign manager, Danny Diaz , can also be feisty.", "sentence_answer": "Jeb Bush\u2019s team, led by his pugnacious campaign manager, Danny Diaz , can also be feisty.", "paragraph_id": "5d700a90c8e4820a9b66b483"} +{"question": "Where are the coloring circles gathered at?", "paragraph": "Surging demand caught Ms. Basford and her publisher off guard. Fan mail poured in from busy professionals and parents who confided to Ms. Basford that they found coloring in her books relaxing. More accolades flowed on social media, as people posted images from their coloring books. Hard-core fans often buy several copies of her books at a time, to experiment with different color combinations. Others have turned it into a social activity. Rebekah Jean Duthie, who lives in Queensland, Australia, and works for the Australian Red Cross, says she regularly gathers with friends for \u201ccoloring circles\u201d at cafes and in one another\u2019s homes. \u201cEach page can transport you back to a gentler time of life,\u201d she said of Ms. Basford\u2019s books in an email.", "answer": "cafes and in one another\u2019s homes", "sentence": "Rebekah Jean Duthie, who lives in Queensland, Australia, and works for the Australian Red Cross, says she regularly gathers with friends for \u201ccoloring circles\u201d at cafes and in one another\u2019s homes .", "paragraph_sentence": "Surging demand caught Ms. Basford and her publisher off guard. Fan mail poured in from busy professionals and parents who confided to Ms. Basford that they found coloring in her books relaxing. More accolades flowed on social media, as people posted images from their coloring books. Hard-core fans often buy several copies of her books at a time, to experiment with different color combinations. Others have turned it into a social activity. Rebekah Jean Duthie, who lives in Queensland, Australia, and works for the Australian Red Cross, says she regularly gathers with friends for \u201ccoloring circles\u201d at cafes and in one another\u2019s homes . \u201cEach page can transport you back to a gentler time of life,\u201d she said of Ms. Basford\u2019s books in an email.", "paragraph_answer": "Surging demand caught Ms. Basford and her publisher off guard. Fan mail poured in from busy professionals and parents who confided to Ms. Basford that they found coloring in her books relaxing. More accolades flowed on social media, as people posted images from their coloring books. Hard-core fans often buy several copies of her books at a time, to experiment with different color combinations. Others have turned it into a social activity. Rebekah Jean Duthie, who lives in Queensland, Australia, and works for the Australian Red Cross, says she regularly gathers with friends for \u201ccoloring circles\u201d at cafes and in one another\u2019s homes . \u201cEach page can transport you back to a gentler time of life,\u201d she said of Ms. Basford\u2019s books in an email.", "sentence_answer": "Rebekah Jean Duthie, who lives in Queensland, Australia, and works for the Australian Red Cross, says she regularly gathers with friends for \u201ccoloring circles\u201d at cafes and in one another\u2019s homes .", "paragraph_id": "5d70221ec8e4820a9b66ce29"} +{"question": "What were people protesting?", "paragraph": "Laxman Lal Karna, a Madhesi political leader, said talks would not progress unless a curfew in parts of the southern plains was lifted and soldiers, who have been patrolling some of towns, returned to their barracks. In the past month, at least 36 people have been killed in protests over the draft constitution, including 11 police officers and a 2-year-old child. Schools, workplaces and shops have been shut for nearly a month in many of the southern districts.", "answer": "the draft constitution", "sentence": "In the past month, at least 36 people have been killed in protests over the draft constitution , including 11 police officers and a 2-year-old child.", "paragraph_sentence": "Laxman Lal Karna, a Madhesi political leader, said talks would not progress unless a curfew in parts of the southern plains was lifted and soldiers, who have been patrolling some of towns, returned to their barracks. In the past month, at least 36 people have been killed in protests over the draft constitution , including 11 police officers and a 2-year-old child. Schools, workplaces and shops have been shut for nearly a month in many of the southern districts.", "paragraph_answer": "Laxman Lal Karna, a Madhesi political leader, said talks would not progress unless a curfew in parts of the southern plains was lifted and soldiers, who have been patrolling some of towns, returned to their barracks. In the past month, at least 36 people have been killed in protests over the draft constitution , including 11 police officers and a 2-year-old child. Schools, workplaces and shops have been shut for nearly a month in many of the southern districts.", "sentence_answer": "In the past month, at least 36 people have been killed in protests over the draft constitution , including 11 police officers and a 2-year-old child.", "paragraph_id": "5d700f77c8e4820a9b66bba0"} +{"question": "What did Shin Dong-Hyuk confess to last month?", "paragraph": "Shin Dong-hyuk, a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags, confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate. His dramatic story, which included being forced to watch the execution of his mother and brother, led to a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities. He now says that instead of growing up in the notorious Camp 14, where most prisoners go to die, he spent most of his time in the less draconian Camp 18.", "answer": "that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate", "sentence": "Shin Dong-hyuk, a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags, confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate .", "paragraph_sentence": " Shin Dong-hyuk, a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags, confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate . His dramatic story, which included being forced to watch the execution of his mother and brother, led to a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities. He now says that instead of growing up in the notorious Camp 14, where most prisoners go to die, he spent most of his time in the less draconian Camp 18.", "paragraph_answer": "Shin Dong-hyuk, a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags, confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate . His dramatic story, which included being forced to watch the execution of his mother and brother, led to a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities. He now says that instead of growing up in the notorious Camp 14, where most prisoners go to die, he spent most of his time in the less draconian Camp 18.", "sentence_answer": "Shin Dong-hyuk, a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags, confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate .", "paragraph_id": "5d70ab9dc8e4820a9b66f6ce"} +{"question": "Who was killed on the day Lamesa White movied with her children?", "paragraph": "PLANO, Tex. \u2014 Lamesa White and her four children moved in February from the most dangerous public housing project in Dallas to a single-family home in this affluent suburb. On the day she left, one of her daughter\u2019s old schoolmates was shot to death. Ms. White\u2019s escape from the Estell Village housing project \u2014 better known as The Pinks because the buildings were once painted that color \u2014 was made possible by an experiment in housing policy the federal government began in Dallas in 2011 and is now proposing to expand to most other large metropolitan areas.", "answer": "daughter\u2019s old schoolmates", "sentence": "On the day she left, one of her daughter\u2019s old schoolmates was shot to death.", "paragraph_sentence": "PLANO, Tex. \u2014 Lamesa White and her four children moved in February from the most dangerous public housing project in Dallas to a single-family home in this affluent suburb. On the day she left, one of her daughter\u2019s old schoolmates was shot to death. Ms. White\u2019s escape from the Estell Village housing project \u2014 better known as The Pinks because the buildings were once painted that color \u2014 was made possible by an experiment in housing policy the federal government began in Dallas in 2011 and is now proposing to expand to most other large metropolitan areas.", "paragraph_answer": "PLANO, Tex. \u2014 Lamesa White and her four children moved in February from the most dangerous public housing project in Dallas to a single-family home in this affluent suburb. On the day she left, one of her daughter\u2019s old schoolmates was shot to death. Ms. White\u2019s escape from the Estell Village housing project \u2014 better known as The Pinks because the buildings were once painted that color \u2014 was made possible by an experiment in housing policy the federal government began in Dallas in 2011 and is now proposing to expand to most other large metropolitan areas.", "sentence_answer": "On the day she left, one of her daughter\u2019s old schoolmates was shot to death.", "paragraph_id": "5d704680c8e4820a9b66e864"} +{"question": "In what state did Huckabee run in 2008?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt is a completely different environment than 2008, with different issues and with different candidates,\u201d said Bob Vander Plaats, who was chairman of Mr. Huckabee\u2019s 2008 Iowa campaign and is uncommitted this time. Mr. Huckabee\u2019s upset victory in the Iowa caucuses seven years ago, powered by evangelicals and home-school families, has been burnished to a political legend in the state that holds the first nominating contest. Recent polls show Iowa Republicans still put Mr. Huckabee among their top preferences, although he has been surpassed by more prominent party figures including Scott Walker and Mr. Bush. To an unusual degree, strategists for Mr. Huckabee are counting on his likability \u2014 a folksy charm that a national audience got to know during his six years as a Fox News host \u2014 to break through the pack of competitors.", "answer": "Iowa", "sentence": "\u201cIt is a completely different environment than 2008, with different issues and with different candidates,\u201d said Bob Vander Plaats, who was chairman of Mr. Huckabee\u2019s 2008 Iowa campaign and is uncommitted this time.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cIt is a completely different environment than 2008, with different issues and with different candidates,\u201d said Bob Vander Plaats, who was chairman of Mr. Huckabee\u2019s 2008 Iowa campaign and is uncommitted this time. Mr. Huckabee\u2019s upset victory in the Iowa caucuses seven years ago, powered by evangelicals and home-school families, has been burnished to a political legend in the state that holds the first nominating contest. Recent polls show Iowa Republicans still put Mr. Huckabee among their top preferences, although he has been surpassed by more prominent party figures including Scott Walker and Mr. Bush. To an unusual degree, strategists for Mr. Huckabee are counting on his likability \u2014 a folksy charm that a national audience got to know during his six years as a Fox News host \u2014 to break through the pack of competitors.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt is a completely different environment than 2008, with different issues and with different candidates,\u201d said Bob Vander Plaats, who was chairman of Mr. Huckabee\u2019s 2008 Iowa campaign and is uncommitted this time. Mr. Huckabee\u2019s upset victory in the Iowa caucuses seven years ago, powered by evangelicals and home-school families, has been burnished to a political legend in the state that holds the first nominating contest. Recent polls show Iowa Republicans still put Mr. Huckabee among their top preferences, although he has been surpassed by more prominent party figures including Scott Walker and Mr. Bush. To an unusual degree, strategists for Mr. Huckabee are counting on his likability \u2014 a folksy charm that a national audience got to know during his six years as a Fox News host \u2014 to break through the pack of competitors.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt is a completely different environment than 2008, with different issues and with different candidates,\u201d said Bob Vander Plaats, who was chairman of Mr. Huckabee\u2019s 2008 Iowa campaign and is uncommitted this time.", "paragraph_id": "5d704777c8e4820a9b66e899"} +{"question": "When does Yukiya Amano have to provide the final assessment?", "paragraph": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "answer": "Dec. 15", "sentence": "Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said.", "paragraph_sentence": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "paragraph_answer": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "sentence_answer": "Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said.", "paragraph_id": "5d70133ec8e4820a9b66bfe6"} +{"question": "What religion was RBG part of?", "paragraph": "RBG: There were many firms who put up sign-up sheets that said, \u201cMen Only.\u201d And I had three strikes against me. First, I was Jewish, and the Wall Street firms were just beginning to accept Jews. Then I was a woman. But the killer was my daughter Jane, who was 4 by then. PG: They didn\u2019t even hide why they were rejecting you? GS: No. I tried to get a much less prestigious job, at Time magazine. And they made it very clear that women researched, and men wrote. No exceptions, in spite of Clare Boothe Luce. PG: You remind me of my grandmother\u2019s line: Rejection is the best thing that can happen. It pushes us. There might not be a Ms. magazine or Notorious R.B.G. without it.", "answer": "Jewish", "sentence": "First, I was Jewish , and the Wall Street firms were just beginning to accept Jews.", "paragraph_sentence": "RBG: There were many firms who put up sign-up sheets that said, \u201cMen Only.\u201d And I had three strikes against me. First, I was Jewish , and the Wall Street firms were just beginning to accept Jews. Then I was a woman. But the killer was my daughter Jane, who was 4 by then. PG: They didn\u2019t even hide why they were rejecting you? GS: No. I tried to get a much less prestigious job, at Time magazine. And they made it very clear that women researched, and men wrote. No exceptions, in spite of Clare Boothe Luce. PG: You remind me of my grandmother\u2019s line: Rejection is the best thing that can happen. It pushes us. There might not be a Ms. magazine or Notorious R.B.G. without it.", "paragraph_answer": "RBG: There were many firms who put up sign-up sheets that said, \u201cMen Only.\u201d And I had three strikes against me. First, I was Jewish , and the Wall Street firms were just beginning to accept Jews. Then I was a woman. But the killer was my daughter Jane, who was 4 by then. PG: They didn\u2019t even hide why they were rejecting you? GS: No. I tried to get a much less prestigious job, at Time magazine. And they made it very clear that women researched, and men wrote. No exceptions, in spite of Clare Boothe Luce. PG: You remind me of my grandmother\u2019s line: Rejection is the best thing that can happen. It pushes us. There might not be a Ms. magazine or Notorious R.B.G. without it.", "sentence_answer": "First, I was Jewish , and the Wall Street firms were just beginning to accept Jews.", "paragraph_id": "5d705d3fc8e4820a9b66ef5f"} +{"question": "How many member of the inmate council signed the letter?", "paragraph": "Indeed, it is prison employees who have been implicated: One has pleaded guilty to aiding the escape; another faces criminal charges; nine officers have been suspended; and the leadership of the prison, in Dannemora, has been removed. More than 60 inmates have filed complaints with Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services of New York, an organization that assists indigent prisoners. And 10 members of an inmate council at Clinton signed a letter last month to state corrections officials making similar allegations. \u201cWe have been daily getting complaints along these lines from around the state,\u201d said Michael Cassidy, a lawyer for Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services.", "answer": "10", "sentence": "And 10 members of an inmate council at Clinton signed a letter last month to state corrections officials making similar allegations.", "paragraph_sentence": "Indeed, it is prison employees who have been implicated: One has pleaded guilty to aiding the escape; another faces criminal charges; nine officers have been suspended; and the leadership of the prison, in Dannemora, has been removed. More than 60 inmates have filed complaints with Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services of New York, an organization that assists indigent prisoners. And 10 members of an inmate council at Clinton signed a letter last month to state corrections officials making similar allegations. \u201cWe have been daily getting complaints along these lines from around the state,\u201d said Michael Cassidy, a lawyer for Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services.", "paragraph_answer": "Indeed, it is prison employees who have been implicated: One has pleaded guilty to aiding the escape; another faces criminal charges; nine officers have been suspended; and the leadership of the prison, in Dannemora, has been removed. More than 60 inmates have filed complaints with Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services of New York, an organization that assists indigent prisoners. And 10 members of an inmate council at Clinton signed a letter last month to state corrections officials making similar allegations. \u201cWe have been daily getting complaints along these lines from around the state,\u201d said Michael Cassidy, a lawyer for Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services.", "sentence_answer": "And 10 members of an inmate council at Clinton signed a letter last month to state corrections officials making similar allegations.", "paragraph_id": "5d7078fdc8e4820a9b66f2e4"} +{"question": "What do fairies use to replace babies placed in a crib?", "paragraph": "In folklore, the figure of the changeling often involves an enchanted piece of wood placed in a crib by fairies that a parent finds instead of her baby. The wood might become ill and die, or the fairies might skip the wood altogether and leave a fairy-baby instead, carting the little human off for other purposes. Either way, there\u2019s a particular kind of terror inherent in the situation: to look in a crib expecting to see one\u2019s cooing infant and instead find something inert and unknown. Maurice Sendak\u2019s picture book \u201cOutside Over There\u201d captures the horror with a rich gorgeousness, where the replacement baby is made of ice, and glows milky and terrifying and odd on the page.", "answer": "enchanted piece of wood", "sentence": "In folklore, the figure of the changeling often involves an enchanted piece of wood placed in a crib by fairies that a parent finds instead of her baby.", "paragraph_sentence": " In folklore, the figure of the changeling often involves an enchanted piece of wood placed in a crib by fairies that a parent finds instead of her baby. The wood might become ill and die, or the fairies might skip the wood altogether and leave a fairy-baby instead, carting the little human off for other purposes. Either way, there\u2019s a particular kind of terror inherent in the situation: to look in a crib expecting to see one\u2019s cooing infant and instead find something inert and unknown. Maurice Sendak\u2019s picture book \u201cOutside Over There\u201d captures the horror with a rich gorgeousness, where the replacement baby is made of ice, and glows milky and terrifying and odd on the page.", "paragraph_answer": "In folklore, the figure of the changeling often involves an enchanted piece of wood placed in a crib by fairies that a parent finds instead of her baby. The wood might become ill and die, or the fairies might skip the wood altogether and leave a fairy-baby instead, carting the little human off for other purposes. Either way, there\u2019s a particular kind of terror inherent in the situation: to look in a crib expecting to see one\u2019s cooing infant and instead find something inert and unknown. Maurice Sendak\u2019s picture book \u201cOutside Over There\u201d captures the horror with a rich gorgeousness, where the replacement baby is made of ice, and glows milky and terrifying and odd on the page.", "sentence_answer": "In folklore, the figure of the changeling often involves an enchanted piece of wood placed in a crib by fairies that a parent finds instead of her baby.", "paragraph_id": "5d700a99c8e4820a9b66b4a1"} +{"question": "What did Mr. Fawwaz head up in Kenya?", "paragraph": "He had run a Qaeda training camp in Afghanistan, and then helped to lead a terror cell in Nairobi, Kenya, Mr. Lewin said. Later, Mr. Fawwaz became \u201cBin Laden\u2019s man in London,\u201d pretending to live peacefully as a Saudi dissident but actually helping Al Qaeda \u201cbroadcast its message to the world,\u201d Mr. Lewin told the jury. He said that, Mr. Fawwaz helped to publicize Bin Laden\u2019s 1998 fatwa stating that Muslims should kill Americans anywhere in the world, and he vetted journalists who wanted to interview Bin Laden, who was living in the mountains of Afghanistan. \u201cThe defendant\u2019s participation in Al Qaeda conspiracies to kill Americans and attack American buildings is simply overwhelming,\u201d Mr. Lewin said. Mr. Fawwaz\u2019s lawyer, Bobbi C. Sternheim, did not deny that her client knew Bin Laden and had often met with him, depicting them as fellow Saudi exiles seeking to end corruption in their country. \u201cBut what we emphatically dispute,\u201d Ms. Sternheim said, \u201cis the allegation that Khaled al-Fawwaz is a member of Al Qaeda, was in cahoots with members of Al Qaeda, to plan, to prosper and to in any way effect the heinous goals of Al Qaeda to commit violence.\u201d She called her client an advocate of \u201cpeaceful reform.\u201d The nearly simultaneous attacks on the embassies in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, killed 224 people. The four men convicted each received sentences of life imprisonment. In 2010, Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani was convicted of one count of conspiracy after prosecutors said he had assisted in the attack in Dar es Salaam. Mr. Fawwaz\u2019s trial is expected to last about five weeks, the judge, Lewis A. Kaplan of Federal District Court, has said. Mr. Fawwaz has pleaded not guilty to charges that include conspiracy to kill Americans, to destroy buildings and property of the United States, and to attack national defense utilities. Arrested in 1998 in Britain, Mr. Fawwaz was sent in 2012 to Manhattan to face trial after a long extradition fight. He originally had two co-defendants: one, Nazih Abdul-Hamed al-Ruqai, 50, who had liver cancer, died this month; the other, Adel Abdul Bary, has pleaded guilty.", "answer": "terror cell", "sentence": "He had run a Qaeda training camp in Afghanistan, and then helped to lead a terror cell in Nairobi, Kenya", "paragraph_sentence": " He had run a Qaeda training camp in Afghanistan, and then helped to lead a terror cell in Nairobi, Kenya , Mr. Lewin said. Later, Mr. Fawwaz became \u201cBin Laden\u2019s man in London,\u201d pretending to live peacefully as a Saudi dissident but actually helping Al Qaeda \u201cbroadcast its message to the world,\u201d Mr. Lewin told the jury. He said that, Mr. Fawwaz helped to publicize Bin Laden\u2019s 1998 fatwa stating that Muslims should kill Americans anywhere in the world, and he vetted journalists who wanted to interview Bin Laden, who was living in the mountains of Afghanistan. \u201cThe defendant\u2019s participation in Al Qaeda conspiracies to kill Americans and attack American buildings is simply overwhelming,\u201d Mr. Lewin said. Mr. Fawwaz\u2019s lawyer, Bobbi C. Sternheim, did not deny that her client knew Bin Laden and had often met with him, depicting them as fellow Saudi exiles seeking to end corruption in their country. \u201cBut what we emphatically dispute,\u201d Ms. Sternheim said, \u201cis the allegation that Khaled al-Fawwaz is a member of Al Qaeda, was in cahoots with members of Al Qaeda, to plan, to prosper and to in any way effect the heinous goals of Al Qaeda to commit violence.\u201d She called her client an advocate of \u201cpeaceful reform.\u201d The nearly simultaneous attacks on the embassies in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, killed 224 people. The four men convicted each received sentences of life imprisonment. In 2010, Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani was convicted of one count of conspiracy after prosecutors said he had assisted in the attack in Dar es Salaam. Mr. Fawwaz\u2019s trial is expected to last about five weeks, the judge, Lewis A. Kaplan of Federal District Court, has said. Mr. Fawwaz has pleaded not guilty to charges that include conspiracy to kill Americans, to destroy buildings and property of the United States, and to attack national defense utilities. Arrested in 1998 in Britain, Mr. Fawwaz was sent in 2012 to Manhattan to face trial after a long extradition fight. He originally had two co-defendants: one, Nazih Abdul-Hamed al-Ruqai, 50, who had liver cancer, died this month; the other, Adel Abdul Bary, has pleaded guilty.", "paragraph_answer": "He had run a Qaeda training camp in Afghanistan, and then helped to lead a terror cell in Nairobi, Kenya, Mr. Lewin said. Later, Mr. Fawwaz became \u201cBin Laden\u2019s man in London,\u201d pretending to live peacefully as a Saudi dissident but actually helping Al Qaeda \u201cbroadcast its message to the world,\u201d Mr. Lewin told the jury. He said that, Mr. Fawwaz helped to publicize Bin Laden\u2019s 1998 fatwa stating that Muslims should kill Americans anywhere in the world, and he vetted journalists who wanted to interview Bin Laden, who was living in the mountains of Afghanistan. \u201cThe defendant\u2019s participation in Al Qaeda conspiracies to kill Americans and attack American buildings is simply overwhelming,\u201d Mr. Lewin said. Mr. Fawwaz\u2019s lawyer, Bobbi C. Sternheim, did not deny that her client knew Bin Laden and had often met with him, depicting them as fellow Saudi exiles seeking to end corruption in their country. \u201cBut what we emphatically dispute,\u201d Ms. Sternheim said, \u201cis the allegation that Khaled al-Fawwaz is a member of Al Qaeda, was in cahoots with members of Al Qaeda, to plan, to prosper and to in any way effect the heinous goals of Al Qaeda to commit violence.\u201d She called her client an advocate of \u201cpeaceful reform.\u201d The nearly simultaneous attacks on the embassies in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, killed 224 people. The four men convicted each received sentences of life imprisonment. In 2010, Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani was convicted of one count of conspiracy after prosecutors said he had assisted in the attack in Dar es Salaam. Mr. Fawwaz\u2019s trial is expected to last about five weeks, the judge, Lewis A. Kaplan of Federal District Court, has said. Mr. Fawwaz has pleaded not guilty to charges that include conspiracy to kill Americans, to destroy buildings and property of the United States, and to attack national defense utilities. Arrested in 1998 in Britain, Mr. Fawwaz was sent in 2012 to Manhattan to face trial after a long extradition fight. He originally had two co-defendants: one, Nazih Abdul-Hamed al-Ruqai, 50, who had liver cancer, died this month; the other, Adel Abdul Bary, has pleaded guilty.", "sentence_answer": "He had run a Qaeda training camp in Afghanistan, and then helped to lead a terror cell in Nairobi, Kenya", "paragraph_id": "5d701f24c8e4820a9b66cae5"} +{"question": "Who owns Dix Hills Animal Hospital?", "paragraph": "Dr. Rhein (left), 45, is a veterinarian in Huntington and the owner of Dix Hills Animal Hospital in Dix Hills, N.Y. She graduated and also received a veterinary medicine degree from Cornell. She is a daughter of Carol Heller Rhein and Dr. Harvey Rhein of Dix Hills. Her father retired as the owner of the veterinary clinic that she now owns. Her mother retired as an owner of A Special Place, a women\u2019s clothing boutique in Huntington. Ms. Stark-Rhein, 40, is a psychotherapist in the Smithtown, N.Y., clinic of New Horizon Counseling Center. She graduated from the University of Maryland and received a master\u2019s degree in social welfare from the State University of New York, Stony Brook.", "answer": "Dr. Rhein", "sentence": "Dr. Rhein (left), 45, is a veterinarian in Huntington and the owner of Dix Hills Animal Hospital in Dix Hills, N.Y.", "paragraph_sentence": " Dr. Rhein (left), 45, is a veterinarian in Huntington and the owner of Dix Hills Animal Hospital in Dix Hills, N.Y. She graduated and also received a veterinary medicine degree from Cornell. She is a daughter of Carol Heller Rhein and Dr. Harvey Rhein of Dix Hills. Her father retired as the owner of the veterinary clinic that she now owns. Her mother retired as an owner of A Special Place, a women\u2019s clothing boutique in Huntington. Ms. Stark-Rhein, 40, is a psychotherapist in the Smithtown, N.Y., clinic of New Horizon Counseling Center. She graduated from the University of Maryland and received a master\u2019s degree in social welfare from the State University of New York, Stony Brook.", "paragraph_answer": " Dr. Rhein (left), 45, is a veterinarian in Huntington and the owner of Dix Hills Animal Hospital in Dix Hills, N.Y. She graduated and also received a veterinary medicine degree from Cornell. She is a daughter of Carol Heller Rhein and Dr. Harvey Rhein of Dix Hills. Her father retired as the owner of the veterinary clinic that she now owns. Her mother retired as an owner of A Special Place, a women\u2019s clothing boutique in Huntington. Ms. Stark-Rhein, 40, is a psychotherapist in the Smithtown, N.Y., clinic of New Horizon Counseling Center. She graduated from the University of Maryland and received a master\u2019s degree in social welfare from the State University of New York, Stony Brook.", "sentence_answer": " Dr. Rhein (left), 45, is a veterinarian in Huntington and the owner of Dix Hills Animal Hospital in Dix Hills, N.Y.", "paragraph_id": "5d7073acc8e4820a9b66f21f"} +{"question": "In 2016 what would this threshold change too if it kept pace with inflation?", "paragraph": "Under current rules, salaried workers are not eligible for overtime if they earn enough to qualify as executives, professionals or administrators. The proposal would raise the salary threshold that defines those positions. Today, employees can be considered part of the top ranks \u2014 and generally ineligible for overtime \u2014 once their salary reaches a paltry $455 a week, or $23,660 a year. The new threshold in 2016 would be $970 a week, or $50,440 a year, about where it would be if it had kept pace with inflation over the decades. At or below that level, salaried workers are automatically eligible for overtime. (The current rules for hourly workers would remain intact.)", "answer": "$970 a week, or $50,440 a year", "sentence": "The new threshold in 2016 would be $970 a week, or $50,440 a year , about where it would be if it had kept pace with inflation over the decades.", "paragraph_sentence": "Under current rules, salaried workers are not eligible for overtime if they earn enough to qualify as executives, professionals or administrators. The proposal would raise the salary threshold that defines those positions. Today, employees can be considered part of the top ranks \u2014 and generally ineligible for overtime \u2014 once their salary reaches a paltry $455 a week, or $23,660 a year. The new threshold in 2016 would be $970 a week, or $50,440 a year , about where it would be if it had kept pace with inflation over the decades. At or below that level, salaried workers are automatically eligible for overtime. (The current rules for hourly workers would remain intact.)", "paragraph_answer": "Under current rules, salaried workers are not eligible for overtime if they earn enough to qualify as executives, professionals or administrators. The proposal would raise the salary threshold that defines those positions. Today, employees can be considered part of the top ranks \u2014 and generally ineligible for overtime \u2014 once their salary reaches a paltry $455 a week, or $23,660 a year. The new threshold in 2016 would be $970 a week, or $50,440 a year , about where it would be if it had kept pace with inflation over the decades. At or below that level, salaried workers are automatically eligible for overtime. (The current rules for hourly workers would remain intact.)", "sentence_answer": "The new threshold in 2016 would be $970 a week, or $50,440 a year , about where it would be if it had kept pace with inflation over the decades.", "paragraph_id": "5d7009e4c8e4820a9b66b30b"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700bc3c8e4820a9b66b6a6"} +{"question": "What community has virtual currencies helped enable since its existence?", "paragraph": "But the proliferation of ransom demands has provided an unhappy reminder of the virtual currency\u2019s continuing appeal to the criminal underworld, long after the authorities shut down the online drug bazaar, Silk Road, where heroin and cocaine were sold using Bitcoin. The latest reminder of Bitcoin\u2019s underbelly came last week with the arrest of two Florida men. The authorities said victims of malware were steered to Coin.mx, a site run by the two men, to buy the Bitcoins to pay the ransom demanded by the malware. The complaint suggested that the criminals also used the site to launder their proceeds.", "answer": "the criminal underworld", "sentence": "But the proliferation of ransom demands has provided an unhappy reminder of the virtual currency\u2019s continuing appeal to the criminal underworld , long after the authorities shut down the online drug bazaar, Silk Road, where heroin and cocaine were sold using Bitcoin.", "paragraph_sentence": " But the proliferation of ransom demands has provided an unhappy reminder of the virtual currency\u2019s continuing appeal to the criminal underworld , long after the authorities shut down the online drug bazaar, Silk Road, where heroin and cocaine were sold using Bitcoin. The latest reminder of Bitcoin\u2019s underbelly came last week with the arrest of two Florida men. The authorities said victims of malware were steered to Coin.mx, a site run by the two men, to buy the Bitcoins to pay the ransom demanded by the malware. The complaint suggested that the criminals also used the site to launder their proceeds.", "paragraph_answer": "But the proliferation of ransom demands has provided an unhappy reminder of the virtual currency\u2019s continuing appeal to the criminal underworld , long after the authorities shut down the online drug bazaar, Silk Road, where heroin and cocaine were sold using Bitcoin. The latest reminder of Bitcoin\u2019s underbelly came last week with the arrest of two Florida men. The authorities said victims of malware were steered to Coin.mx, a site run by the two men, to buy the Bitcoins to pay the ransom demanded by the malware. The complaint suggested that the criminals also used the site to launder their proceeds.", "sentence_answer": "But the proliferation of ransom demands has provided an unhappy reminder of the virtual currency\u2019s continuing appeal to the criminal underworld , long after the authorities shut down the online drug bazaar, Silk Road, where heroin and cocaine were sold using Bitcoin.", "paragraph_id": "5d703d83c8e4820a9b66e3b3"} +{"question": "Mr. Carson was invited to what last spring?", "paragraph": "More recently, however, Mr. Carson made clear that he would always defend his Adventist beliefs against skeptics. \u201cI\u2019m proud of the fact that I believe what God has said, and I\u2019ve said many times that I\u2019ll defend it before anyone,\u201d Mr. Carson told the Adventist Report in 2013. \u201cIf they want to criticize the fact that I believe in a literal six-day creation, let\u2019s have at it, because I will poke all kinds of holes in what they believe.\u201d For theological reasons, Adventism has faced tensions with the Roman Catholic and Baptist Churches over the years. Last spring, Mr. Carson was invited to speak at a Southern Baptist Pastors\u2019 Conference in Ohio, but he faced opposition because of his beliefs and eventually backed out. \u201cDr. Carson is a Seventh-day Adventist,\u201d a group of pastors from the Baptist organization B21 wrote in protest of his visit. \u201cTheir official theology denies the doctrine of hell in favor of annihilation,\u201d they wrote, \u201cand believes that those who worship on Sunday will bear the \u2018mark of the beast.\u2019 \u201d The church has also had a strongly anti-Catholic strain, and when Mr. Carson decided to attend Pope Francis\u2019 visit to Congress last month, Adventist message boards lit up with questions about his presence with the pontiff. Some questioned his referring to the pope as the \u201cHoly Leader\u201d and wondered, \u201cHow do such words come from the mouth of a Seventh-day Adventist?\u201d", "answer": "Southern Baptist Pastors\u2019 Conference", "sentence": "Last spring, Mr. Carson was invited to speak at a Southern Baptist Pastors\u2019 Conference in Ohio, but he faced opposition because of his beliefs and eventually backed out.", "paragraph_sentence": "More recently, however, Mr. Carson made clear that he would always defend his Adventist beliefs against skeptics. \u201cI\u2019m proud of the fact that I believe what God has said, and I\u2019ve said many times that I\u2019ll defend it before anyone,\u201d Mr. Carson told the Adventist Report in 2013. \u201cIf they want to criticize the fact that I believe in a literal six-day creation, let\u2019s have at it, because I will poke all kinds of holes in what they believe.\u201d For theological reasons, Adventism has faced tensions with the Roman Catholic and Baptist Churches over the years. Last spring, Mr. Carson was invited to speak at a Southern Baptist Pastors\u2019 Conference in Ohio, but he faced opposition because of his beliefs and eventually backed out. \u201cDr. Carson is a Seventh-day Adventist,\u201d a group of pastors from the Baptist organization B21 wrote in protest of his visit. \u201cTheir official theology denies the doctrine of hell in favor of annihilation,\u201d they wrote, \u201cand believes that those who worship on Sunday will bear the \u2018mark of the beast.\u2019 \u201d The church has also had a strongly anti-Catholic strain, and when Mr. Carson decided to attend Pope Francis\u2019 visit to Congress last month, Adventist message boards lit up with questions about his presence with the pontiff. Some questioned his referring to the pope as the \u201cHoly Leader\u201d and wondered, \u201cHow do such words come from the mouth of a Seventh-day Adventist?\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "More recently, however, Mr. Carson made clear that he would always defend his Adventist beliefs against skeptics. \u201cI\u2019m proud of the fact that I believe what God has said, and I\u2019ve said many times that I\u2019ll defend it before anyone,\u201d Mr. Carson told the Adventist Report in 2013. \u201cIf they want to criticize the fact that I believe in a literal six-day creation, let\u2019s have at it, because I will poke all kinds of holes in what they believe.\u201d For theological reasons, Adventism has faced tensions with the Roman Catholic and Baptist Churches over the years. Last spring, Mr. Carson was invited to speak at a Southern Baptist Pastors\u2019 Conference in Ohio, but he faced opposition because of his beliefs and eventually backed out. \u201cDr. Carson is a Seventh-day Adventist,\u201d a group of pastors from the Baptist organization B21 wrote in protest of his visit. \u201cTheir official theology denies the doctrine of hell in favor of annihilation,\u201d they wrote, \u201cand believes that those who worship on Sunday will bear the \u2018mark of the beast.\u2019 \u201d The church has also had a strongly anti-Catholic strain, and when Mr. Carson decided to attend Pope Francis\u2019 visit to Congress last month, Adventist message boards lit up with questions about his presence with the pontiff. Some questioned his referring to the pope as the \u201cHoly Leader\u201d and wondered, \u201cHow do such words come from the mouth of a Seventh-day Adventist?\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Last spring, Mr. Carson was invited to speak at a Southern Baptist Pastors\u2019 Conference in Ohio, but he faced opposition because of his beliefs and eventually backed out.", "paragraph_id": "5d702afec8e4820a9b66d87b"} +{"question": "Why does Trump believe climate change is a hoax?", "paragraph": "Trump calls climate change \u201ca total hoax.\u201d He arrived at this position, judging by several tweets, after experiencing a couple of especially cold winter days in New York. This is a man who has bought into every nutty conspiracy theory, and stoked much of the same, about President Obama\u2019s birth \u2014 all without a shred of evidence. But he won\u2019t take the world\u2019s leading scientists at their peer-reviewed word. If this is the kind of judgment you want in the Oval Office, get thee to Trump Tower. And here\u2019s Carson: \u201cI\u2019ll tell you what I think about climate change,\u201d he said earlier this year. \u201cThe temperature is either going up or down at any point in time, so it really is not a big deal.\u201d Ah, well. He also believes the pyramids of Egypt were built to store grain rather than as tombs for kings and queens. Hey, it\u2019s all there in the Bible, Carson says, for you fact-obsessed archaeologists. How do you explain the boastful ignorance of other leading Republican candidates? It\u2019s a political variant of Upton Sinclair\u2019s line about how \u201cIt is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends upon his not understanding it.\u201d In trying to win the support of the Koch brothers, Senators Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio and Rand Paul have signed a pledge to do the bidding of the billionaire oil industrialists, promising to \u201coppose any legislation relating to climate change\u201d that would involve higher taxes or fees. Cruz has gone the extra step of denying the very existence of climate change, an assertion that puts him at odds with three-fourths of the American public. Just pause for a second to soak in the magnitude of this sellout by these candidates to a pair of men who\u2019ve vowed to spend $889 million influencing the 2016 election.", "answer": "after experiencing a couple of especially cold winter days in New York", "sentence": "He arrived at this position, judging by several tweets, after experiencing a couple of especially cold winter days in New York .", "paragraph_sentence": "Trump calls climate change \u201ca total hoax.\u201d He arrived at this position, judging by several tweets, after experiencing a couple of especially cold winter days in New York . This is a man who has bought into every nutty conspiracy theory, and stoked much of the same, about President Obama\u2019s birth \u2014 all without a shred of evidence. But he won\u2019t take the world\u2019s leading scientists at their peer-reviewed word. If this is the kind of judgment you want in the Oval Office, get thee to Trump Tower. And here\u2019s Carson: \u201cI\u2019ll tell you what I think about climate change,\u201d he said earlier this year. \u201cThe temperature is either going up or down at any point in time, so it really is not a big deal.\u201d Ah, well. He also believes the pyramids of Egypt were built to store grain rather than as tombs for kings and queens. Hey, it\u2019s all there in the Bible, Carson says, for you fact-obsessed archaeologists. How do you explain the boastful ignorance of other leading Republican candidates? It\u2019s a political variant of Upton Sinclair\u2019s line about how \u201cIt is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends upon his not understanding it.\u201d In trying to win the support of the Koch brothers, Senators Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio and Rand Paul have signed a pledge to do the bidding of the billionaire oil industrialists, promising to \u201coppose any legislation relating to climate change\u201d that would involve higher taxes or fees. Cruz has gone the extra step of denying the very existence of climate change, an assertion that puts him at odds with three-fourths of the American public. Just pause for a second to soak in the magnitude of this sellout by these candidates to a pair of men who\u2019ve vowed to spend $889 million influencing the 2016 election.", "paragraph_answer": "Trump calls climate change \u201ca total hoax.\u201d He arrived at this position, judging by several tweets, after experiencing a couple of especially cold winter days in New York . This is a man who has bought into every nutty conspiracy theory, and stoked much of the same, about President Obama\u2019s birth \u2014 all without a shred of evidence. But he won\u2019t take the world\u2019s leading scientists at their peer-reviewed word. If this is the kind of judgment you want in the Oval Office, get thee to Trump Tower. And here\u2019s Carson: \u201cI\u2019ll tell you what I think about climate change,\u201d he said earlier this year. \u201cThe temperature is either going up or down at any point in time, so it really is not a big deal.\u201d Ah, well. He also believes the pyramids of Egypt were built to store grain rather than as tombs for kings and queens. Hey, it\u2019s all there in the Bible, Carson says, for you fact-obsessed archaeologists. How do you explain the boastful ignorance of other leading Republican candidates? It\u2019s a political variant of Upton Sinclair\u2019s line about how \u201cIt is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends upon his not understanding it.\u201d In trying to win the support of the Koch brothers, Senators Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio and Rand Paul have signed a pledge to do the bidding of the billionaire oil industrialists, promising to \u201coppose any legislation relating to climate change\u201d that would involve higher taxes or fees. Cruz has gone the extra step of denying the very existence of climate change, an assertion that puts him at odds with three-fourths of the American public. Just pause for a second to soak in the magnitude of this sellout by these candidates to a pair of men who\u2019ve vowed to spend $889 million influencing the 2016 election.", "sentence_answer": "He arrived at this position, judging by several tweets, after experiencing a couple of especially cold winter days in New York .", "paragraph_id": "5d70240bc8e4820a9b66d04b"} +{"question": "Rueben Randle and Odell Beckham Jr. both play what position for the Giants?", "paragraph": "Coughlin said: \u201cWe dedicated the game to him. We showed him the game ball that will be awarded to him. Everyone was able to cheer him on and try to make him feel better. He said he watched the game, and he was very proud of how we finished.\u201d EXTRA POINTS Wide receivers Odell Beckham Jr. and Rueben Randle have hamstring injuries that could jeopardize their readiness for the Giants\u2019 next game, at Philadelphia on Oct. 19. Tom Coughlin said he was hoping Beckham and Randle could practice this week in some capacity, even if they were limited. Coughlin offered no update on the availability of Victor Cruz, another receiver, for the Eagles game. ... Middle linebacker Jon Beason, who left Sunday\u2019s game against the San Francisco 49ers early in the first quarter with a concussion, was in \u201cpretty good shape\u201d on Monday morning, Coughlin said.", "answer": "Wide receivers", "sentence": "EXTRA POINTS Wide receivers Odell Beckham Jr. and Rueben Randle have hamstring injuries that could jeopardize their readiness for the Giants\u2019 next game, at Philadelphia on Oct. 19.", "paragraph_sentence": "Coughlin said: \u201cWe dedicated the game to him. We showed him the game ball that will be awarded to him. Everyone was able to cheer him on and try to make him feel better. He said he watched the game, and he was very proud of how we finished.\u201d EXTRA POINTS Wide receivers Odell Beckham Jr. and Rueben Randle have hamstring injuries that could jeopardize their readiness for the Giants\u2019 next game, at Philadelphia on Oct. 19. Tom Coughlin said he was hoping Beckham and Randle could practice this week in some capacity, even if they were limited. Coughlin offered no update on the availability of Victor Cruz, another receiver, for the Eagles game. ... Middle linebacker Jon Beason, who left Sunday\u2019s game against the San Francisco 49ers early in the first quarter with a concussion, was in \u201cpretty good shape\u201d on Monday morning, Coughlin said.", "paragraph_answer": "Coughlin said: \u201cWe dedicated the game to him. We showed him the game ball that will be awarded to him. Everyone was able to cheer him on and try to make him feel better. He said he watched the game, and he was very proud of how we finished.\u201d EXTRA POINTS Wide receivers Odell Beckham Jr. and Rueben Randle have hamstring injuries that could jeopardize their readiness for the Giants\u2019 next game, at Philadelphia on Oct. 19. Tom Coughlin said he was hoping Beckham and Randle could practice this week in some capacity, even if they were limited. Coughlin offered no update on the availability of Victor Cruz, another receiver, for the Eagles game. ... Middle linebacker Jon Beason, who left Sunday\u2019s game against the San Francisco 49ers early in the first quarter with a concussion, was in \u201cpretty good shape\u201d on Monday morning, Coughlin said.", "sentence_answer": "EXTRA POINTS Wide receivers Odell Beckham Jr. and Rueben Randle have hamstring injuries that could jeopardize their readiness for the Giants\u2019 next game, at Philadelphia on Oct. 19.", "paragraph_id": "5d703a66c8e4820a9b66e226"} +{"question": "What country also uses the euro?", "paragraph": "Greece\u2019s backsliding on its pledges has stirred speculation in recent days of a possible \u201cGrexit,\u201d or Greek exit, from the 19-nation group that uses the euro. It also gave rise to a new piece of Brussels jargon: \u201cGrexident,\u201d or the prospect of Greece stumbling through the exit by accident. In a sign of how testy the mood had become, Charles Michel, the prime minister of Belgium, another country that uses the euro, complained that mediation with Greece should involve all members of the eurozone and could not be done by a few individual members.", "answer": "that mediation with Greece should involve all members of the eurozone and could not be done by a few individual members", "sentence": "In a sign of how testy the mood had become, Charles Michel, the prime minister of Belgium, another country that uses the euro, complained that mediation with Greece should involve all members of the eurozone and could not be done by a few individual members .", "paragraph_sentence": "Greece\u2019s backsliding on its pledges has stirred speculation in recent days of a possible \u201cGrexit,\u201d or Greek exit, from the 19-nation group that uses the euro. It also gave rise to a new piece of Brussels jargon: \u201cGrexident,\u201d or the prospect of Greece stumbling through the exit by accident. In a sign of how testy the mood had become, Charles Michel, the prime minister of Belgium, another country that uses the euro, complained that mediation with Greece should involve all members of the eurozone and could not be done by a few individual members . ", "paragraph_answer": "Greece\u2019s backsliding on its pledges has stirred speculation in recent days of a possible \u201cGrexit,\u201d or Greek exit, from the 19-nation group that uses the euro. It also gave rise to a new piece of Brussels jargon: \u201cGrexident,\u201d or the prospect of Greece stumbling through the exit by accident. In a sign of how testy the mood had become, Charles Michel, the prime minister of Belgium, another country that uses the euro, complained that mediation with Greece should involve all members of the eurozone and could not be done by a few individual members .", "sentence_answer": "In a sign of how testy the mood had become, Charles Michel, the prime minister of Belgium, another country that uses the euro, complained that mediation with Greece should involve all members of the eurozone and could not be done by a few individual members .", "paragraph_id": "5d702245c8e4820a9b66ce4e"} +{"question": "How much was the settlement with General Motors?", "paragraph": "Harry Reid, the Senate Democratic leader, and Nancy Pelosi, the House Democratic leader, visit in the afternoon. MARKETS \u2022 U.S. prosecutors unveiled today a $900 million settlement with General Motors over its failure to disclose a defect in ignition switches tied to at least 124 deaths. G.M. admitted that it did not disclose the flaw to federal regulators and falsely represented to consumers that the vehicles posed no safety concern. The defect led to the recall of 2.6 million small cars last year.", "answer": "$900 million", "sentence": "U.S. prosecutors unveiled today a $900 million settlement with General Motors over its failure to disclose a defect in ignition switches tied to at least 124 deaths.", "paragraph_sentence": "Harry Reid, the Senate Democratic leader, and Nancy Pelosi, the House Democratic leader, visit in the afternoon. MARKETS \u2022 U.S. prosecutors unveiled today a $900 million settlement with General Motors over its failure to disclose a defect in ignition switches tied to at least 124 deaths. G.M. admitted that it did not disclose the flaw to federal regulators and falsely represented to consumers that the vehicles posed no safety concern. The defect led to the recall of 2.6 million small cars last year.", "paragraph_answer": "Harry Reid, the Senate Democratic leader, and Nancy Pelosi, the House Democratic leader, visit in the afternoon. MARKETS \u2022 U.S. prosecutors unveiled today a $900 million settlement with General Motors over its failure to disclose a defect in ignition switches tied to at least 124 deaths. G.M. admitted that it did not disclose the flaw to federal regulators and falsely represented to consumers that the vehicles posed no safety concern. The defect led to the recall of 2.6 million small cars last year.", "sentence_answer": "U.S. prosecutors unveiled today a $900 million settlement with General Motors over its failure to disclose a defect in ignition switches tied to at least 124 deaths.", "paragraph_id": "5d701efcc8e4820a9b66caa6"} +{"question": "What city was home to the first professional baseball team?", "paragraph": "Rose has permission to be on the field Tuesday as part of M.L.B.\u2019s fan-voted Franchise Four promotion. REDS FANS SAVOR TEAM HISTORY Cincinnati was home to the first professional baseball team, the 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings, who went unbeaten their inaugural season. There are tributes to the vintage players around the city, and former players will be in town from two other great Cincinnati teams \u2014 the 1975-76 world champions, including Rose, and the 1990 team, led by Barry Larkin, which swept the World Series over Oakland.", "answer": "Cincinnati", "sentence": "REDS FANS SAVOR TEAM HISTORY Cincinnati was home to the first professional baseball team, the 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings, who went unbeaten their inaugural season.", "paragraph_sentence": "Rose has permission to be on the field Tuesday as part of M.L.B.\u2019s fan-voted Franchise Four promotion. REDS FANS SAVOR TEAM HISTORY Cincinnati was home to the first professional baseball team, the 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings, who went unbeaten their inaugural season. There are tributes to the vintage players around the city, and former players will be in town from two other great Cincinnati teams \u2014 the 1975-76 world champions, including Rose, and the 1990 team, led by Barry Larkin, which swept the World Series over Oakland.", "paragraph_answer": "Rose has permission to be on the field Tuesday as part of M.L.B.\u2019s fan-voted Franchise Four promotion. REDS FANS SAVOR TEAM HISTORY Cincinnati was home to the first professional baseball team, the 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings, who went unbeaten their inaugural season. There are tributes to the vintage players around the city, and former players will be in town from two other great Cincinnati teams \u2014 the 1975-76 world champions, including Rose, and the 1990 team, led by Barry Larkin, which swept the World Series over Oakland.", "sentence_answer": "REDS FANS SAVOR TEAM HISTORY Cincinnati was home to the first professional baseball team, the 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings, who went unbeaten their inaugural season.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026ebc8e4820a9b66d443"} +{"question": "How long did it take for Mr. Capponi's restaurant to be built?", "paragraph": "Mr. Mana, 57, the founder of Moishe\u2019s Moving and Storage, who had recently acquired a significant swath of the Wynwood art district in Miami, paused just long enough to chide his companion: \u201cPay attention, Michael.\u201d Michael Capponi, his host, obliged, glancing up briefly from the iPhone he had been monitoring as avidly as an N.F.L. game. Mr. Capponi, a 42-year-old bon viveur, developer, night life impresario and champion of humanitarian causes (having made no fewer than 70 trips to Haiti since the island\u2019s 2010 earthquake), had in fact been listening. Then Mr. Capponi spoke, waxing effusive as he presided over the kind of high-testosterone boastfest increasingly common inside the restaurant\u2019s tulle-tented courtyard. The space, which he had constructed with his building partner, Gary Shear, is thriving these days as a hub for power diners. \u201cWe built it from scratch,\u201d Mr. Capponi all but gloated. \u201cIt took four months and a lot of getting yelled at.\u201d", "answer": "four months", "sentence": "\u201cIt took four months and a lot of getting yelled at.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Mana, 57, the founder of Moishe\u2019s Moving and Storage, who had recently acquired a significant swath of the Wynwood art district in Miami, paused just long enough to chide his companion: \u201cPay attention, Michael.\u201d Michael Capponi, his host, obliged, glancing up briefly from the iPhone he had been monitoring as avidly as an N.F.L. game. Mr. Capponi, a 42-year-old bon viveur, developer, night life impresario and champion of humanitarian causes (having made no fewer than 70 trips to Haiti since the island\u2019s 2010 earthquake), had in fact been listening. Then Mr. Capponi spoke, waxing effusive as he presided over the kind of high-testosterone boastfest increasingly common inside the restaurant\u2019s tulle-tented courtyard. The space, which he had constructed with his building partner, Gary Shear, is thriving these days as a hub for power diners. \u201cWe built it from scratch,\u201d Mr. Capponi all but gloated. \u201cIt took four months and a lot of getting yelled at.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Mana, 57, the founder of Moishe\u2019s Moving and Storage, who had recently acquired a significant swath of the Wynwood art district in Miami, paused just long enough to chide his companion: \u201cPay attention, Michael.\u201d Michael Capponi, his host, obliged, glancing up briefly from the iPhone he had been monitoring as avidly as an N.F.L. game. Mr. Capponi, a 42-year-old bon viveur, developer, night life impresario and champion of humanitarian causes (having made no fewer than 70 trips to Haiti since the island\u2019s 2010 earthquake), had in fact been listening. Then Mr. Capponi spoke, waxing effusive as he presided over the kind of high-testosterone boastfest increasingly common inside the restaurant\u2019s tulle-tented courtyard. The space, which he had constructed with his building partner, Gary Shear, is thriving these days as a hub for power diners. \u201cWe built it from scratch,\u201d Mr. Capponi all but gloated. \u201cIt took four months and a lot of getting yelled at.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt took four months and a lot of getting yelled at.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d700e12c8e4820a9b66b9d6"} +{"question": "These latest murders took place where?", "paragraph": "It\u2019s always the same story. The San Bernardino murderers were wielding assault rifles, with which they were able to fire an estimated 65-75 bullets in rapid succession. Assault weapons, which seem to be the armament of choice for mass shootings, used to be illegal under a law that expired in 2004. If the law had stayed on the books, how many victims would have survived in San Bernardino, or at the elementary school in Newtown, Conn.? Given the fact that semiautomatic weapons are totally inappropriate for either hunting or home defense, some of us would love to trade them for the possibility of reduced casualties next time somebody decides to go on a rampage. Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina is an excellent example of the politicians who totally disagree. Last time an assault weapons ban came up, he argued that Americans should not be forced to rely on regular slowpoke rifles \u201cin an environment where the law and order has broken down, whether it\u2019s a hurricane, national disaster, earthquake, terrorist attack, cyberattack where the power goes down and the dam\u2019s broken and chemicals have been released into the air and law enforcement is really not able to respond and people take advantage of that lawless environment.\u201d", "answer": "San Bernardino", "sentence": "The San Bernardino murderers were wielding assault rifles, with which they were able to fire an estimated 65-75 bullets in rapid succession.", "paragraph_sentence": "It\u2019s always the same story. The San Bernardino murderers were wielding assault rifles, with which they were able to fire an estimated 65-75 bullets in rapid succession. Assault weapons, which seem to be the armament of choice for mass shootings, used to be illegal under a law that expired in 2004. If the law had stayed on the books, how many victims would have survived in San Bernardino, or at the elementary school in Newtown, Conn.? Given the fact that semiautomatic weapons are totally inappropriate for either hunting or home defense, some of us would love to trade them for the possibility of reduced casualties next time somebody decides to go on a rampage. Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina is an excellent example of the politicians who totally disagree. Last time an assault weapons ban came up, he argued that Americans should not be forced to rely on regular slowpoke rifles \u201cin an environment where the law and order has broken down, whether it\u2019s a hurricane, national disaster, earthquake, terrorist attack, cyberattack where the power goes down and the dam\u2019s broken and chemicals have been released into the air and law enforcement is really not able to respond and people take advantage of that lawless environment.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "It\u2019s always the same story. The San Bernardino murderers were wielding assault rifles, with which they were able to fire an estimated 65-75 bullets in rapid succession. Assault weapons, which seem to be the armament of choice for mass shootings, used to be illegal under a law that expired in 2004. If the law had stayed on the books, how many victims would have survived in San Bernardino, or at the elementary school in Newtown, Conn.? Given the fact that semiautomatic weapons are totally inappropriate for either hunting or home defense, some of us would love to trade them for the possibility of reduced casualties next time somebody decides to go on a rampage. Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina is an excellent example of the politicians who totally disagree. Last time an assault weapons ban came up, he argued that Americans should not be forced to rely on regular slowpoke rifles \u201cin an environment where the law and order has broken down, whether it\u2019s a hurricane, national disaster, earthquake, terrorist attack, cyberattack where the power goes down and the dam\u2019s broken and chemicals have been released into the air and law enforcement is really not able to respond and people take advantage of that lawless environment.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The San Bernardino murderers were wielding assault rifles, with which they were able to fire an estimated 65-75 bullets in rapid succession.", "paragraph_id": "5d7018f9c8e4820a9b66c508"} +{"question": "What do some soldiers forget on their first day of excercise", "paragraph": "In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians\u2019 soldierly skills lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction. \u201cI came into it expecting them not to know much of the basics,\u201d said Sgt. Michael Faranda, who is teaching maneuvers. He was correct. Things \u201cevery soldier should know,\u201d he said, they did not. Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises. Still, Sergeant Faranda said, the Ukrainians\u2019 willingness to go into combat was all the more notable for their lack of preparation for it.", "answer": "helmets", "sentence": "Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises.", "paragraph_sentence": "In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians\u2019 soldierly skills lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction. \u201cI came into it expecting them not to know much of the basics,\u201d said Sgt. Michael Faranda, who is teaching maneuvers. He was correct. Things \u201cevery soldier should know,\u201d he said, they did not. Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises. Still, Sergeant Faranda said, the Ukrainians\u2019 willingness to go into combat was all the more notable for their lack of preparation for it.", "paragraph_answer": "In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians\u2019 soldierly skills lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction. \u201cI came into it expecting them not to know much of the basics,\u201d said Sgt. Michael Faranda, who is teaching maneuvers. He was correct. Things \u201cevery soldier should know,\u201d he said, they did not. Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises. Still, Sergeant Faranda said, the Ukrainians\u2019 willingness to go into combat was all the more notable for their lack of preparation for it.", "sentence_answer": "Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026e6c8e4820a9b66d3e1"} +{"question": "Is your friend critical of you?", "paragraph": "My best friend and I are going through a rough patch, but I\u2019m pretty sure she\u2019s not even aware of it. We moved to New York after college 10 years ago and still live together. Work is going well for us; we both date. But she has been getting more and more critical of friends, potential boyfriends and co-workers every day. I hate to use the word \u201ctoxic,\u201d but that\u2019s what it feels like. She never stops judging. Should I extricate myself or what?", "answer": "She never stops judging", "sentence": "She never stops judging .", "paragraph_sentence": "My best friend and I are going through a rough patch, but I\u2019m pretty sure she\u2019s not even aware of it. We moved to New York after college 10 years ago and still live together. Work is going well for us; we both date. But she has been getting more and more critical of friends, potential boyfriends and co-workers every day. I hate to use the word \u201ctoxic,\u201d but that\u2019s what it feels like. She never stops judging . Should I extricate myself or what?", "paragraph_answer": "My best friend and I are going through a rough patch, but I\u2019m pretty sure she\u2019s not even aware of it. We moved to New York after college 10 years ago and still live together. Work is going well for us; we both date. But she has been getting more and more critical of friends, potential boyfriends and co-workers every day. I hate to use the word \u201ctoxic,\u201d but that\u2019s what it feels like. She never stops judging . Should I extricate myself or what?", "sentence_answer": " She never stops judging .", "paragraph_id": "5d701fabc8e4820a9b66cb40"} +{"question": "Why was David Sweat in prison?", "paragraph": "Night after night for months, David Sweat slipped through a hole he had sawed at the back of his cell in the Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York. He would plumb the catacomb-like tunnels beneath the prison, where he was serving a life sentence for murder, searching for an escape route, confident that the guards would have no idea he was gone because they were asleep. Then he would return to his empty bunk. His explorations began this past winter and continued through the spring. They took him underground almost every night for hours until he finally stumbled on what would become, through trial and error and countless hours of grueling work, his subterranean route out. Mr. Sweat felt free during his nightly journeys into the maze, as though he had already escaped the ugliness of his day-to-day prison life.", "answer": "murder", "sentence": "He would plumb the catacomb-like tunnels beneath the prison, where he was serving a life sentence for murder , searching for an escape route, confident that the guards would have no idea he was gone because they were asleep.", "paragraph_sentence": "Night after night for months, David Sweat slipped through a hole he had sawed at the back of his cell in the Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York. He would plumb the catacomb-like tunnels beneath the prison, where he was serving a life sentence for murder , searching for an escape route, confident that the guards would have no idea he was gone because they were asleep. Then he would return to his empty bunk. His explorations began this past winter and continued through the spring. They took him underground almost every night for hours until he finally stumbled on what would become, through trial and error and countless hours of grueling work, his subterranean route out. Mr. Sweat felt free during his nightly journeys into the maze, as though he had already escaped the ugliness of his day-to-day prison life.", "paragraph_answer": "Night after night for months, David Sweat slipped through a hole he had sawed at the back of his cell in the Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York. He would plumb the catacomb-like tunnels beneath the prison, where he was serving a life sentence for murder , searching for an escape route, confident that the guards would have no idea he was gone because they were asleep. Then he would return to his empty bunk. His explorations began this past winter and continued through the spring. They took him underground almost every night for hours until he finally stumbled on what would become, through trial and error and countless hours of grueling work, his subterranean route out. Mr. Sweat felt free during his nightly journeys into the maze, as though he had already escaped the ugliness of his day-to-day prison life.", "sentence_answer": "He would plumb the catacomb-like tunnels beneath the prison, where he was serving a life sentence for murder , searching for an escape route, confident that the guards would have no idea he was gone because they were asleep.", "paragraph_id": "5d7055f1c8e4820a9b66ecf2"} +{"question": "Where is Liver from?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe speaker is not stepping down,\u201d Mr. Whyland said. He added that Mr. Silver\u2019s delegation of his responsibilities \u201cwill give him the flexibility he needs so that he can defend himself against these charges, and he is confident that he will be found innocent.\u201d Mr. Silver, 70, who is from the Lower East Side of Manhattan, is accused of abusing his office to obtain $4 million in payoffs. Federal prosecutors said he disguised his windfall by portraying it as legitimate income he earned working part time, ostensibly as a personal injury lawyer. The charges against Mr. Silver threatened to throw the Capitol into turmoil because of the central role that he plays there. The speaker of the Assembly is one of Albany\u2019s \u201cthree men in a room,\u201d along with the governor and the State Senate majority leader, who make many of the most important decisions in state government. The new leadership arrangement will be a startling change because of Mr. Silver\u2019s longevity: As governors and other legislators have come and gone, Mr. Silver has remained firmly in place as speaker since 1994.", "answer": "Lower East Side of Manhattan", "sentence": "Mr. Silver, 70, who is from the Lower East Side of Manhattan , is accused of abusing his office to obtain $4 million in payoffs.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe speaker is not stepping down,\u201d Mr. Whyland said. He added that Mr. Silver\u2019s delegation of his responsibilities \u201cwill give him the flexibility he needs so that he can defend himself against these charges, and he is confident that he will be found innocent.\u201d Mr. Silver, 70, who is from the Lower East Side of Manhattan , is accused of abusing his office to obtain $4 million in payoffs. Federal prosecutors said he disguised his windfall by portraying it as legitimate income he earned working part time, ostensibly as a personal injury lawyer. The charges against Mr. Silver threatened to throw the Capitol into turmoil because of the central role that he plays there. The speaker of the Assembly is one of Albany\u2019s \u201cthree men in a room,\u201d along with the governor and the State Senate majority leader, who make many of the most important decisions in state government. The new leadership arrangement will be a startling change because of Mr. Silver\u2019s longevity: As governors and other legislators have come and gone, Mr. Silver has remained firmly in place as speaker since 1994.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe speaker is not stepping down,\u201d Mr. Whyland said. He added that Mr. Silver\u2019s delegation of his responsibilities \u201cwill give him the flexibility he needs so that he can defend himself against these charges, and he is confident that he will be found innocent.\u201d Mr. Silver, 70, who is from the Lower East Side of Manhattan , is accused of abusing his office to obtain $4 million in payoffs. Federal prosecutors said he disguised his windfall by portraying it as legitimate income he earned working part time, ostensibly as a personal injury lawyer. The charges against Mr. Silver threatened to throw the Capitol into turmoil because of the central role that he plays there. The speaker of the Assembly is one of Albany\u2019s \u201cthree men in a room,\u201d along with the governor and the State Senate majority leader, who make many of the most important decisions in state government. The new leadership arrangement will be a startling change because of Mr. Silver\u2019s longevity: As governors and other legislators have come and gone, Mr. Silver has remained firmly in place as speaker since 1994.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Silver, 70, who is from the Lower East Side of Manhattan , is accused of abusing his office to obtain $4 million in payoffs.", "paragraph_id": "5d7081d1c8e4820a9b66f3f3"} +{"question": "How many more jobs are needed to match pre-recession levels?", "paragraph": "Moreover, the economy is still 2.8 million jobs short of where it would have to be to match pre-recession employment levels while also absorbing new entrants into the work force, according to the Hamilton Project, a research group associated with the Brookings Institution in Washington. Even if the current trend continues, that so-called \u201cjobs gap\u201d will not be closed until mid-2017. In addition to the tempo of hiring and the unemployment rate, Fed policy makers have been paying close attention to the pace of wage increases. In November, the government said wages rose by 0.2 percent, leaving the 12-month change in average hourly earnings 2.3 percent higher. Despite steady hiring gains and a falling unemployment rate, wage growth in recent years has barely advanced faster than inflation. In October, that trend seemed to improve, with an unexpectedly strong 0.4 percentage point increase in average hourly earnings that pushed the 12-month gain to 2.5 percent even as the pace of inflation fell, mostly because of lower energy prices. But with November\u2019s figures reverting to the earlier trend, Mr. Clemons said, \u201cI don\u2019t think there\u2019s a lot of wage pressure yet.\u201d", "answer": "2.8 million", "sentence": "Moreover, the economy is still 2.8 million jobs short of where it would have to be to match pre-recession employment levels while also absorbing new entrants into the work force, according to the Hamilton Project, a research group associated with the Brookings Institution in Washington.", "paragraph_sentence": " Moreover, the economy is still 2.8 million jobs short of where it would have to be to match pre-recession employment levels while also absorbing new entrants into the work force, according to the Hamilton Project, a research group associated with the Brookings Institution in Washington. Even if the current trend continues, that so-called \u201cjobs gap\u201d will not be closed until mid-2017. In addition to the tempo of hiring and the unemployment rate, Fed policy makers have been paying close attention to the pace of wage increases. In November, the government said wages rose by 0.2 percent, leaving the 12-month change in average hourly earnings 2.3 percent higher. Despite steady hiring gains and a falling unemployment rate, wage growth in recent years has barely advanced faster than inflation. In October, that trend seemed to improve, with an unexpectedly strong 0.4 percentage point increase in average hourly earnings that pushed the 12-month gain to 2.5 percent even as the pace of inflation fell, mostly because of lower energy prices. But with November\u2019s figures reverting to the earlier trend, Mr. Clemons said, \u201cI don\u2019t think there\u2019s a lot of wage pressure yet.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Moreover, the economy is still 2.8 million jobs short of where it would have to be to match pre-recession employment levels while also absorbing new entrants into the work force, according to the Hamilton Project, a research group associated with the Brookings Institution in Washington. Even if the current trend continues, that so-called \u201cjobs gap\u201d will not be closed until mid-2017. In addition to the tempo of hiring and the unemployment rate, Fed policy makers have been paying close attention to the pace of wage increases. In November, the government said wages rose by 0.2 percent, leaving the 12-month change in average hourly earnings 2.3 percent higher. Despite steady hiring gains and a falling unemployment rate, wage growth in recent years has barely advanced faster than inflation. In October, that trend seemed to improve, with an unexpectedly strong 0.4 percentage point increase in average hourly earnings that pushed the 12-month gain to 2.5 percent even as the pace of inflation fell, mostly because of lower energy prices. But with November\u2019s figures reverting to the earlier trend, Mr. Clemons said, \u201cI don\u2019t think there\u2019s a lot of wage pressure yet.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Moreover, the economy is still 2.8 million jobs short of where it would have to be to match pre-recession employment levels while also absorbing new entrants into the work force, according to the Hamilton Project, a research group associated with the Brookings Institution in Washington.", "paragraph_id": "5d702ce9c8e4820a9b66da5f"} +{"question": "Marcelo owns several guns, what does he shoot during the night shift?", "paragraph": "The #nightshift hashtag is especially well populated by the armed professions and the healing ones. Sometimes they are almost one and the same, as in the case of @armedmedic3153, a.k.a. Marcelo Aguirre, a paramedic in Newark and suburban New Jersey. He owns an AR-15, a \u00ad9-millimeter\u00ad and a shotgun, but the only thing he shoots on the night shift is his camera. He works nights so he can study days; he wants to be a doctor. Nights are good preparation for that: You get more serious cases. You learn on the job. A 12-hour course each night you\u2019re on. Twenty-four hours if you take a double. After a while, the adrenaline that juices you when you\u2019re new \u2014 when you\u2019re still keeping a tally of the lives you\u2019ve saved \u2014 disappears. You just do the job. \u201cHigh speed and low drag,\u201d Aguirre told me when I called. \u201cPlease ignore the siren,\u201d he said. \u201cWe\u2019re going to a call.\u201d A stroke. Nothing to get excited about. Coffee sustains him. He stays clean. Some guys, he said, use Provigil, but that\u2019s prescribed. \u201cFor shift-work disorder,\u201d he said.", "answer": "his camera", "sentence": "He owns an AR-15, a \u00ad9-millimeter\u00ad and a shotgun, but the only thing he shoots on the night shift is his camera .", "paragraph_sentence": "The #nightshift hashtag is especially well populated by the armed professions and the healing ones. Sometimes they are almost one and the same, as in the case of @armedmedic3153, a.k.a. Marcelo Aguirre, a paramedic in Newark and suburban New Jersey. He owns an AR-15, a \u00ad9-millimeter\u00ad and a shotgun, but the only thing he shoots on the night shift is his camera . He works nights so he can study days; he wants to be a doctor. Nights are good preparation for that: You get more serious cases. You learn on the job. A 12-hour course each night you\u2019re on. Twenty-four hours if you take a double. After a while, the adrenaline that juices you when you\u2019re new \u2014 when you\u2019re still keeping a tally of the lives you\u2019ve saved \u2014 disappears. You just do the job. \u201cHigh speed and low drag,\u201d Aguirre told me when I called. \u201cPlease ignore the siren,\u201d he said. \u201cWe\u2019re going to a call.\u201d A stroke. Nothing to get excited about. Coffee sustains him. He stays clean. Some guys, he said, use Provigil, but that\u2019s prescribed. \u201cFor shift-work disorder,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "The #nightshift hashtag is especially well populated by the armed professions and the healing ones. Sometimes they are almost one and the same, as in the case of @armedmedic3153, a.k.a. Marcelo Aguirre, a paramedic in Newark and suburban New Jersey. He owns an AR-15, a \u00ad9-millimeter\u00ad and a shotgun, but the only thing he shoots on the night shift is his camera . He works nights so he can study days; he wants to be a doctor. Nights are good preparation for that: You get more serious cases. You learn on the job. A 12-hour course each night you\u2019re on. Twenty-four hours if you take a double. After a while, the adrenaline that juices you when you\u2019re new \u2014 when you\u2019re still keeping a tally of the lives you\u2019ve saved \u2014 disappears. You just do the job. \u201cHigh speed and low drag,\u201d Aguirre told me when I called. \u201cPlease ignore the siren,\u201d he said. \u201cWe\u2019re going to a call.\u201d A stroke. Nothing to get excited about. Coffee sustains him. He stays clean. Some guys, he said, use Provigil, but that\u2019s prescribed. \u201cFor shift-work disorder,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "He owns an AR-15, a \u00ad9-millimeter\u00ad and a shotgun, but the only thing he shoots on the night shift is his camera .", "paragraph_id": "5d703385c8e4820a9b66de6e"} +{"question": "Month that Michael Brown was shot.", "paragraph": "\u201cWe hit the pause button,\u201d Chief Strachan said. \u201cOur view is we don\u2019t want to be part of violating people\u2019s privacy for commercial or voyeuristic reasons. Everyone\u2019s worst day is now going to be put on YouTube for eternity.\u201d Since the death of Michael Brown, an unarmed teenager who was fatally shot during an encounter with a police officer in Ferguson, Mo., in August, departments around the country have begun requiring officers to record their interactions with the public to hold them accountable for their behavior, as well as to protect them against false charges.", "answer": "August", "sentence": "Since the death of Michael Brown, an unarmed teenager who was fatally shot during an encounter with a police officer in Ferguson, Mo., in August , departments around the country have begun requiring officers to record their interactions with the public to hold them accountable for their behavior, as well as to protect them against false charges.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe hit the pause button,\u201d Chief Strachan said. \u201cOur view is we don\u2019t want to be part of violating people\u2019s privacy for commercial or voyeuristic reasons. Everyone\u2019s worst day is now going to be put on YouTube for eternity.\u201d Since the death of Michael Brown, an unarmed teenager who was fatally shot during an encounter with a police officer in Ferguson, Mo., in August , departments around the country have begun requiring officers to record their interactions with the public to hold them accountable for their behavior, as well as to protect them against false charges. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe hit the pause button,\u201d Chief Strachan said. \u201cOur view is we don\u2019t want to be part of violating people\u2019s privacy for commercial or voyeuristic reasons. Everyone\u2019s worst day is now going to be put on YouTube for eternity.\u201d Since the death of Michael Brown, an unarmed teenager who was fatally shot during an encounter with a police officer in Ferguson, Mo., in August , departments around the country have begun requiring officers to record their interactions with the public to hold them accountable for their behavior, as well as to protect them against false charges.", "sentence_answer": "Since the death of Michael Brown, an unarmed teenager who was fatally shot during an encounter with a police officer in Ferguson, Mo., in August , departments around the country have begun requiring officers to record their interactions with the public to hold them accountable for their behavior, as well as to protect them against false charges.", "paragraph_id": "5d700701c8e4820a9b66ac9f"} +{"question": "What country is the United Nations host country?", "paragraph": "News of Mr. Bashir\u2019s plan to participate in the United Nations development meeting, which takes place after the annual General Assembly, first emerged Aug. 3 when his name appeared on the provisional itinerary of speakers for Sept. 26. The United States, as the United Nations\u2019 host country, is obliged by treaty to issue visas to visiting heads of state, even those it finds distasteful. A State Department spokesman, Mark C. Toner, said then that he was unaware a visa had been requested, but that \u201cwe\u2019ve been very clear how we feel about the president of Sudan and that he\u2019s wanted for crimes, and we want to see him held accountable.\u201d", "answer": "The United States", "sentence": "The United States , as the United Nations\u2019 host country, is obliged by treaty to issue visas to visiting heads of state, even those it finds distasteful.", "paragraph_sentence": "News of Mr. Bashir\u2019s plan to participate in the United Nations development meeting, which takes place after the annual General Assembly, first emerged Aug. 3 when his name appeared on the provisional itinerary of speakers for Sept. 26. The United States , as the United Nations\u2019 host country, is obliged by treaty to issue visas to visiting heads of state, even those it finds distasteful. A State Department spokesman, Mark C. Toner, said then that he was unaware a visa had been requested, but that \u201cwe\u2019ve been very clear how we feel about the president of Sudan and that he\u2019s wanted for crimes, and we want to see him held accountable.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "News of Mr. Bashir\u2019s plan to participate in the United Nations development meeting, which takes place after the annual General Assembly, first emerged Aug. 3 when his name appeared on the provisional itinerary of speakers for Sept. 26. The United States , as the United Nations\u2019 host country, is obliged by treaty to issue visas to visiting heads of state, even those it finds distasteful. A State Department spokesman, Mark C. Toner, said then that he was unaware a visa had been requested, but that \u201cwe\u2019ve been very clear how we feel about the president of Sudan and that he\u2019s wanted for crimes, and we want to see him held accountable.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " The United States , as the United Nations\u2019 host country, is obliged by treaty to issue visas to visiting heads of state, even those it finds distasteful.", "paragraph_id": "5d701c63c8e4820a9b66c7b2"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700df8c8e4820a9b66b9b8"} +{"question": "What percentage of men had been in combat accordingg to Oleksandr l. Leshchenko", "paragraph": "The training aims to remold the Ukrainian units by increasing the responsibilities of noncommissioned officers, fixing a Soviet legacy of an officer-heavy infantry. Without sergeants paying attention, basic mistakes were being made, the trainers said. Capt. Nicholas Salimbene, an American trainer, noticed with alarm that the Ukrainians were carrying their rifles with the safeties off. \u201cIt\u2019s about the professionalism of the force,\u201d he said. \u201cWe want them to look like soldiers.\u201d \u201cYou see reports about the little green men,\u201d he said, referring to the Russian soldiers who invaded the Crimean Peninsula last year in unmarked uniforms, \u201cand they all walk around professionally, and carry their weapons professionally.\u201d The Ukrainians should, too, Captain Salimbene said. The United States is also providing advanced courses for military professionals known as forward observers \u2014 the ones who call in targets \u2014 to improve the accuracy of artillery fire, making it more lethal for the enemy and less so for civilians. Oleksandr I. Leshchenko, the deputy director for training in the National Guard, was somewhat skeptical about the value of the training, saying that \u201c99 percent\u201d of the men in the course had already been in combat.", "answer": "99 percent", "sentence": "Oleksandr I. Leshchenko, the deputy director for training in the National Guard, was somewhat skeptical about the value of the training, saying that \u201c 99 percent \u201d of the men in the course had already been in combat.", "paragraph_sentence": "The training aims to remold the Ukrainian units by increasing the responsibilities of noncommissioned officers, fixing a Soviet legacy of an officer-heavy infantry. Without sergeants paying attention, basic mistakes were being made, the trainers said. Capt. Nicholas Salimbene, an American trainer, noticed with alarm that the Ukrainians were carrying their rifles with the safeties off. \u201cIt\u2019s about the professionalism of the force,\u201d he said. \u201cWe want them to look like soldiers.\u201d \u201cYou see reports about the little green men,\u201d he said, referring to the Russian soldiers who invaded the Crimean Peninsula last year in unmarked uniforms, \u201cand they all walk around professionally, and carry their weapons professionally.\u201d The Ukrainians should, too, Captain Salimbene said. The United States is also providing advanced courses for military professionals known as forward observers \u2014 the ones who call in targets \u2014 to improve the accuracy of artillery fire, making it more lethal for the enemy and less so for civilians. Oleksandr I. Leshchenko, the deputy director for training in the National Guard, was somewhat skeptical about the value of the training, saying that \u201c 99 percent \u201d of the men in the course had already been in combat. ", "paragraph_answer": "The training aims to remold the Ukrainian units by increasing the responsibilities of noncommissioned officers, fixing a Soviet legacy of an officer-heavy infantry. Without sergeants paying attention, basic mistakes were being made, the trainers said. Capt. Nicholas Salimbene, an American trainer, noticed with alarm that the Ukrainians were carrying their rifles with the safeties off. \u201cIt\u2019s about the professionalism of the force,\u201d he said. \u201cWe want them to look like soldiers.\u201d \u201cYou see reports about the little green men,\u201d he said, referring to the Russian soldiers who invaded the Crimean Peninsula last year in unmarked uniforms, \u201cand they all walk around professionally, and carry their weapons professionally.\u201d The Ukrainians should, too, Captain Salimbene said. The United States is also providing advanced courses for military professionals known as forward observers \u2014 the ones who call in targets \u2014 to improve the accuracy of artillery fire, making it more lethal for the enemy and less so for civilians. Oleksandr I. Leshchenko, the deputy director for training in the National Guard, was somewhat skeptical about the value of the training, saying that \u201c 99 percent \u201d of the men in the course had already been in combat.", "sentence_answer": "Oleksandr I. Leshchenko, the deputy director for training in the National Guard, was somewhat skeptical about the value of the training, saying that \u201c 99 percent \u201d of the men in the course had already been in combat.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026f3c8e4820a9b66d44f"} +{"question": "What was Russia's most advanced air defense system called?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to imagine a better training drill,\u201d he said of the bombing in Syria. Since Turkey shot down a Russian warplane that it said had violated its airspace, Mr. Putin has engaged in a war of words with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and ordered a number of retaliatory measures. On Thursday, he made clear that Russia has made Syria a no-fly zone for Turkish airplanes. \u201cTurkey used to violate Syrian airspace all the time,\u201d Mr. Putin said. \u201cLet them try and fly there now,\u201d he said, noting that Russia\u2019s most advanced air defense system, the S-400, can hit any target in Syria.", "answer": "S-400", "sentence": "\u201cLet them try and fly there now,\u201d he said, noting that Russia\u2019s most advanced air defense system, the S-400 , can hit any target in Syria.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to imagine a better training drill,\u201d he said of the bombing in Syria. Since Turkey shot down a Russian warplane that it said had violated its airspace, Mr. Putin has engaged in a war of words with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and ordered a number of retaliatory measures. On Thursday, he made clear that Russia has made Syria a no-fly zone for Turkish airplanes. \u201cTurkey used to violate Syrian airspace all the time,\u201d Mr. Putin said. \u201cLet them try and fly there now,\u201d he said, noting that Russia\u2019s most advanced air defense system, the S-400 , can hit any target in Syria. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to imagine a better training drill,\u201d he said of the bombing in Syria. Since Turkey shot down a Russian warplane that it said had violated its airspace, Mr. Putin has engaged in a war of words with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and ordered a number of retaliatory measures. On Thursday, he made clear that Russia has made Syria a no-fly zone for Turkish airplanes. \u201cTurkey used to violate Syrian airspace all the time,\u201d Mr. Putin said. \u201cLet them try and fly there now,\u201d he said, noting that Russia\u2019s most advanced air defense system, the S-400 , can hit any target in Syria.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cLet them try and fly there now,\u201d he said, noting that Russia\u2019s most advanced air defense system, the S-400 , can hit any target in Syria.", "paragraph_id": "5d7012efc8e4820a9b66bf6b"} +{"question": "Which show does Tracee Ellis Ross star in?", "paragraph": "Tracee Ellis Ross, \u201cblack-ish\u201d The degree of difficulty that Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Ms. Metcalf and Ms. Nash face on their respective shows is vertiginous. But Ms. Ross works just as hard in her marriage of pragmatism and new-age nuttiness. Her screen time always feels shorter than her co-star Anthony Anderson\u2019s, but she just does more with what she\u2019s got. She\u2019s so good that even when the writers aren\u2019t giving her great comedy, she makes her own. D\u2019Angelo, Apollo Theater, Feb. 7 For an hour, I sat in my seat worried that he wasn\u2019t ready for us \u2014 for the screaming and hooting, for the orgasmic yeses. That mighty voice was tenuous. The pacing on the potent new songs felt rushed. He seemed fatigued. But during two encores, a very good show became unforgettable. D\u2019Angelo locked in and let go. Ready for us? Ha. We weren\u2019t ready for him. (Read the review) More highlights from the year, as chosen by our critics: Movies, Television, Pop Music, Classical Music, Classical Albums, Dance, Theater, Books and Art", "answer": "black-ish", "sentence": "Tracee Ellis Ross, \u201c black-ish \u201d The degree of difficulty that Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Ms. Metcalf and Ms. Nash face on their respective shows is vertiginous.", "paragraph_sentence": " Tracee Ellis Ross, \u201c black-ish \u201d The degree of difficulty that Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Ms. Metcalf and Ms. Nash face on their respective shows is vertiginous. But Ms. Ross works just as hard in her marriage of pragmatism and new-age nuttiness. Her screen time always feels shorter than her co-star Anthony Anderson\u2019s, but she just does more with what she\u2019s got. She\u2019s so good that even when the writers aren\u2019t giving her great comedy, she makes her own. D\u2019Angelo, Apollo Theater, Feb. 7 For an hour, I sat in my seat worried that he wasn\u2019t ready for us \u2014 for the screaming and hooting, for the orgasmic yeses. That mighty voice was tenuous. The pacing on the potent new songs felt rushed. He seemed fatigued. But during two encores, a very good show became unforgettable. D\u2019Angelo locked in and let go. Ready for us? Ha. We weren\u2019t ready for him. (Read the review) More highlights from the year, as chosen by our critics: Movies, Television, Pop Music, Classical Music, Classical Albums, Dance, Theater, Books and Art", "paragraph_answer": "Tracee Ellis Ross, \u201c black-ish \u201d The degree of difficulty that Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Ms. Metcalf and Ms. Nash face on their respective shows is vertiginous. But Ms. Ross works just as hard in her marriage of pragmatism and new-age nuttiness. Her screen time always feels shorter than her co-star Anthony Anderson\u2019s, but she just does more with what she\u2019s got. She\u2019s so good that even when the writers aren\u2019t giving her great comedy, she makes her own. D\u2019Angelo, Apollo Theater, Feb. 7 For an hour, I sat in my seat worried that he wasn\u2019t ready for us \u2014 for the screaming and hooting, for the orgasmic yeses. That mighty voice was tenuous. The pacing on the potent new songs felt rushed. He seemed fatigued. But during two encores, a very good show became unforgettable. D\u2019Angelo locked in and let go. Ready for us? Ha. We weren\u2019t ready for him. (Read the review) More highlights from the year, as chosen by our critics: Movies, Television, Pop Music, Classical Music, Classical Albums, Dance, Theater, Books and Art", "sentence_answer": "Tracee Ellis Ross, \u201c black-ish \u201d The degree of difficulty that Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Ms. Metcalf and Ms. Nash face on their respective shows is vertiginous.", "paragraph_id": "5d705bd9c8e4820a9b66ef01"} +{"question": "The show reminds you of scenes from what skit TV show?", "paragraph": "My preview audience (I recognized many members of the fraternity of Broadway show folk) awarded this expenditure of energy with two standing ovations. The first occurred halfway through the first act, after Mr. Oscar\u2019s Nostradamus led a number that foresaw the shape of entertainment to come. It features melodic and choreographic references to pretty much every musical you\u2019ve ever heard of, from \u201cWest Side Story\u201d to \u201cLes Mis\u00e9rables.\u201d Any classics that were not namechecked then are dutifully mentioned in the second-act number \u201cMake an Omelette,\u201d which registers as an act of force-feeding an already overstuffed audience. \u201cOmelette,\u201d by the way, is a misreading of \u201cHamlet\u201d by Nostradamus, who tries to predict what Shakespeare\u2019s chef d\u2019oeuvre will be so Nick can steal the idea. When I was in grade school, it was considered the height of wit to refer to \u201cHamlet\u201d as \u201cOmelette,\u201d and it is such heights that \u201cSomething Rotten!\u201d occupies. Phallic humor abounds, starting with the oversized codpieces worn by the men. (Gregg Barnes did the costumes.) It is a codpiece into which Nigel, played with rather charming nerdiness by Mr. Cariani, reaches when he tells the girl he adores, Portia (Kate Reinders, doing an impression of Kristin Chenoweth), \u201cI have something to show you.\u201d Fortunately, it\u2019s only a sonnet that he keeps next to his privates. And, oh yes, there\u2019s a sonnet reading by Mr. Cariani that is rendered as a parallel to premature ejaculation. (Sometimes you wonder if the show isn\u2019t made up of scenes culled from the wastebaskets of the \u201cSaturday Night Live\u201d staff.) The cast also includes Heidi Blickenstaff as Nick\u2019s stalwart wife, Bea, a precocious feminist (\u201cThis is the \u201990s! We\u2019ve got a woman on the throne.\u201d); Gerry Vichi as a Jewish theater lover named, uh, Shylock; Brooks Ashmanskas as a disapproving Puritan, prone to many inadvertent erection jokes; and Peter Bartlett, doing his inimitably rococo thing in a couple of roles.", "answer": "Saturday Night Live", "sentence": "(Sometimes you wonder if the show isn\u2019t made up of scenes culled from the wastebaskets of the \u201c Saturday Night Live \u201d staff.)", "paragraph_sentence": "My preview audience (I recognized many members of the fraternity of Broadway show folk) awarded this expenditure of energy with two standing ovations. The first occurred halfway through the first act, after Mr. Oscar\u2019s Nostradamus led a number that foresaw the shape of entertainment to come. It features melodic and choreographic references to pretty much every musical you\u2019ve ever heard of, from \u201cWest Side Story\u201d to \u201cLes Mis\u00e9rables.\u201d Any classics that were not namechecked then are dutifully mentioned in the second-act number \u201cMake an Omelette,\u201d which registers as an act of force-feeding an already overstuffed audience. \u201cOmelette,\u201d by the way, is a misreading of \u201cHamlet\u201d by Nostradamus, who tries to predict what Shakespeare\u2019s chef d\u2019oeuvre will be so Nick can steal the idea. When I was in grade school, it was considered the height of wit to refer to \u201cHamlet\u201d as \u201cOmelette,\u201d and it is such heights that \u201cSomething Rotten!\u201d occupies. Phallic humor abounds, starting with the oversized codpieces worn by the men. (Gregg Barnes did the costumes.) It is a codpiece into which Nigel, played with rather charming nerdiness by Mr. Cariani, reaches when he tells the girl he adores, Portia (Kate Reinders, doing an impression of Kristin Chenoweth), \u201cI have something to show you.\u201d Fortunately, it\u2019s only a sonnet that he keeps next to his privates. And, oh yes, there\u2019s a sonnet reading by Mr. Cariani that is rendered as a parallel to premature ejaculation. (Sometimes you wonder if the show isn\u2019t made up of scenes culled from the wastebaskets of the \u201c Saturday Night Live \u201d staff.) The cast also includes Heidi Blickenstaff as Nick\u2019s stalwart wife, Bea, a precocious feminist (\u201cThis is the \u201990s! We\u2019ve got a woman on the throne.\u201d); Gerry Vichi as a Jewish theater lover named, uh, Shylock; Brooks Ashmanskas as a disapproving Puritan, prone to many inadvertent erection jokes; and Peter Bartlett, doing his inimitably rococo thing in a couple of roles.", "paragraph_answer": "My preview audience (I recognized many members of the fraternity of Broadway show folk) awarded this expenditure of energy with two standing ovations. The first occurred halfway through the first act, after Mr. Oscar\u2019s Nostradamus led a number that foresaw the shape of entertainment to come. It features melodic and choreographic references to pretty much every musical you\u2019ve ever heard of, from \u201cWest Side Story\u201d to \u201cLes Mis\u00e9rables.\u201d Any classics that were not namechecked then are dutifully mentioned in the second-act number \u201cMake an Omelette,\u201d which registers as an act of force-feeding an already overstuffed audience. \u201cOmelette,\u201d by the way, is a misreading of \u201cHamlet\u201d by Nostradamus, who tries to predict what Shakespeare\u2019s chef d\u2019oeuvre will be so Nick can steal the idea. When I was in grade school, it was considered the height of wit to refer to \u201cHamlet\u201d as \u201cOmelette,\u201d and it is such heights that \u201cSomething Rotten!\u201d occupies. Phallic humor abounds, starting with the oversized codpieces worn by the men. (Gregg Barnes did the costumes.) It is a codpiece into which Nigel, played with rather charming nerdiness by Mr. Cariani, reaches when he tells the girl he adores, Portia (Kate Reinders, doing an impression of Kristin Chenoweth), \u201cI have something to show you.\u201d Fortunately, it\u2019s only a sonnet that he keeps next to his privates. And, oh yes, there\u2019s a sonnet reading by Mr. Cariani that is rendered as a parallel to premature ejaculation. (Sometimes you wonder if the show isn\u2019t made up of scenes culled from the wastebaskets of the \u201c Saturday Night Live \u201d staff.) The cast also includes Heidi Blickenstaff as Nick\u2019s stalwart wife, Bea, a precocious feminist (\u201cThis is the \u201990s! We\u2019ve got a woman on the throne.\u201d); Gerry Vichi as a Jewish theater lover named, uh, Shylock; Brooks Ashmanskas as a disapproving Puritan, prone to many inadvertent erection jokes; and Peter Bartlett, doing his inimitably rococo thing in a couple of roles.", "sentence_answer": "(Sometimes you wonder if the show isn\u2019t made up of scenes culled from the wastebaskets of the \u201c Saturday Night Live \u201d staff.)", "paragraph_id": "5d702b4ec8e4820a9b66d8db"} +{"question": "What is on the second floor?", "paragraph": "\u2605 Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art (ongoing) The skilled refurbishing of the Atheneum\u2019s storied Morgan Memorial Building reveals as never before the museum\u2019s splendors. The Great Hall is triple-hung with European paintings encircled by a spirited art-historical Cliff Notes from Egypt to Florence. On the second floor the fabulous Cabinet of Art and Curiosities leads to even more often outstanding paintings \u2013 Baroque to Modernism \u2013 accompanied by an array of decorative objects, especially porcelains. 600 Main Street, Hartford, Conn., 860-278-2670, thewadsworth.org. (Smith)", "answer": "the fabulous Cabinet of Art and Curiosities", "sentence": "On the second floor the fabulous Cabinet of Art and Curiosities leads to even more often outstanding paintings \u2013 Baroque to Modernism \u2013 accompanied by an array of decorative objects, especially porcelains.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2605 Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art (ongoing) The skilled refurbishing of the Atheneum\u2019s storied Morgan Memorial Building reveals as never before the museum\u2019s splendors. The Great Hall is triple-hung with European paintings encircled by a spirited art-historical Cliff Notes from Egypt to Florence. On the second floor the fabulous Cabinet of Art and Curiosities leads to even more often outstanding paintings \u2013 Baroque to Modernism \u2013 accompanied by an array of decorative objects, especially porcelains. 600 Main Street, Hartford, Conn., 860-278-2670, thewadsworth.org. (Smith)", "paragraph_answer": "\u2605 Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art (ongoing) The skilled refurbishing of the Atheneum\u2019s storied Morgan Memorial Building reveals as never before the museum\u2019s splendors. The Great Hall is triple-hung with European paintings encircled by a spirited art-historical Cliff Notes from Egypt to Florence. On the second floor the fabulous Cabinet of Art and Curiosities leads to even more often outstanding paintings \u2013 Baroque to Modernism \u2013 accompanied by an array of decorative objects, especially porcelains. 600 Main Street, Hartford, Conn., 860-278-2670, thewadsworth.org. (Smith)", "sentence_answer": "On the second floor the fabulous Cabinet of Art and Curiosities leads to even more often outstanding paintings \u2013 Baroque to Modernism \u2013 accompanied by an array of decorative objects, especially porcelains.", "paragraph_id": "5d701174c8e4820a9b66bdf6"} +{"question": "In what year did Dealogic begin tracking global investment banking revenue?", "paragraph": "Mr. Jain and the bank\u2019s other co-chief executive, J\u00fcrgen Fitschen, insisted on Monday that they are not retreating from the idea of a universal bank that offers a full range of banking services to individuals and business worldwide. And they reaffirmed their determination to be a force on Wall Street. But since the financial crisis, European investment banks have steadily lost market share to their United States rivals. In the first quarter, European banks accounted for 30 percent of global investment banking revenue, according to the data provider Dealogic. That was the lowest share since Dealogic began keeping track in 1995. Deutsche Bank ranks sixth worldwide measured by investment banking revenue. The top five are all based in the United States: JPMorgan, Goldman, Morgan Stanley, Bank of America Merrill Lynch and Citigroup. In the United States market alone, Deutsche Bank is a mere ninth among investment banks.", "answer": "1995", "sentence": "That was the lowest share since Dealogic began keeping track in 1995 .", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Jain and the bank\u2019s other co-chief executive, J\u00fcrgen Fitschen, insisted on Monday that they are not retreating from the idea of a universal bank that offers a full range of banking services to individuals and business worldwide. And they reaffirmed their determination to be a force on Wall Street. But since the financial crisis, European investment banks have steadily lost market share to their United States rivals. In the first quarter, European banks accounted for 30 percent of global investment banking revenue, according to the data provider Dealogic. That was the lowest share since Dealogic began keeping track in 1995 . Deutsche Bank ranks sixth worldwide measured by investment banking revenue. The top five are all based in the United States: JPMorgan, Goldman, Morgan Stanley, Bank of America Merrill Lynch and Citigroup. In the United States market alone, Deutsche Bank is a mere ninth among investment banks.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Jain and the bank\u2019s other co-chief executive, J\u00fcrgen Fitschen, insisted on Monday that they are not retreating from the idea of a universal bank that offers a full range of banking services to individuals and business worldwide. And they reaffirmed their determination to be a force on Wall Street. But since the financial crisis, European investment banks have steadily lost market share to their United States rivals. In the first quarter, European banks accounted for 30 percent of global investment banking revenue, according to the data provider Dealogic. That was the lowest share since Dealogic began keeping track in 1995 . Deutsche Bank ranks sixth worldwide measured by investment banking revenue. The top five are all based in the United States: JPMorgan, Goldman, Morgan Stanley, Bank of America Merrill Lynch and Citigroup. In the United States market alone, Deutsche Bank is a mere ninth among investment banks.", "sentence_answer": "That was the lowest share since Dealogic began keeping track in 1995 .", "paragraph_id": "5d700e49c8e4820a9b66ba1f"} +{"question": "What often accompanies large cartoonish illustrations in the displays?", "paragraph": "The displays, despite large cartoonish illustrations, require close reading, and many are accompanied by thought-provoking questions about the gray areas in liability. Still, this is Ralph Nader, and educational does not mean nonpolitical. Though the language is not shrill, a common element in the showcased disputes is what the museum\u2019s labels describe as strenuous efforts by companies to deceive the public about risks. Pointedly included is the case that became a symbol to some of consumer overreach and trial lawyer greed: the 1992 suit by a 79-year-old woman who was badly burned in the groin and thighs when she spilled a cup of scalding McDonald\u2019s coffee.", "answer": "thought-provoking questions", "sentence": "The displays, despite large cartoonish illustrations, require close reading, and many are accompanied by thought-provoking questions about the gray areas in liability.", "paragraph_sentence": " The displays, despite large cartoonish illustrations, require close reading, and many are accompanied by thought-provoking questions about the gray areas in liability. Still, this is Ralph Nader, and educational does not mean nonpolitical. Though the language is not shrill, a common element in the showcased disputes is what the museum\u2019s labels describe as strenuous efforts by companies to deceive the public about risks. Pointedly included is the case that became a symbol to some of consumer overreach and trial lawyer greed: the 1992 suit by a 79-year-old woman who was badly burned in the groin and thighs when she spilled a cup of scalding McDonald\u2019s coffee.", "paragraph_answer": "The displays, despite large cartoonish illustrations, require close reading, and many are accompanied by thought-provoking questions about the gray areas in liability. Still, this is Ralph Nader, and educational does not mean nonpolitical. Though the language is not shrill, a common element in the showcased disputes is what the museum\u2019s labels describe as strenuous efforts by companies to deceive the public about risks. Pointedly included is the case that became a symbol to some of consumer overreach and trial lawyer greed: the 1992 suit by a 79-year-old woman who was badly burned in the groin and thighs when she spilled a cup of scalding McDonald\u2019s coffee.", "sentence_answer": "The displays, despite large cartoonish illustrations, require close reading, and many are accompanied by thought-provoking questions about the gray areas in liability.", "paragraph_id": "5d703e36c8e4820a9b66e3cd"} +{"question": "What is the name of the red-tailed hawk?", "paragraph": "A red-tailed hawk named Pale Male became a celebrity after starring in a film, \u201cThe Legend of Pale Male,\u201d that opened at the Angelika Film Center in Greenwich Village in 2010. And one raccoon in Central Park is so well known that he goes by a single name \u2013 Rocky \u2013 a rarefied status typically afforded to superstars like Madonna or Cher. Unlike hawks and raccoons, however, alligators are not native to New York. Ms. Silver suggested that CockadoodleQ may have at one point been a pet, and in her statement she reminded New Yorkers that it is illegal to keep alligators and other exotic animals as house pets in the city.", "answer": "Pale Male", "sentence": "A red-tailed hawk named Pale Male became a celebrity after starring in a film, \u201cThe Legend of Pale Male,\u201d that opened at the Angelika Film Center in Greenwich Village in 2010.", "paragraph_sentence": " A red-tailed hawk named Pale Male became a celebrity after starring in a film, \u201cThe Legend of Pale Male,\u201d that opened at the Angelika Film Center in Greenwich Village in 2010. And one raccoon in Central Park is so well known that he goes by a single name \u2013 Rocky \u2013 a rarefied status typically afforded to superstars like Madonna or Cher. Unlike hawks and raccoons, however, alligators are not native to New York. Ms. Silver suggested that CockadoodleQ may have at one point been a pet, and in her statement she reminded New Yorkers that it is illegal to keep alligators and other exotic animals as house pets in the city.", "paragraph_answer": "A red-tailed hawk named Pale Male became a celebrity after starring in a film, \u201cThe Legend of Pale Male,\u201d that opened at the Angelika Film Center in Greenwich Village in 2010. And one raccoon in Central Park is so well known that he goes by a single name \u2013 Rocky \u2013 a rarefied status typically afforded to superstars like Madonna or Cher. Unlike hawks and raccoons, however, alligators are not native to New York. Ms. Silver suggested that CockadoodleQ may have at one point been a pet, and in her statement she reminded New Yorkers that it is illegal to keep alligators and other exotic animals as house pets in the city.", "sentence_answer": "A red-tailed hawk named Pale Male became a celebrity after starring in a film, \u201cThe Legend of Pale Male,\u201d that opened at the Angelika Film Center in Greenwich Village in 2010.", "paragraph_id": "5d70213fc8e4820a9b66cd21"} +{"question": "What does Joan Enger have to do with J. Patryce Design?", "paragraph": "Q. Our fireplace surround is outdated brick. Should we replace it before selling? A. \u201cMost people like the idea of a fireplace, even if they barely use it,\u201d said Sandra Smith, a real estate salesperson at Compass, in Manhattan. So \u201ca fireplace brings value to a property.\u201d But whether it\u2019s worth spending the time and money to update the surround on your fireplace depends on a number of factors, she said. If your whole home is in need of renovation, changing the surround is unlikely to make much of a difference in buyers\u2019 eyes. And if the fireplace is nonfunctional, \u201cyou should take that into account in determining how much you want to invest,\u201d Ms. Smith said, because some buyers may prefer to use the space for something else, like built-in bookshelves. However, if the rest of your home is in good shape and has an up-to-date look, and you have a working fireplace, an outdated surround needs attention. \u201cThe mantel serves as a center-point of the home, and you usually design a room around it,\u201d said Joan Enger, owner of J. Patryce Design, in Hoboken, N.J. \u201cSo it has to be right.\u201d", "answer": "owner", "sentence": "\u201cThe mantel serves as a center-point of the home, and you usually design a room around it,\u201d said Joan Enger, owner of J. Patryce Design, in Hoboken, N.J.", "paragraph_sentence": "Q. Our fireplace surround is outdated brick. Should we replace it before selling? A. \u201cMost people like the idea of a fireplace, even if they barely use it,\u201d said Sandra Smith, a real estate salesperson at Compass, in Manhattan. So \u201ca fireplace brings value to a property.\u201d But whether it\u2019s worth spending the time and money to update the surround on your fireplace depends on a number of factors, she said. If your whole home is in need of renovation, changing the surround is unlikely to make much of a difference in buyers\u2019 eyes. And if the fireplace is nonfunctional, \u201cyou should take that into account in determining how much you want to invest,\u201d Ms. Smith said, because some buyers may prefer to use the space for something else, like built-in bookshelves. However, if the rest of your home is in good shape and has an up-to-date look, and you have a working fireplace, an outdated surround needs attention. \u201cThe mantel serves as a center-point of the home, and you usually design a room around it,\u201d said Joan Enger, owner of J. Patryce Design, in Hoboken, N.J. \u201cSo it has to be right.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Q. Our fireplace surround is outdated brick. Should we replace it before selling? A. \u201cMost people like the idea of a fireplace, even if they barely use it,\u201d said Sandra Smith, a real estate salesperson at Compass, in Manhattan. So \u201ca fireplace brings value to a property.\u201d But whether it\u2019s worth spending the time and money to update the surround on your fireplace depends on a number of factors, she said. If your whole home is in need of renovation, changing the surround is unlikely to make much of a difference in buyers\u2019 eyes. And if the fireplace is nonfunctional, \u201cyou should take that into account in determining how much you want to invest,\u201d Ms. Smith said, because some buyers may prefer to use the space for something else, like built-in bookshelves. However, if the rest of your home is in good shape and has an up-to-date look, and you have a working fireplace, an outdated surround needs attention. \u201cThe mantel serves as a center-point of the home, and you usually design a room around it,\u201d said Joan Enger, owner of J. Patryce Design, in Hoboken, N.J. \u201cSo it has to be right.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe mantel serves as a center-point of the home, and you usually design a room around it,\u201d said Joan Enger, owner of J. Patryce Design, in Hoboken, N.J.", "paragraph_id": "5d704e3ec8e4820a9b66ea70"} +{"question": "What is the position of Li Keqiang?", "paragraph": "Investors were also comforted by comments from China\u2019s No. 2 leader, who tried to ease concerns about its economic slowdown. Premier Li Keqiang said the nation\u2019s growth was in the \u201cproper range\u201d and Beijing had no plans to allow its currency to decline further after a surprise devaluation on Aug. 11. Among individual stock movers on Wednesday, Barnes & Noble was a big loser. The book retailer\u2019s stock sank $4.50, or 28 percent, to $11.80 after the troubled bookseller reported a wider first-quarter loss as sales of its Nook e-reader and digital books fell sharply. Netflix was the biggest gainer in the S.&P. 500 index. The video streaming company snapped a seven-day losing streak, gaining $4.23, or 4.5 percent, to $99.18 after the company said it would bring its service to four more Asian countries next year. In Europe, France\u2019s CAC 40 advanced 1.4 percent. Germany\u2019s DAX rose 0.3 percent. Britain\u2019s FTSE 100 rose 1.4 percent.", "answer": "Premier", "sentence": "Premier Li Keqiang said the nation\u2019s growth was in the \u201cproper range\u201d and Beijing had no plans to allow its currency to decline further after a surprise devaluation on Aug. 11.", "paragraph_sentence": "Investors were also comforted by comments from China\u2019s No. 2 leader, who tried to ease concerns about its economic slowdown. Premier Li Keqiang said the nation\u2019s growth was in the \u201cproper range\u201d and Beijing had no plans to allow its currency to decline further after a surprise devaluation on Aug. 11. Among individual stock movers on Wednesday, Barnes & Noble was a big loser. The book retailer\u2019s stock sank $4.50, or 28 percent, to $11.80 after the troubled bookseller reported a wider first-quarter loss as sales of its Nook e-reader and digital books fell sharply. Netflix was the biggest gainer in the S.&P. 500 index. The video streaming company snapped a seven-day losing streak, gaining $4.23, or 4.5 percent, to $99.18 after the company said it would bring its service to four more Asian countries next year. In Europe, France\u2019s CAC 40 advanced 1.4 percent. Germany\u2019s DAX rose 0.3 percent. Britain\u2019s FTSE 100 rose 1.4 percent.", "paragraph_answer": "Investors were also comforted by comments from China\u2019s No. 2 leader, who tried to ease concerns about its economic slowdown. Premier Li Keqiang said the nation\u2019s growth was in the \u201cproper range\u201d and Beijing had no plans to allow its currency to decline further after a surprise devaluation on Aug. 11. Among individual stock movers on Wednesday, Barnes & Noble was a big loser. The book retailer\u2019s stock sank $4.50, or 28 percent, to $11.80 after the troubled bookseller reported a wider first-quarter loss as sales of its Nook e-reader and digital books fell sharply. Netflix was the biggest gainer in the S.&P. 500 index. The video streaming company snapped a seven-day losing streak, gaining $4.23, or 4.5 percent, to $99.18 after the company said it would bring its service to four more Asian countries next year. In Europe, France\u2019s CAC 40 advanced 1.4 percent. Germany\u2019s DAX rose 0.3 percent. Britain\u2019s FTSE 100 rose 1.4 percent.", "sentence_answer": " Premier Li Keqiang said the nation\u2019s growth was in the \u201cproper range\u201d and Beijing had no plans to allow its currency to decline further after a surprise devaluation on Aug. 11.", "paragraph_id": "5d701966c8e4820a9b66c551"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d7007fcc8e4820a9b66af16"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700e53c8e4820a9b66ba3c"} +{"question": "What is the Hudson Davis Orton Gallery showing?", "paragraph": "BRONX Lehman College Art Gallery \u201cThe Gee\u2019s Bend Tradition,\u201d group show. Through April 24. Tuesdays through Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Lehman College Art Gallery, 250 Bedford Park Boulevard West. 718-960-8731; lehman.edu/gallery. BRONX The New York Botanical Garden \u201cThe Orchid Show: Chandeliers,\u201d in the Enid A. Haupt Conservatory. Through April 19. $8 to $25; children under 2, free. Tuesdays through Sundays, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. The New York Botanical Garden, Southern Boulevard. 718-817-8700; nybg.org. DOBBS FERRY The Donald Gallery \u201cA Place to Remember,\u201d paintings by Emily Stedman. Through April 12. Tuesdays through Sundays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The Donald Gallery, 343 Broadway. southpres.org/thedonaldgallery.shtml; 914-693-0473. GARRISON Garrison Art Center \u201cCrossing the Lines,\u201d group show. \u201cSuspended Carbon,\u201d Keiko Sono. Through May 3. Tuesdays through Sundays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Garrison Art Center, 23 Garrison\u2019s Landing. garrisonartcenter.org; 845-424-3960. HASTINGS-ON-HUDSON Upstream Gallery Works by Jerry Vis and Arline Simon. Through April 19. Thursdays through Sundays, 12:30 to 5:30 p.m.; and by appointment. Upstream Gallery, 8 Main Street. upstreamgallery.com; 914-674-8548. HUDSON 510 Warren Street Gallery \u201cDiana Felber: Our Woods in Oil and Water.\u201d Through April 26. Fridays and Saturdays, noon to 6 p.m.; Sundays, noon to 5 p.m. 510 Warren Street Gallery, 510 Warren Street. 510warrenstgallery.com; 518-822-0510. HUDSON Carrie Haddad Gallery \u201cRichard Merkin: Some of His Favorite Things,\u201d paintings. Through April 19. Mondays through Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sundays, noon to 5 p.m. Carrie Haddad Gallery, 622 Warren Street. 518-828-1915; carriehaddadgallery.com. HUDSON Curatorium \u201cVeiled Actions,\u201d George Hildrew. \u201cEveryday Places,\u201d Cathryn Griffin. Through May 7. Thursdays through Sundays, noon to 5 p.m.; and by appointment. Curatorium, 60 South Front Street. 212-537-6029; curatoriumhudson.org. HUDSON Davis Orton Gallery \u201cNight Photography: From Cities to Towns to Way, Way Beyond.\u201d Through May 10. Fridays through Sundays, noon to 6 p.m.; and by appointment. Davis Orton Gallery, 114 Warren Street. davisortongallery.com; 518-697-0266.", "answer": "\u201cNight Photography: From Cities to Towns to Way, Way Beyond.\u201d", "sentence": "HUDSON Davis Orton Gallery \u201cNight Photography: From Cities to Towns to Way, Way Beyond.\u201d Through May 10.", "paragraph_sentence": "BRONX Lehman College Art Gallery \u201cThe Gee\u2019s Bend Tradition,\u201d group show. Through April 24. Tuesdays through Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Lehman College Art Gallery, 250 Bedford Park Boulevard West. 718-960-8731; lehman.edu/gallery. BRONX The New York Botanical Garden \u201cThe Orchid Show: Chandeliers,\u201d in the Enid A. Haupt Conservatory. Through April 19. $8 to $25; children under 2, free. Tuesdays through Sundays, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. The New York Botanical Garden, Southern Boulevard. 718-817-8700; nybg.org. DOBBS FERRY The Donald Gallery \u201cA Place to Remember,\u201d paintings by Emily Stedman. Through April 12. Tuesdays through Sundays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The Donald Gallery, 343 Broadway. southpres.org/thedonaldgallery.shtml; 914-693-0473. GARRISON Garrison Art Center \u201cCrossing the Lines,\u201d group show. \u201cSuspended Carbon,\u201d Keiko Sono. Through May 3. Tuesdays through Sundays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Garrison Art Center, 23 Garrison\u2019s Landing. garrisonartcenter.org; 845-424-3960. HASTINGS-ON-HUDSON Upstream Gallery Works by Jerry Vis and Arline Simon. Through April 19. Thursdays through Sundays, 12:30 to 5:30 p.m.; and by appointment. Upstream Gallery, 8 Main Street. upstreamgallery.com; 914-674-8548. HUDSON 510 Warren Street Gallery \u201cDiana Felber: Our Woods in Oil and Water.\u201d Through April 26. Fridays and Saturdays, noon to 6 p.m.; Sundays, noon to 5 p.m. 510 Warren Street Gallery, 510 Warren Street. 510warrenstgallery.com; 518-822-0510. HUDSON Carrie Haddad Gallery \u201cRichard Merkin: Some of His Favorite Things,\u201d paintings. Through April 19. Mondays through Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sundays, noon to 5 p.m. Carrie Haddad Gallery, 622 Warren Street. 518-828-1915; carriehaddadgallery.com. HUDSON Curatorium \u201cVeiled Actions,\u201d George Hildrew. \u201cEveryday Places,\u201d Cathryn Griffin. Through May 7. Thursdays through Sundays, noon to 5 p.m.; and by appointment. Curatorium, 60 South Front Street. 212-537-6029; curatoriumhudson.org. HUDSON Davis Orton Gallery \u201cNight Photography: From Cities to Towns to Way, Way Beyond.\u201d Through May 10. Fridays through Sundays, noon to 6 p.m.; and by appointment. Davis Orton Gallery, 114 Warren Street. davisortongallery.com; 518-697-0266.", "paragraph_answer": "BRONX Lehman College Art Gallery \u201cThe Gee\u2019s Bend Tradition,\u201d group show. Through April 24. Tuesdays through Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Lehman College Art Gallery, 250 Bedford Park Boulevard West. 718-960-8731; lehman.edu/gallery. BRONX The New York Botanical Garden \u201cThe Orchid Show: Chandeliers,\u201d in the Enid A. Haupt Conservatory. Through April 19. $8 to $25; children under 2, free. Tuesdays through Sundays, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. The New York Botanical Garden, Southern Boulevard. 718-817-8700; nybg.org. DOBBS FERRY The Donald Gallery \u201cA Place to Remember,\u201d paintings by Emily Stedman. Through April 12. Tuesdays through Sundays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The Donald Gallery, 343 Broadway. southpres.org/thedonaldgallery.shtml; 914-693-0473. GARRISON Garrison Art Center \u201cCrossing the Lines,\u201d group show. \u201cSuspended Carbon,\u201d Keiko Sono. Through May 3. Tuesdays through Sundays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Garrison Art Center, 23 Garrison\u2019s Landing. garrisonartcenter.org; 845-424-3960. HASTINGS-ON-HUDSON Upstream Gallery Works by Jerry Vis and Arline Simon. Through April 19. Thursdays through Sundays, 12:30 to 5:30 p.m.; and by appointment. Upstream Gallery, 8 Main Street. upstreamgallery.com; 914-674-8548. HUDSON 510 Warren Street Gallery \u201cDiana Felber: Our Woods in Oil and Water.\u201d Through April 26. Fridays and Saturdays, noon to 6 p.m.; Sundays, noon to 5 p.m. 510 Warren Street Gallery, 510 Warren Street. 510warrenstgallery.com; 518-822-0510. HUDSON Carrie Haddad Gallery \u201cRichard Merkin: Some of His Favorite Things,\u201d paintings. Through April 19. Mondays through Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sundays, noon to 5 p.m. Carrie Haddad Gallery, 622 Warren Street. 518-828-1915; carriehaddadgallery.com. HUDSON Curatorium \u201cVeiled Actions,\u201d George Hildrew. \u201cEveryday Places,\u201d Cathryn Griffin. Through May 7. Thursdays through Sundays, noon to 5 p.m.; and by appointment. Curatorium, 60 South Front Street. 212-537-6029; curatoriumhudson.org. HUDSON Davis Orton Gallery \u201cNight Photography: From Cities to Towns to Way, Way Beyond.\u201d Through May 10. Fridays through Sundays, noon to 6 p.m.; and by appointment. Davis Orton Gallery, 114 Warren Street. davisortongallery.com; 518-697-0266.", "sentence_answer": "HUDSON Davis Orton Gallery \u201cNight Photography: From Cities to Towns to Way, Way Beyond.\u201d Through May 10.", "paragraph_id": "5d7066f2c8e4820a9b66f0cb"} +{"question": "Who is the representative of realChange Partners?", "paragraph": "\u201cHelp us raise back the $100,000 a donor asked us to return because we welcome transgender girls,\u201d read the headline on the page, which included a video about the Girl Scouts\u2019 commitment to inclusivity. In a little over five hours, Ms. Ferland says, the site had already received over $100,000 in donations. By the end of that first day, the number was up to $243,958 from 4,760 donors. By the time the fund-raising effort was concluded a month later, the organization had raised $365,573. It was a victory for the Girl Scouts and a lesson for the philanthropic community. \u201cThe lesson for the fund-raising community is that if you\u2019re interested in accessing the L.G.B.T. market, your values have to be those of inclusiveness,\u201d says Mickey MacIntyre of realChange Partners, a consultant for nonprofits, focusing on L.G.B.T. issues.", "answer": "Mickey MacIntyre", "sentence": "\u201cThe lesson for the fund-raising community is that if you\u2019re interested in accessing the L.G.B.T. market, your values have to be those of inclusiveness,\u201d says Mickey MacIntyre of realChange Partners, a consultant for nonprofits, focusing on L.G.B.T. issues.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cHelp us raise back the $100,000 a donor asked us to return because we welcome transgender girls,\u201d read the headline on the page, which included a video about the Girl Scouts\u2019 commitment to inclusivity. In a little over five hours, Ms. Ferland says, the site had already received over $100,000 in donations. By the end of that first day, the number was up to $243,958 from 4,760 donors. By the time the fund-raising effort was concluded a month later, the organization had raised $365,573. It was a victory for the Girl Scouts and a lesson for the philanthropic community. \u201cThe lesson for the fund-raising community is that if you\u2019re interested in accessing the L.G.B.T. market, your values have to be those of inclusiveness,\u201d says Mickey MacIntyre of realChange Partners, a consultant for nonprofits, focusing on L.G.B.T. issues. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cHelp us raise back the $100,000 a donor asked us to return because we welcome transgender girls,\u201d read the headline on the page, which included a video about the Girl Scouts\u2019 commitment to inclusivity. In a little over five hours, Ms. Ferland says, the site had already received over $100,000 in donations. By the end of that first day, the number was up to $243,958 from 4,760 donors. By the time the fund-raising effort was concluded a month later, the organization had raised $365,573. It was a victory for the Girl Scouts and a lesson for the philanthropic community. \u201cThe lesson for the fund-raising community is that if you\u2019re interested in accessing the L.G.B.T. market, your values have to be those of inclusiveness,\u201d says Mickey MacIntyre of realChange Partners, a consultant for nonprofits, focusing on L.G.B.T. issues.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe lesson for the fund-raising community is that if you\u2019re interested in accessing the L.G.B.T. market, your values have to be those of inclusiveness,\u201d says Mickey MacIntyre of realChange Partners, a consultant for nonprofits, focusing on L.G.B.T. issues.", "paragraph_id": "5d700f59c8e4820a9b66bb59"} +{"question": "Who is the largest bank in America?", "paragraph": "All the large United States banks passed an annual regulatory test that aims to assess whether they can make it through a financial and economic calamity, the Federal Reserve said on Wednesday. But Bank of America, the nation\u2019s second-largest bank by assets after JPMorgan Chase, passed only provisionally and could still fail later this year if it does not fix deficiencies that the Fed identified. Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase and Morgan Stanley, which dominate Wall Street, each had to alter their planned payouts to investors to achieve passing grades.", "answer": "JPMorgan Chase", "sentence": "But Bank of America, the nation\u2019s second-largest bank by assets after JPMorgan Chase , passed only provisionally and could still fail later this year if it does not fix deficiencies that the Fed identified.", "paragraph_sentence": "All the large United States banks passed an annual regulatory test that aims to assess whether they can make it through a financial and economic calamity, the Federal Reserve said on Wednesday. But Bank of America, the nation\u2019s second-largest bank by assets after JPMorgan Chase , passed only provisionally and could still fail later this year if it does not fix deficiencies that the Fed identified. Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase and Morgan Stanley, which dominate Wall Street, each had to alter their planned payouts to investors to achieve passing grades.", "paragraph_answer": "All the large United States banks passed an annual regulatory test that aims to assess whether they can make it through a financial and economic calamity, the Federal Reserve said on Wednesday. But Bank of America, the nation\u2019s second-largest bank by assets after JPMorgan Chase , passed only provisionally and could still fail later this year if it does not fix deficiencies that the Fed identified. Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase and Morgan Stanley, which dominate Wall Street, each had to alter their planned payouts to investors to achieve passing grades.", "sentence_answer": "But Bank of America, the nation\u2019s second-largest bank by assets after JPMorgan Chase , passed only provisionally and could still fail later this year if it does not fix deficiencies that the Fed identified.", "paragraph_id": "5d7006b0c8e4820a9b66abf8"} +{"question": "What's the name of one of Emily Post Institute's spokeswoman?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe problem with Instagram and Facebook is that they\u2019re being used by career-minded people outside the original targeted audience \u2014 the college crowd \u2014 Ms. Sternheimer said. \u201cEveryone is using it now, so smartphones are essentially monitoring our behavior,\u201d she said. \u201cPeople may be behaving better for fear of being captured doing something inappropriate without their consent.\u201d Ms. Sternheimer added that people are more careful about what they let others see, especially because they know that other employment opportunities can be hindered if they portray themselves negatively in either a work or social setting. If the web is monitoring, it\u2019s also educating us in good performance. \u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post, a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt. \u201cThe generation before the Internet watched movies and learned how to behave from them,\u201d she said, pointing to the John Hughes cult film \u201cSixteen Candles\u201d as one example. \u201cPeople acted a little drunk and goofy.\u201d", "answer": "Anna Post", "sentence": "\u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post , a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe problem with Instagram and Facebook is that they\u2019re being used by career-minded people outside the original targeted audience \u2014 the college crowd \u2014 Ms. Sternheimer said. \u201cEveryone is using it now, so smartphones are essentially monitoring our behavior,\u201d she said. \u201cPeople may be behaving better for fear of being captured doing something inappropriate without their consent.\u201d Ms. Sternheimer added that people are more careful about what they let others see, especially because they know that other employment opportunities can be hindered if they portray themselves negatively in either a work or social setting. If the web is monitoring, it\u2019s also educating us in good performance. \u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post , a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt. \u201cThe generation before the Internet watched movies and learned how to behave from them,\u201d she said, pointing to the John Hughes cult film \u201cSixteen Candles\u201d as one example. \u201cPeople acted a little drunk and goofy.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe problem with Instagram and Facebook is that they\u2019re being used by career-minded people outside the original targeted audience \u2014 the college crowd \u2014 Ms. Sternheimer said. \u201cEveryone is using it now, so smartphones are essentially monitoring our behavior,\u201d she said. \u201cPeople may be behaving better for fear of being captured doing something inappropriate without their consent.\u201d Ms. Sternheimer added that people are more careful about what they let others see, especially because they know that other employment opportunities can be hindered if they portray themselves negatively in either a work or social setting. If the web is monitoring, it\u2019s also educating us in good performance. \u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post , a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt. \u201cThe generation before the Internet watched movies and learned how to behave from them,\u201d she said, pointing to the John Hughes cult film \u201cSixteen Candles\u201d as one example. \u201cPeople acted a little drunk and goofy.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post , a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt.", "paragraph_id": "5d7016a8c8e4820a9b66c2c2"} +{"question": "Which party is being blaimed for right-to-work not passing?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe large group of Republicans who have supported working families in the state of Missouri are the reason we\u2019re not right to work today,\u201d said Albert L. Bond, assistant executive secretary-treasurer of the Carpenters\u2019 District Council of Greater St. Louis and Vicinity.", "answer": "Republicans", "sentence": "\u201cThe large group of Republicans who have supported working families in the state of Missouri are the reason we\u2019re not right to work today,\u201d said Albert L. Bond, assistant executive secretary-treasurer of the Carpenters\u2019 District Council of Greater St. Louis and Vicinity.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThe large group of Republicans who have supported working families in the state of Missouri are the reason we\u2019re not right to work today,\u201d said Albert L. Bond, assistant executive secretary-treasurer of the Carpenters\u2019 District Council of Greater St. Louis and Vicinity. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe large group of Republicans who have supported working families in the state of Missouri are the reason we\u2019re not right to work today,\u201d said Albert L. Bond, assistant executive secretary-treasurer of the Carpenters\u2019 District Council of Greater St. Louis and Vicinity.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe large group of Republicans who have supported working families in the state of Missouri are the reason we\u2019re not right to work today,\u201d said Albert L. Bond, assistant executive secretary-treasurer of the Carpenters\u2019 District Council of Greater St. Louis and Vicinity.", "paragraph_id": "5d701991c8e4820a9b66c59d"} +{"question": "What does the band used to do to Mr. Bridges?", "paragraph": "They also played in his band here: In White Denim, they\u2019re not especially restrained, but here, they played with a light touch. Maybe that\u2019s out of deference to the style, or maybe it\u2019s because Mr. Bridges isn\u2019t yet a fully realized stage performer: He looked reluctant at times, and often the band was clobbering him as he was attempting subtlety. In between songs, he mumbled words quickly and unintelligibly. Playing the part is not enough. That mode gives him a framework, historical and structural. It takes the pressure off. It also advertises him without his having to so much as open his mouth.", "answer": "clobbering him", "sentence": "Maybe that\u2019s out of deference to the style, or maybe it\u2019s because Mr. Bridges isn\u2019t yet a fully realized stage performer: He looked reluctant at times, and often the band was clobbering him as he was attempting subtlety.", "paragraph_sentence": "They also played in his band here: In White Denim, they\u2019re not especially restrained, but here, they played with a light touch. Maybe that\u2019s out of deference to the style, or maybe it\u2019s because Mr. Bridges isn\u2019t yet a fully realized stage performer: He looked reluctant at times, and often the band was clobbering him as he was attempting subtlety. In between songs, he mumbled words quickly and unintelligibly. Playing the part is not enough. That mode gives him a framework, historical and structural. It takes the pressure off. It also advertises him without his having to so much as open his mouth.", "paragraph_answer": "They also played in his band here: In White Denim, they\u2019re not especially restrained, but here, they played with a light touch. Maybe that\u2019s out of deference to the style, or maybe it\u2019s because Mr. Bridges isn\u2019t yet a fully realized stage performer: He looked reluctant at times, and often the band was clobbering him as he was attempting subtlety. In between songs, he mumbled words quickly and unintelligibly. Playing the part is not enough. That mode gives him a framework, historical and structural. It takes the pressure off. It also advertises him without his having to so much as open his mouth.", "sentence_answer": "Maybe that\u2019s out of deference to the style, or maybe it\u2019s because Mr. Bridges isn\u2019t yet a fully realized stage performer: He looked reluctant at times, and often the band was clobbering him as he was attempting subtlety.", "paragraph_id": "5d701252c8e4820a9b66bec9"} +{"question": "What big event did Johannsson play a big part in for his team?", "paragraph": "Johannsson has played with the Dutch club AZ Alkmaar since 2013, scoring 38 goals in 84 games across all competitions. He will depart after having led the club to three important wins to end last season and propelling AZ into a surprising third-place finish that earned the team a place in the Europa League this season. On Tuesday, AZ announced that it had agreed to sell Johannsson\u2019s rights to Werder Bremen. Johannsson still needed to agree to a contract and pass a physical; those could be completed as soon as Wednesday. \u201cOnce they came and were interested, it was a pretty easy choice, because obviously I want to play for a better team in a better league, and the Bundesliga is one of the best leagues in the world,\u201d Johannsson said in a farewell interview posted online by AZ. \u201cIt\u2019s a step in the right direction for me, and hopefully it will go well.\u201d The move now makes Johannsson the only American forward likely to see regular minutes in one of Europe\u2019s top leagues. Clint Dempsey was the last American to establish himself in an elite league; his best season was in 2011-12 with Fulham, when he scored 17 goals in the Premier League and 23 over all.", "answer": "propelling AZ into a surprising third-place finish that earned the team a place in the Europa League", "sentence": "He will depart after having led the club to three important wins to end last season and propelling AZ into a surprising third-place finish that earned the team a place in the Europa League this season.", "paragraph_sentence": "Johannsson has played with the Dutch club AZ Alkmaar since 2013, scoring 38 goals in 84 games across all competitions. He will depart after having led the club to three important wins to end last season and propelling AZ into a surprising third-place finish that earned the team a place in the Europa League this season. On Tuesday, AZ announced that it had agreed to sell Johannsson\u2019s rights to Werder Bremen. Johannsson still needed to agree to a contract and pass a physical; those could be completed as soon as Wednesday. \u201cOnce they came and were interested, it was a pretty easy choice, because obviously I want to play for a better team in a better league, and the Bundesliga is one of the best leagues in the world,\u201d Johannsson said in a farewell interview posted online by AZ. \u201cIt\u2019s a step in the right direction for me, and hopefully it will go well.\u201d The move now makes Johannsson the only American forward likely to see regular minutes in one of Europe\u2019s top leagues. Clint Dempsey was the last American to establish himself in an elite league; his best season was in 2011-12 with Fulham, when he scored 17 goals in the Premier League and 23 over all.", "paragraph_answer": "Johannsson has played with the Dutch club AZ Alkmaar since 2013, scoring 38 goals in 84 games across all competitions. He will depart after having led the club to three important wins to end last season and propelling AZ into a surprising third-place finish that earned the team a place in the Europa League this season. On Tuesday, AZ announced that it had agreed to sell Johannsson\u2019s rights to Werder Bremen. Johannsson still needed to agree to a contract and pass a physical; those could be completed as soon as Wednesday. \u201cOnce they came and were interested, it was a pretty easy choice, because obviously I want to play for a better team in a better league, and the Bundesliga is one of the best leagues in the world,\u201d Johannsson said in a farewell interview posted online by AZ. \u201cIt\u2019s a step in the right direction for me, and hopefully it will go well.\u201d The move now makes Johannsson the only American forward likely to see regular minutes in one of Europe\u2019s top leagues. Clint Dempsey was the last American to establish himself in an elite league; his best season was in 2011-12 with Fulham, when he scored 17 goals in the Premier League and 23 over all.", "sentence_answer": "He will depart after having led the club to three important wins to end last season and propelling AZ into a surprising third-place finish that earned the team a place in the Europa League this season.", "paragraph_id": "5d702cf2c8e4820a9b66da7e"} +{"question": "Who helped fight a fire on New Jersey apartment complex?", "paragraph": "Indeed, the sight of smoke billowing from an industrial zone as water arches in from bobbing watercraft is an increasingly rare one for the Fire Department\u2019s Marine Battalion, which counts about 20 boats in its fleet but more frequently responds to medical emergencies and boats in distress. This weekend\u2019s fire, however, marked the second time in two weeks that fireboats rushed toward plumes of smoke from out-of-control fires on the banks of the city\u2019s rivers. On Jan. 21, several New York City fireboats helped fight a fire in a New Jersey apartment complex in Edgewater, a community along the Hudson.", "answer": "several New York City fireboats", "sentence": "On Jan. 21, several New York City fireboats helped fight a fire in a New Jersey apartment complex in Edgewater, a community along the Hudson.", "paragraph_sentence": "Indeed, the sight of smoke billowing from an industrial zone as water arches in from bobbing watercraft is an increasingly rare one for the Fire Department\u2019s Marine Battalion, which counts about 20 boats in its fleet but more frequently responds to medical emergencies and boats in distress. This weekend\u2019s fire, however, marked the second time in two weeks that fireboats rushed toward plumes of smoke from out-of-control fires on the banks of the city\u2019s rivers. On Jan. 21, several New York City fireboats helped fight a fire in a New Jersey apartment complex in Edgewater, a community along the Hudson. ", "paragraph_answer": "Indeed, the sight of smoke billowing from an industrial zone as water arches in from bobbing watercraft is an increasingly rare one for the Fire Department\u2019s Marine Battalion, which counts about 20 boats in its fleet but more frequently responds to medical emergencies and boats in distress. This weekend\u2019s fire, however, marked the second time in two weeks that fireboats rushed toward plumes of smoke from out-of-control fires on the banks of the city\u2019s rivers. On Jan. 21, several New York City fireboats helped fight a fire in a New Jersey apartment complex in Edgewater, a community along the Hudson.", "sentence_answer": "On Jan. 21, several New York City fireboats helped fight a fire in a New Jersey apartment complex in Edgewater, a community along the Hudson.", "paragraph_id": "5d701594c8e4820a9b66c1b2"} +{"question": "What job did Mr. Clinton help Mr. Rodman get in 2010?", "paragraph": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "answer": "raising investments in GreenTech Automotive", "sentence": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive , an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia.", "paragraph_sentence": " When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive , an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "paragraph_answer": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive , an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "sentence_answer": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive , an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia.", "paragraph_id": "5d71266cc8e4820a9b66f76e"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700982c8e4820a9b66b22d"} +{"question": "Who was wounded and now needs a cane to walk?", "paragraph": "CENTENNIAL, Colo. \u2014 Inside Courtroom 201, the families of the dead and wounded watched in taut silence on Thursday afternoon as the judge shuffled through a stack of verdict forms containing the fate of James E. Holmes, the gunman who slipped into a Colorado movie theater in 2012 and opened fire on their sons and daughters, friends and loved ones. As the judge began reading the verdicts \u2014 guilty, guilty, guilty \u2014 repeated 165 times over an entire hour, for each count of murder and attempted murder, the families sobbed quietly, clutched one another\u2019s shoulders and nodded along to a recitation of guilt that many had been waiting nearly three years to hear. Sandy Phillips wrapped herself tightly in the green scarf that her slain daughter, Jessica Ghawi, had loved. A father whose son was killed patted the arm of Joshua Nowlan, who was wounded and now walks with a cane.", "answer": "Joshua Nowlan", "sentence": "A father whose son was killed patted the arm of Joshua Nowlan , who was wounded and now walks with a cane.", "paragraph_sentence": "CENTENNIAL, Colo. \u2014 Inside Courtroom 201, the families of the dead and wounded watched in taut silence on Thursday afternoon as the judge shuffled through a stack of verdict forms containing the fate of James E. Holmes, the gunman who slipped into a Colorado movie theater in 2012 and opened fire on their sons and daughters, friends and loved ones. As the judge began reading the verdicts \u2014 guilty, guilty, guilty \u2014 repeated 165 times over an entire hour, for each count of murder and attempted murder, the families sobbed quietly, clutched one another \u2019s shoulders and nodded along to a recitation of guilt that many had been waiting nearly three years to hear. Sandy Phillips wrapped herself tightly in the green scarf that her slain daughter, Jessica Ghawi, had loved. A father whose son was killed patted the arm of Joshua Nowlan , who was wounded and now walks with a cane. ", "paragraph_answer": "CENTENNIAL, Colo. \u2014 Inside Courtroom 201, the families of the dead and wounded watched in taut silence on Thursday afternoon as the judge shuffled through a stack of verdict forms containing the fate of James E. Holmes, the gunman who slipped into a Colorado movie theater in 2012 and opened fire on their sons and daughters, friends and loved ones. As the judge began reading the verdicts \u2014 guilty, guilty, guilty \u2014 repeated 165 times over an entire hour, for each count of murder and attempted murder, the families sobbed quietly, clutched one another\u2019s shoulders and nodded along to a recitation of guilt that many had been waiting nearly three years to hear. Sandy Phillips wrapped herself tightly in the green scarf that her slain daughter, Jessica Ghawi, had loved. A father whose son was killed patted the arm of Joshua Nowlan , who was wounded and now walks with a cane.", "sentence_answer": "A father whose son was killed patted the arm of Joshua Nowlan , who was wounded and now walks with a cane.", "paragraph_id": "5d7012c3c8e4820a9b66bf03"} +{"question": "How many bottles of pentobarbital had Sandy ordered from Mexico?", "paragraph": "In October, Sandy wrote to an address in Mexico listed on the website of \u201cThe Peaceful Pill Handbook.\u201d Weeks passed, and she fretted that her order had been confiscated at the border. But at last it arrived: a cardboard box, no bigger than a softball, wrapped in brown paper. Sandy eagerly took scissors to the packaging and retrieved two 100-\u00admilliliter bottles of pentobarbital \u2014 she had bought an extra one just in case, even though she believed that one bottle would be enough for a person her size. The drug needed to be kept in a cool place, so she took the bottles down to the basement. For the time being, she could leave the pentobarbital on a shelf, comforted by the knowledge that it was there. Now that the matter of \u201cHow?\u201d was taken care of, the Bems turned back to the elusive question of \u201cWhen?\u201d They still generally agreed that Sandy would probably be alive until the end of 2014. But even with the treatments in Manhattan, her cognitive deficits were becoming more pronounced. When Bev came from Oregon to visit, Sandy couldn\u2019t understand how Bev and she could possibly have had the same parents. She didn\u2019t recognize Robyn\u2019s name in conversation, and when Emily tried to explain that Robyn was \u201cDad\u2019s sister,\u201d Sandy asked who, exactly, was Dad?", "answer": "two", "sentence": "Sandy eagerly took scissors to the packaging and retrieved two 100-\u00admilliliter bottles of pentobarbital \u2014 she had bought an extra one just in case, even though she believed that one bottle would be enough for a person her size.", "paragraph_sentence": "In October, Sandy wrote to an address in Mexico listed on the website of \u201cThe Peaceful Pill Handbook.\u201d Weeks passed, and she fretted that her order had been confiscated at the border. But at last it arrived: a cardboard box, no bigger than a softball, wrapped in brown paper. Sandy eagerly took scissors to the packaging and retrieved two 100-\u00admilliliter bottles of pentobarbital \u2014 she had bought an extra one just in case, even though she believed that one bottle would be enough for a person her size. The drug needed to be kept in a cool place, so she took the bottles down to the basement. For the time being, she could leave the pentobarbital on a shelf, comforted by the knowledge that it was there. Now that the matter of \u201cHow?\u201d was taken care of, the Bems turned back to the elusive question of \u201cWhen?\u201d They still generally agreed that Sandy would probably be alive until the end of 2014. But even with the treatments in Manhattan, her cognitive deficits were becoming more pronounced. When Bev came from Oregon to visit, Sandy couldn\u2019t understand how Bev and she could possibly have had the same parents. She didn\u2019t recognize Robyn\u2019s name in conversation, and when Emily tried to explain that Robyn was \u201cDad\u2019s sister,\u201d Sandy asked who, exactly, was Dad?", "paragraph_answer": "In October, Sandy wrote to an address in Mexico listed on the website of \u201cThe Peaceful Pill Handbook.\u201d Weeks passed, and she fretted that her order had been confiscated at the border. But at last it arrived: a cardboard box, no bigger than a softball, wrapped in brown paper. Sandy eagerly took scissors to the packaging and retrieved two 100-\u00admilliliter bottles of pentobarbital \u2014 she had bought an extra one just in case, even though she believed that one bottle would be enough for a person her size. The drug needed to be kept in a cool place, so she took the bottles down to the basement. For the time being, she could leave the pentobarbital on a shelf, comforted by the knowledge that it was there. Now that the matter of \u201cHow?\u201d was taken care of, the Bems turned back to the elusive question of \u201cWhen?\u201d They still generally agreed that Sandy would probably be alive until the end of 2014. But even with the treatments in Manhattan, her cognitive deficits were becoming more pronounced. When Bev came from Oregon to visit, Sandy couldn\u2019t understand how Bev and she could possibly have had the same parents. She didn\u2019t recognize Robyn\u2019s name in conversation, and when Emily tried to explain that Robyn was \u201cDad\u2019s sister,\u201d Sandy asked who, exactly, was Dad?", "sentence_answer": "Sandy eagerly took scissors to the packaging and retrieved two 100-\u00admilliliter bottles of pentobarbital \u2014 she had bought an extra one just in case, even though she believed that one bottle would be enough for a person her size.", "paragraph_id": "5d70424ac8e4820a9b66e62d"} +{"question": "Lucius Clay and others helped to feed children from Japan and where else?", "paragraph": "Cuts in food aid are leading Syrian refugees to take desperate measures (\u201cChild Labor Rises Sharply in Syria Unrest,\u201d news article, July 2). This is a terrible situation for Syrian children to be forced to beg and work just to get a meal. But we can do something about it. After World War II, Gens. Douglas MacArthur and Lucius Clay set up school feeding for millions of children in Japan and Germany, respectively. These meals saved a whole generation of children. The school feeding gives children nutrition, but it also gets them in school and learning. It gets them away from child labor. The United Nations World Food Program has some limited school feeding for Syrian refugee children, but it needs a big expansion in funding and support.", "answer": "Germany", "sentence": "Douglas MacArthur and Lucius Clay set up school feeding for millions of children in Japan and Germany , respectively.", "paragraph_sentence": "Cuts in food aid are leading Syrian refugees to take desperate measures (\u201cChild Labor Rises Sharply in Syria Unrest,\u201d news article, July 2). This is a terrible situation for Syrian children to be forced to beg and work just to get a meal. But we can do something about it. After World War II, Gens. Douglas MacArthur and Lucius Clay set up school feeding for millions of children in Japan and Germany , respectively. These meals saved a whole generation of children. The school feeding gives children nutrition, but it also gets them in school and learning. It gets them away from child labor. The United Nations World Food Program has some limited school feeding for Syrian refugee children, but it needs a big expansion in funding and support.", "paragraph_answer": "Cuts in food aid are leading Syrian refugees to take desperate measures (\u201cChild Labor Rises Sharply in Syria Unrest,\u201d news article, July 2). This is a terrible situation for Syrian children to be forced to beg and work just to get a meal. But we can do something about it. After World War II, Gens. Douglas MacArthur and Lucius Clay set up school feeding for millions of children in Japan and Germany , respectively. These meals saved a whole generation of children. The school feeding gives children nutrition, but it also gets them in school and learning. It gets them away from child labor. The United Nations World Food Program has some limited school feeding for Syrian refugee children, but it needs a big expansion in funding and support.", "sentence_answer": "Douglas MacArthur and Lucius Clay set up school feeding for millions of children in Japan and Germany , respectively.", "paragraph_id": "5d700c5dc8e4820a9b66b763"} +{"question": "What is the name of the team Gallardo previously joined before the transfer?", "paragraph": "The active leader among pitchers is Yovani Gallardo, with 12. Gallardo, 29, was traded before the season from the Brewers to the Rangers in the American League, so his opportunities to add to that total will be limited. Bumgarner was lauded for his astonishing postseason pitching performance last year, but he has some pop in his bat, too.", "answer": "Brewers", "sentence": "Gallardo, 29, was traded before the season from the Brewers to the Rangers in the American League, so his opportunities to add to that total will be limited.", "paragraph_sentence": "The active leader among pitchers is Yovani Gallardo, with 12. Gallardo, 29, was traded before the season from the Brewers to the Rangers in the American League, so his opportunities to add to that total will be limited. Bumgarner was lauded for his astonishing postseason pitching performance last year, but he has some pop in his bat, too.", "paragraph_answer": "The active leader among pitchers is Yovani Gallardo, with 12. Gallardo, 29, was traded before the season from the Brewers to the Rangers in the American League, so his opportunities to add to that total will be limited. Bumgarner was lauded for his astonishing postseason pitching performance last year, but he has some pop in his bat, too.", "sentence_answer": "Gallardo, 29, was traded before the season from the Brewers to the Rangers in the American League, so his opportunities to add to that total will be limited.", "paragraph_id": "5d7028e7c8e4820a9b66d6ae"} +{"question": "At what rate did consumer prices fall in November?", "paragraph": "The weaker euro is a mixed blessing for the struggling eurozone economy. European exporters will gain a competitive advantage against foreign rivals because their products will become cheaper for customers who pay in dollars or other currencies that tend to track with the dollar. A weaker euro could also push up inflation \u2014 a desirable outcome at the moment \u2014 because foreign goods would become more expensive in euro terms. With the collapse of the crude oil market adding to the downward pressure, economists expect an official report next Wednesday to show that consumer prices fell at an annual rate of about 0.1 percent in December, down from the rate of 0.3 percent in November. However, a weaker euro also has negative effects in the eurozone. Because oil is usually priced in dollars, a weak euro cancels out some of the economic benefit from the recent drop in oil prices. Cheaper energy is good for companies because it reduces production costs for factories. Consumers benefit because they pay less for fuel and can spend the money on other things.", "answer": "0.3 percent", "sentence": "With the collapse of the crude oil market adding to the downward pressure, economists expect an official report next Wednesday to show that consumer prices fell at an annual rate of about 0.1 percent in December, down from the rate of 0.3 percent in November.", "paragraph_sentence": "The weaker euro is a mixed blessing for the struggling eurozone economy. European exporters will gain a competitive advantage against foreign rivals because their products will become cheaper for customers who pay in dollars or other currencies that tend to track with the dollar. A weaker euro could also push up inflation \u2014 a desirable outcome at the moment \u2014 because foreign goods would become more expensive in euro terms. With the collapse of the crude oil market adding to the downward pressure, economists expect an official report next Wednesday to show that consumer prices fell at an annual rate of about 0.1 percent in December, down from the rate of 0.3 percent in November. However, a weaker euro also has negative effects in the eurozone. Because oil is usually priced in dollars, a weak euro cancels out some of the economic benefit from the recent drop in oil prices. Cheaper energy is good for companies because it reduces production costs for factories. Consumers benefit because they pay less for fuel and can spend the money on other things.", "paragraph_answer": "The weaker euro is a mixed blessing for the struggling eurozone economy. European exporters will gain a competitive advantage against foreign rivals because their products will become cheaper for customers who pay in dollars or other currencies that tend to track with the dollar. A weaker euro could also push up inflation \u2014 a desirable outcome at the moment \u2014 because foreign goods would become more expensive in euro terms. With the collapse of the crude oil market adding to the downward pressure, economists expect an official report next Wednesday to show that consumer prices fell at an annual rate of about 0.1 percent in December, down from the rate of 0.3 percent in November. However, a weaker euro also has negative effects in the eurozone. Because oil is usually priced in dollars, a weak euro cancels out some of the economic benefit from the recent drop in oil prices. Cheaper energy is good for companies because it reduces production costs for factories. Consumers benefit because they pay less for fuel and can spend the money on other things.", "sentence_answer": "With the collapse of the crude oil market adding to the downward pressure, economists expect an official report next Wednesday to show that consumer prices fell at an annual rate of about 0.1 percent in December, down from the rate of 0.3 percent in November.", "paragraph_id": "5d6fb505c8e4820a9b66a7b8"} +{"question": "How would you feel if you thought human nature is good and powerful?", "paragraph": "If you think that human nature is good and powerful, then you go around frustrated because the perfect society has not yet been achieved. But if you go through life believing that our reason is not that great, our individual skills are not that impressive, and our goodness is severely mottled, then you\u2019re sort of amazed life has managed to be as sweet as it is. You\u2019re grateful for all the institutions our ancestors gave us, like the Constitution and our customs, which shape us to be better than we\u2019d otherwise be. Appreciation becomes the first political virtue and the need to perfect the gifts of others is the first political task.", "answer": "frustrated", "sentence": "If you think that human nature is good and powerful, then you go around frustrated because the perfect society has not yet been achieved.", "paragraph_sentence": " If you think that human nature is good and powerful, then you go around frustrated because the perfect society has not yet been achieved. But if you go through life believing that our reason is not that great, our individual skills are not that impressive, and our goodness is severely mottled, then you\u2019re sort of amazed life has managed to be as sweet as it is. You\u2019re grateful for all the institutions our ancestors gave us, like the Constitution and our customs, which shape us to be better than we\u2019d otherwise be. Appreciation becomes the first political virtue and the need to perfect the gifts of others is the first political task.", "paragraph_answer": "If you think that human nature is good and powerful, then you go around frustrated because the perfect society has not yet been achieved. But if you go through life believing that our reason is not that great, our individual skills are not that impressive, and our goodness is severely mottled, then you\u2019re sort of amazed life has managed to be as sweet as it is. You\u2019re grateful for all the institutions our ancestors gave us, like the Constitution and our customs, which shape us to be better than we\u2019d otherwise be. Appreciation becomes the first political virtue and the need to perfect the gifts of others is the first political task.", "sentence_answer": "If you think that human nature is good and powerful, then you go around frustrated because the perfect society has not yet been achieved.", "paragraph_id": "5d7005d2c8e4820a9b66a9a8"} +{"question": "The reaction where two molecules swap groups of atoms in chemistry is called what?", "paragraph": "Mr. Chauvin was the first to explain chemical reactions involving petroleum compounds in which two molecules swap groups of atoms. The reactions, called metathesis (pronounced meh-TATH-eh-sis), which means \u201cchanging places,\u201d break and then re-form strong \u201cdouble bonds\u201d between carbon atoms. That process generally requires high temperatures and immense pressures; metathesis, however, takes place under relatively mild conditions, is often quicker than conventional processes, consumes less energy and produces less waste \u2014 advantages for chemical companies and for the environment. For years, chemists were unable to explain how the bonds were being rearranged.", "answer": "metathesis", "sentence": "The reactions, called metathesis (pronounced meh-TATH-eh-sis), which means \u201cchanging places,\u201d break and then re-form strong \u201cdouble bonds\u201d between carbon atoms.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Chauvin was the first to explain chemical reactions involving petroleum compounds in which two molecules swap groups of atoms. The reactions, called metathesis (pronounced meh-TATH-eh-sis), which means \u201cchanging places,\u201d break and then re-form strong \u201cdouble bonds\u201d between carbon atoms. That process generally requires high temperatures and immense pressures; metathesis, however, takes place under relatively mild conditions, is often quicker than conventional processes, consumes less energy and produces less waste \u2014 advantages for chemical companies and for the environment. For years, chemists were unable to explain how the bonds were being rearranged.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Chauvin was the first to explain chemical reactions involving petroleum compounds in which two molecules swap groups of atoms. The reactions, called metathesis (pronounced meh-TATH-eh-sis), which means \u201cchanging places,\u201d break and then re-form strong \u201cdouble bonds\u201d between carbon atoms. That process generally requires high temperatures and immense pressures; metathesis, however, takes place under relatively mild conditions, is often quicker than conventional processes, consumes less energy and produces less waste \u2014 advantages for chemical companies and for the environment. For years, chemists were unable to explain how the bonds were being rearranged.", "sentence_answer": "The reactions, called metathesis (pronounced meh-TATH-eh-sis), which means \u201cchanging places,\u201d break and then re-form strong \u201cdouble bonds\u201d between carbon atoms.", "paragraph_id": "5d7034f2c8e4820a9b66df31"} +{"question": "What is the amount of prisoners that the area is meant for?", "paragraph": "The jail is overcrowded, with nearly 200 inmates in a space for 40. Untreated sewage means visitors are greeted with a foul stench. But the mood among prisoners seems to waver between blas\u00e9 and leisurely. \u201cIt\u2019s not a jail here,\u201d said Idmark dos Santos da Silva, 36, serving time for bank robbery. \u201cIt\u2019s a day care.\u201d Ayrllys Mateus Silva, 24, a bus ticket seller and Mr. Silva Neto\u2019s daughter by the wife whom he killed, said both she and her grandmother had forgiven him, and that she visited his Sap\u00e9 prison.", "answer": "40", "sentence": "The jail is overcrowded, with nearly 200 inmates in a space for 40 .", "paragraph_sentence": " The jail is overcrowded, with nearly 200 inmates in a space for 40 . Untreated sewage means visitors are greeted with a foul stench. But the mood among prisoners seems to waver between blas\u00e9 and leisurely. \u201cIt\u2019s not a jail here,\u201d said Idmark dos Santos da Silva, 36, serving time for bank robbery. \u201cIt\u2019s a day care.\u201d Ayrllys Mateus Silva, 24, a bus ticket seller and Mr. Silva Neto\u2019s daughter by the wife whom he killed, said both she and her grandmother had forgiven him, and that she visited his Sap\u00e9 prison.", "paragraph_answer": "The jail is overcrowded, with nearly 200 inmates in a space for 40 . Untreated sewage means visitors are greeted with a foul stench. But the mood among prisoners seems to waver between blas\u00e9 and leisurely. \u201cIt\u2019s not a jail here,\u201d said Idmark dos Santos da Silva, 36, serving time for bank robbery. \u201cIt\u2019s a day care.\u201d Ayrllys Mateus Silva, 24, a bus ticket seller and Mr. Silva Neto\u2019s daughter by the wife whom he killed, said both she and her grandmother had forgiven him, and that she visited his Sap\u00e9 prison.", "sentence_answer": "The jail is overcrowded, with nearly 200 inmates in a space for 40 .", "paragraph_id": "5d70296ec8e4820a9b66d707"} +{"question": "Why are people requesting anonymity when providing information about the investigation?", "paragraph": "The United investigation grew out of the federal inquiry into the 2013 closing of lanes at the George Washington Bridge, and Mr. Fox is the latest high-ranking figure to leave his post amid those investigations. Last month, the chief executive of United, Jeff Smisek, resigned, as did two other top United executives who also attended the September 2011 dinner. People close to the investigation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because it is continuing, told The New York Times that prosecutors had been asking witnesses before a grand jury questions about Mr. Fox.", "answer": "because it is continuing", "sentence": "People close to the investigation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because it is continuing , told The New York Times that prosecutors had been asking witnesses before a grand jury questions about Mr. Fox.", "paragraph_sentence": "The United investigation grew out of the federal inquiry into the 2013 closing of lanes at the George Washington Bridge, and Mr. Fox is the latest high-ranking figure to leave his post amid those investigations. Last month, the chief executive of United, Jeff Smisek, resigned, as did two other top United executives who also attended the September 2011 dinner. People close to the investigation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because it is continuing , told The New York Times that prosecutors had been asking witnesses before a grand jury questions about Mr. Fox. ", "paragraph_answer": "The United investigation grew out of the federal inquiry into the 2013 closing of lanes at the George Washington Bridge, and Mr. Fox is the latest high-ranking figure to leave his post amid those investigations. Last month, the chief executive of United, Jeff Smisek, resigned, as did two other top United executives who also attended the September 2011 dinner. People close to the investigation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because it is continuing , told The New York Times that prosecutors had been asking witnesses before a grand jury questions about Mr. Fox.", "sentence_answer": "People close to the investigation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because it is continuing , told The New York Times that prosecutors had been asking witnesses before a grand jury questions about Mr. Fox.", "paragraph_id": "5d701845c8e4820a9b66c45e"} +{"question": "What percentage of Land's End customers viewed the catalog before making a purchase?", "paragraph": "However small, the recent resurgence in direct mail may be explained by a better understanding of the catalog\u2019s power to drive sales, Mr. Cohen said. He pointed to Lands\u2019 End as an early example. In 2000, that retailer reduced the number of catalogs it sent consumers. It experienced a $100 million drop in sales as a result, according to research by Kurt Salmon. Lands\u2019 End later added a pop-up survey to its website and found that 75 percent of customers who were making purchases had first reviewed the catalog.", "answer": "75", "sentence": "Lands\u2019 End later added a pop-up survey to its website and found that 75 percent of customers who were making purchases had first reviewed the catalog.", "paragraph_sentence": "However small, the recent resurgence in direct mail may be explained by a better understanding of the catalog\u2019s power to drive sales, Mr. Cohen said. He pointed to Lands\u2019 End as an early example. In 2000, that retailer reduced the number of catalogs it sent consumers. It experienced a $100 million drop in sales as a result, according to research by Kurt Salmon. Lands\u2019 End later added a pop-up survey to its website and found that 75 percent of customers who were making purchases had first reviewed the catalog. ", "paragraph_answer": "However small, the recent resurgence in direct mail may be explained by a better understanding of the catalog\u2019s power to drive sales, Mr. Cohen said. He pointed to Lands\u2019 End as an early example. In 2000, that retailer reduced the number of catalogs it sent consumers. It experienced a $100 million drop in sales as a result, according to research by Kurt Salmon. Lands\u2019 End later added a pop-up survey to its website and found that 75 percent of customers who were making purchases had first reviewed the catalog.", "sentence_answer": "Lands\u2019 End later added a pop-up survey to its website and found that 75 percent of customers who were making purchases had first reviewed the catalog.", "paragraph_id": "5d70260ec8e4820a9b66d256"} +{"question": "What brand is Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel reviving?", "paragraph": "Success brought a private clientele and the Rubels opened stores on Fifth Avenue and in Palm Beach, Fla. But, by the mid-1950s, the boutiques had closed. The last vestiges of their fame are the vintage pieces that turn up for auction occasionally at Sotheby\u2019s, Christie\u2019s and Bonhams. Since finding her grand uncles\u2019 archives, Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel has been working on designs and is now reviving the John Rubel brand with the collection La Boh\u00e8me. Inspired by the shapes and bold colors of Rubel Fr\u00e8res style, the 18 pieces in the collection are made of diamonds, rubies, emeralds, blue and pink sapphires and blue-green tourmalines. \u201cI call it dancing jewelry\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s very colorful, very joyful with touches of Art Deco style.\u201d John Rubel\u2019s Modernist-style Rouleau bracelet of curved gold and blue and pink sapphires inspired Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel\u2019s Ginger ring, named for Ginger Rogers, which the buyer can have pav\u00e9d with diamonds, emeralds, or sapphires. The Mozambique ruby and diamond ring, named La Divine, was derived from Rubel\u2019s Undersea Flower clip of turquoises, rubies and diamonds.", "answer": "John Rubel", "sentence": "Since finding her grand uncles\u2019 archives, Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel has been working on designs and is now reviving the John Rubel brand with the collection La Boh\u00e8me.", "paragraph_sentence": "Success brought a private clientele and the Rubels opened stores on Fifth Avenue and in Palm Beach, Fla. But, by the mid-1950s, the boutiques had closed. The last vestiges of their fame are the vintage pieces that turn up for auction occasionally at Sotheby\u2019s, Christie\u2019s and Bonhams. Since finding her grand uncles\u2019 archives, Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel has been working on designs and is now reviving the John Rubel brand with the collection La Boh\u00e8me. Inspired by the shapes and bold colors of Rubel Fr\u00e8res style, the 18 pieces in the collection are made of diamonds, rubies, emeralds, blue and pink sapphires and blue-green tourmalines. \u201cI call it dancing jewelry\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s very colorful, very joyful with touches of Art Deco style.\u201d John Rubel\u2019s Modernist-style Rouleau bracelet of curved gold and blue and pink sapphires inspired Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel\u2019s Ginger ring, named for Ginger Rogers, which the buyer can have pav\u00e9d with diamonds, emeralds, or sapphires. The Mozambique ruby and diamond ring, named La Divine, was derived from Rubel\u2019s Undersea Flower clip of turquoises, rubies and diamonds.", "paragraph_answer": "Success brought a private clientele and the Rubels opened stores on Fifth Avenue and in Palm Beach, Fla. But, by the mid-1950s, the boutiques had closed. The last vestiges of their fame are the vintage pieces that turn up for auction occasionally at Sotheby\u2019s, Christie\u2019s and Bonhams. Since finding her grand uncles\u2019 archives, Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel has been working on designs and is now reviving the John Rubel brand with the collection La Boh\u00e8me. Inspired by the shapes and bold colors of Rubel Fr\u00e8res style, the 18 pieces in the collection are made of diamonds, rubies, emeralds, blue and pink sapphires and blue-green tourmalines. \u201cI call it dancing jewelry\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s very colorful, very joyful with touches of Art Deco style.\u201d John Rubel\u2019s Modernist-style Rouleau bracelet of curved gold and blue and pink sapphires inspired Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel\u2019s Ginger ring, named for Ginger Rogers, which the buyer can have pav\u00e9d with diamonds, emeralds, or sapphires. The Mozambique ruby and diamond ring, named La Divine, was derived from Rubel\u2019s Undersea Flower clip of turquoises, rubies and diamonds.", "sentence_answer": "Since finding her grand uncles\u2019 archives, Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel has been working on designs and is now reviving the John Rubel brand with the collection La Boh\u00e8me.", "paragraph_id": "5d70502cc8e4820a9b66eb31"} +{"question": "What is the name of the Sudanese government negotiator?", "paragraph": "Ibrahim Ghandour, a Sudanese government negotiator, attributed the failure of the talks to the rebels \u201cbeing held hostage\u201d to their alliances with one another. Yasser Arman, a negotiator with the SPLM-N, said the government was not able to make firm decisions. \u201cOutstanding issues have been identified and they need decisions,\u201d he said. The government said it did not want to revisit issues relating to Darfur that had already agreed upon with one of the groups in 2011. \u201cPerhaps a new faction will come and say an agreement in Addis Ababa does not concern us and we start all over again,\u201d said Amin Hassan Omar, a government negotiator. Some have called for greater international involvement in the negotiations. In what some see as a breakthrough, Sudan\u2019s rebels, opposition parties and civil society groups signed a declaration late last year, known as the Sudan Call, uniting efforts to push for change in Sudan, but the impact of the declaration remains to be seen. \u201cIt has unified the opposition,\u201d said Mahjoub Mohamed Salih, editor in chief of Al-Ayam newspaper in Khartoum. \u201cBut it remains to be seen how it will be used and what political power it will bring.\u201d Talks are to resume this month, but Mr. Salih is not holding his breath. \u201cYou have to be either a prophet or fool to predict what will happen in Sudan,\u201d he said. For many Sudanese, though, the urgency is clear. \u201cThere needs to be compromises from all sides for the sake of the people,\u201d said Hamid Hussein, 45, a used-books seller in downtown Khartoum. He is originally from South Kordofan, where fighting continues. \u201cWe are the ones who pay the price of war,\u201d he said.", "answer": "Ibrahim Ghandour", "sentence": "Ibrahim Ghandour , a Sudanese government negotiator, attributed the failure of the talks to the rebels \u201cbeing held hostage\u201d to their alliances with one another.", "paragraph_sentence": " Ibrahim Ghandour , a Sudanese government negotiator, attributed the failure of the talks to the rebels \u201cbeing held hostage\u201d to their alliances with one another. Yasser Arman, a negotiator with the SPLM-N, said the government was not able to make firm decisions. \u201cOutstanding issues have been identified and they need decisions,\u201d he said. The government said it did not want to revisit issues relating to Darfur that had already agreed upon with one of the groups in 2011. \u201cPerhaps a new faction will come and say an agreement in Addis Ababa does not concern us and we start all over again,\u201d said Amin Hassan Omar, a government negotiator. Some have called for greater international involvement in the negotiations. In what some see as a breakthrough, Sudan\u2019s rebels, opposition parties and civil society groups signed a declaration late last year, known as the Sudan Call, uniting efforts to push for change in Sudan, but the impact of the declaration remains to be seen. \u201cIt has unified the opposition,\u201d said Mahjoub Mohamed Salih, editor in chief of Al-Ayam newspaper in Khartoum. \u201cBut it remains to be seen how it will be used and what political power it will bring.\u201d Talks are to resume this month, but Mr. Salih is not holding his breath. \u201cYou have to be either a prophet or fool to predict what will happen in Sudan,\u201d he said. For many Sudanese, though, the urgency is clear. \u201cThere needs to be compromises from all sides for the sake of the people,\u201d said Hamid Hussein, 45, a used-books seller in downtown Khartoum. He is originally from South Kordofan, where fighting continues. \u201cWe are the ones who pay the price of war,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": " Ibrahim Ghandour , a Sudanese government negotiator, attributed the failure of the talks to the rebels \u201cbeing held hostage\u201d to their alliances with one another. Yasser Arman, a negotiator with the SPLM-N, said the government was not able to make firm decisions. \u201cOutstanding issues have been identified and they need decisions,\u201d he said. The government said it did not want to revisit issues relating to Darfur that had already agreed upon with one of the groups in 2011. \u201cPerhaps a new faction will come and say an agreement in Addis Ababa does not concern us and we start all over again,\u201d said Amin Hassan Omar, a government negotiator. Some have called for greater international involvement in the negotiations. In what some see as a breakthrough, Sudan\u2019s rebels, opposition parties and civil society groups signed a declaration late last year, known as the Sudan Call, uniting efforts to push for change in Sudan, but the impact of the declaration remains to be seen. \u201cIt has unified the opposition,\u201d said Mahjoub Mohamed Salih, editor in chief of Al-Ayam newspaper in Khartoum. \u201cBut it remains to be seen how it will be used and what political power it will bring.\u201d Talks are to resume this month, but Mr. Salih is not holding his breath. \u201cYou have to be either a prophet or fool to predict what will happen in Sudan,\u201d he said. For many Sudanese, though, the urgency is clear. \u201cThere needs to be compromises from all sides for the sake of the people,\u201d said Hamid Hussein, 45, a used-books seller in downtown Khartoum. He is originally from South Kordofan, where fighting continues. \u201cWe are the ones who pay the price of war,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": " Ibrahim Ghandour , a Sudanese government negotiator, attributed the failure of the talks to the rebels \u201cbeing held hostage\u201d to their alliances with one another.", "paragraph_id": "5d703f90c8e4820a9b66e483"} +{"question": "What French author is published by Little Brown Bear?", "paragraph": "Major publishers are seizing on the trend. This year, Little, Brown will release four illustrated coloring books for adults, all subtitled \u201cColor Your Way to Calm.\u201d The books, \u201cSplendid Cities\u201d by the British artists Rosie Goodwin and Alice Chadwick and three titles by the French illustrator Zo\u00e9 de Las Cases, feature detailed cityscapes with famous landmarks, cafes and street life. Promotional materials for the books emphasize the health benefits of \u201cmindful coloring,\u201d noting that the activity \u201chas been shown to be a stress reliever for adults.\u201d", "answer": "Zo\u00e9 de Las Cases", "sentence": "The books, \u201cSplendid Cities\u201d by the British artists Rosie Goodwin and Alice Chadwick and three titles by the French illustrator Zo\u00e9 de Las Cases , feature detailed cityscapes with famous landmarks, cafes and street life.", "paragraph_sentence": "Major publishers are seizing on the trend. This year, Little, Brown will release four illustrated coloring books for adults, all subtitled \u201cColor Your Way to Calm.\u201d The books, \u201cSplendid Cities\u201d by the British artists Rosie Goodwin and Alice Chadwick and three titles by the French illustrator Zo\u00e9 de Las Cases , feature detailed cityscapes with famous landmarks, cafes and street life. Promotional materials for the books emphasize the health benefits of \u201cmindful coloring,\u201d noting that the activity \u201chas been shown to be a stress reliever for adults.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Major publishers are seizing on the trend. This year, Little, Brown will release four illustrated coloring books for adults, all subtitled \u201cColor Your Way to Calm.\u201d The books, \u201cSplendid Cities\u201d by the British artists Rosie Goodwin and Alice Chadwick and three titles by the French illustrator Zo\u00e9 de Las Cases , feature detailed cityscapes with famous landmarks, cafes and street life. Promotional materials for the books emphasize the health benefits of \u201cmindful coloring,\u201d noting that the activity \u201chas been shown to be a stress reliever for adults.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The books, \u201cSplendid Cities\u201d by the British artists Rosie Goodwin and Alice Chadwick and three titles by the French illustrator Zo\u00e9 de Las Cases , feature detailed cityscapes with famous landmarks, cafes and street life.", "paragraph_id": "5d7024b0c8e4820a9b66d109"} +{"question": "About how many American dollars does three and a half billion billion Euros equal?", "paragraph": "For Deutsche Bank, the change will entail a reduction of hundreds of billions of euros in the bank\u2019s use of borrowed funds. It also means that the bank will earn a lower return on the money it invests than in the past. The bank will aim for a 10 percent return on capital, down from a previous target of 12 percent and a far cry from the 25 percent return that Deutsche Bank sought to achieve before the financial crisis. In addition, the bank said it aimed to cut costs by 3.5 billion euros, or about $3.8 billion, a year. The cuts would seem to suggest that Deutsche Bank will have little choice but to join other European banks like UBS or Barclays in scaling back its American operations.", "answer": "$3.8 billion", "sentence": "In addition, the bank said it aimed to cut costs by 3.5 billion euros, or about $3.8 billion , a year.", "paragraph_sentence": "For Deutsche Bank, the change will entail a reduction of hundreds of billions of euros in the bank\u2019s use of borrowed funds. It also means that the bank will earn a lower return on the money it invests than in the past. The bank will aim for a 10 percent return on capital, down from a previous target of 12 percent and a far cry from the 25 percent return that Deutsche Bank sought to achieve before the financial crisis. In addition, the bank said it aimed to cut costs by 3.5 billion euros, or about $3.8 billion , a year. The cuts would seem to suggest that Deutsche Bank will have little choice but to join other European banks like UBS or Barclays in scaling back its American operations.", "paragraph_answer": "For Deutsche Bank, the change will entail a reduction of hundreds of billions of euros in the bank\u2019s use of borrowed funds. It also means that the bank will earn a lower return on the money it invests than in the past. The bank will aim for a 10 percent return on capital, down from a previous target of 12 percent and a far cry from the 25 percent return that Deutsche Bank sought to achieve before the financial crisis. In addition, the bank said it aimed to cut costs by 3.5 billion euros, or about $3.8 billion , a year. The cuts would seem to suggest that Deutsche Bank will have little choice but to join other European banks like UBS or Barclays in scaling back its American operations.", "sentence_answer": "In addition, the bank said it aimed to cut costs by 3.5 billion euros, or about $3.8 billion , a year.", "paragraph_id": "5d7012f6c8e4820a9b66bf7c"} +{"question": "What do the strongmen have to gain from militia expansion/", "paragraph": "The current expansion is happening without the mentorship of American forces, and under difficult circumstances. Thousands of men who had once been disarmed by government campaigns costing hundreds of millions of dollars are now being rearmed. The design is also being rolled out at a time when factional strongmen and elements of the former government in Kabul have mounted pressure on Mr. Ghani\u2019s government, accusing him of exclusionary politics. In the wake of the Kunduz disaster, the strongmen, many of whom have pasts as northern warlords, have been pressing the government to use militias loyal to them in the fight against the Taliban. Some officials fear the militia expansion amounts to a political payoff to these strongmen, who have often used A.L.P. units for their personal business.", "answer": "political payoff", "sentence": "Some officials fear the militia expansion amounts to a political payoff to these strongmen, who have often used A.L.P. units for their personal business.", "paragraph_sentence": "The current expansion is happening without the mentorship of American forces, and under difficult circumstances. Thousands of men who had once been disarmed by government campaigns costing hundreds of millions of dollars are now being rearmed. The design is also being rolled out at a time when factional strongmen and elements of the former government in Kabul have mounted pressure on Mr. Ghani\u2019s government, accusing him of exclusionary politics. In the wake of the Kunduz disaster, the strongmen, many of whom have pasts as northern warlords, have been pressing the government to use militias loyal to them in the fight against the Taliban. Some officials fear the militia expansion amounts to a political payoff to these strongmen, who have often used A.L.P. units for their personal business. ", "paragraph_answer": "The current expansion is happening without the mentorship of American forces, and under difficult circumstances. Thousands of men who had once been disarmed by government campaigns costing hundreds of millions of dollars are now being rearmed. The design is also being rolled out at a time when factional strongmen and elements of the former government in Kabul have mounted pressure on Mr. Ghani\u2019s government, accusing him of exclusionary politics. In the wake of the Kunduz disaster, the strongmen, many of whom have pasts as northern warlords, have been pressing the government to use militias loyal to them in the fight against the Taliban. Some officials fear the militia expansion amounts to a political payoff to these strongmen, who have often used A.L.P. units for their personal business.", "sentence_answer": "Some officials fear the militia expansion amounts to a political payoff to these strongmen, who have often used A.L.P. units for their personal business.", "paragraph_id": "5d7018b7c8e4820a9b66c4c3"} +{"question": "What was the name of the American trainer", "paragraph": "The training aims to remold the Ukrainian units by increasing the responsibilities of noncommissioned officers, fixing a Soviet legacy of an officer-heavy infantry. Without sergeants paying attention, basic mistakes were being made, the trainers said. Capt. Nicholas Salimbene, an American trainer, noticed with alarm that the Ukrainians were carrying their rifles with the safeties off. \u201cIt\u2019s about the professionalism of the force,\u201d he said. \u201cWe want them to look like soldiers.\u201d \u201cYou see reports about the little green men,\u201d he said, referring to the Russian soldiers who invaded the Crimean Peninsula last year in unmarked uniforms, \u201cand they all walk around professionally, and carry their weapons professionally.\u201d The Ukrainians should, too, Captain Salimbene said. The United States is also providing advanced courses for military professionals known as forward observers \u2014 the ones who call in targets \u2014 to improve the accuracy of artillery fire, making it more lethal for the enemy and less so for civilians. Oleksandr I. Leshchenko, the deputy director for training in the National Guard, was somewhat skeptical about the value of the training, saying that \u201c99 percent\u201d of the men in the course had already been in combat.", "answer": "Capt. Nicholas Salimbene", "sentence": "Capt. Nicholas Salimbene , an American trainer, noticed with alarm that the Ukrainians were carrying their rifles with the safeties off.", "paragraph_sentence": "The training aims to remold the Ukrainian units by increasing the responsibilities of noncommissioned officers, fixing a Soviet legacy of an officer-heavy infantry. Without sergeants paying attention, basic mistakes were being made, the trainers said. Capt. Nicholas Salimbene , an American trainer, noticed with alarm that the Ukrainians were carrying their rifles with the safeties off. \u201cIt\u2019s about the professionalism of the force,\u201d he said. \u201cWe want them to look like soldiers.\u201d \u201cYou see reports about the little green men,\u201d he said, referring to the Russian soldiers who invaded the Crimean Peninsula last year in unmarked uniforms, \u201cand they all walk around professionally, and carry their weapons professionally.\u201d The Ukrainians should, too, Captain Salimbene said. The United States is also providing advanced courses for military professionals known as forward observers \u2014 the ones who call in targets \u2014 to improve the accuracy of artillery fire, making it more lethal for the enemy and less so for civilians. Oleksandr I. Leshchenko, the deputy director for training in the National Guard, was somewhat skeptical about the value of the training, saying that \u201c99 percent\u201d of the men in the course had already been in combat.", "paragraph_answer": "The training aims to remold the Ukrainian units by increasing the responsibilities of noncommissioned officers, fixing a Soviet legacy of an officer-heavy infantry. Without sergeants paying attention, basic mistakes were being made, the trainers said. Capt. Nicholas Salimbene , an American trainer, noticed with alarm that the Ukrainians were carrying their rifles with the safeties off. \u201cIt\u2019s about the professionalism of the force,\u201d he said. \u201cWe want them to look like soldiers.\u201d \u201cYou see reports about the little green men,\u201d he said, referring to the Russian soldiers who invaded the Crimean Peninsula last year in unmarked uniforms, \u201cand they all walk around professionally, and carry their weapons professionally.\u201d The Ukrainians should, too, Captain Salimbene said. The United States is also providing advanced courses for military professionals known as forward observers \u2014 the ones who call in targets \u2014 to improve the accuracy of artillery fire, making it more lethal for the enemy and less so for civilians. Oleksandr I. Leshchenko, the deputy director for training in the National Guard, was somewhat skeptical about the value of the training, saying that \u201c99 percent\u201d of the men in the course had already been in combat.", "sentence_answer": " Capt. Nicholas Salimbene , an American trainer, noticed with alarm that the Ukrainians were carrying their rifles with the safeties off.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026fec8e4820a9b66d47f"} +{"question": "What is the name of the chapter where the stry expands into the future?", "paragraph": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "answer": "That Year and Those That Followed", "sentence": "But in a daring interim chapter called \u201c That Year and Those That Followed ,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future.", "paragraph_sentence": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201c That Year and Those That Followed ,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "paragraph_answer": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201c That Year and Those That Followed ,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "sentence_answer": "But in a daring interim chapter called \u201c That Year and Those That Followed ,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future.", "paragraph_id": "5d70239cc8e4820a9b66cfb5"} +{"question": "What country needed instructions from the Americans?", "paragraph": "In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians\u2019 soldierly skills lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction. \u201cI came into it expecting them not to know much of the basics,\u201d said Sgt. Michael Faranda, who is teaching maneuvers. He was correct. Things \u201cevery soldier should know,\u201d he said, they did not. Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises. Still, Sergeant Faranda said, the Ukrainians\u2019 willingness to go into combat was all the more notable for their lack of preparation for it.", "answer": "Ukrainians", "sentence": "In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians \u2019 soldierly skills lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction.", "paragraph_sentence": " In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians \u2019 soldierly skills lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction. \u201cI came into it expecting them not to know much of the basics,\u201d said Sgt. Michael Faranda, who is teaching maneuvers. He was correct. Things \u201cevery soldier should know,\u201d he said, they did not. Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises. Still, Sergeant Faranda said, the Ukrainians\u2019 willingness to go into combat was all the more notable for their lack of preparation for it.", "paragraph_answer": "In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians \u2019 soldierly skills lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction. \u201cI came into it expecting them not to know much of the basics,\u201d said Sgt. Michael Faranda, who is teaching maneuvers. He was correct. Things \u201cevery soldier should know,\u201d he said, they did not. Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises. Still, Sergeant Faranda said, the Ukrainians\u2019 willingness to go into combat was all the more notable for their lack of preparation for it.", "sentence_answer": "In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians \u2019 soldierly skills lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026e8c8e4820a9b66d413"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700826c8e4820a9b66af63"} +{"question": "Who is Joey Stallings brother?", "paragraph": "Still, about one in 20 high school students used the drugs in 2014; about one in 30 adults age 19 to 28 used them in 2013, the most recent data available for that age group. More than 400 emergency-room visits in Mississippi were attributed to synthetic cannabinoids in April, according to the state health department. Two of those cases involved Jeffrey and Joey Stallings of McComb, who spent several days in intensive care in medically induced comas, their mother, Karen, said in a telephone interview. Ms. Stallings said that Jeffrey, 24, and Joey, 29, smoked a type of spice known as \u201cmojo\u201d that they received from a dealer. She said that Jeffrey became delusional, thinking that a woman was bleeding in their hallway, and extremely violent; Joey became extremely agitated before she took them to the hospital.", "answer": "Jeffrey", "sentence": "Two of those cases involved Jeffrey and Joey Stallings of McComb, who spent several days in intensive care in medically induced comas, their mother, Karen, said in a telephone interview.", "paragraph_sentence": "Still, about one in 20 high school students used the drugs in 2014; about one in 30 adults age 19 to 28 used them in 2013, the most recent data available for that age group. More than 400 emergency-room visits in Mississippi were attributed to synthetic cannabinoids in April, according to the state health department. Two of those cases involved Jeffrey and Joey Stallings of McComb, who spent several days in intensive care in medically induced comas, their mother, Karen, said in a telephone interview. Ms. Stallings said that Jeffrey, 24, and Joey, 29, smoked a type of spice known as \u201cmojo\u201d that they received from a dealer. She said that Jeffrey became delusional, thinking that a woman was bleeding in their hallway, and extremely violent; Joey became extremely agitated before she took them to the hospital.", "paragraph_answer": "Still, about one in 20 high school students used the drugs in 2014; about one in 30 adults age 19 to 28 used them in 2013, the most recent data available for that age group. More than 400 emergency-room visits in Mississippi were attributed to synthetic cannabinoids in April, according to the state health department. Two of those cases involved Jeffrey and Joey Stallings of McComb, who spent several days in intensive care in medically induced comas, their mother, Karen, said in a telephone interview. Ms. Stallings said that Jeffrey, 24, and Joey, 29, smoked a type of spice known as \u201cmojo\u201d that they received from a dealer. She said that Jeffrey became delusional, thinking that a woman was bleeding in their hallway, and extremely violent; Joey became extremely agitated before she took them to the hospital.", "sentence_answer": "Two of those cases involved Jeffrey and Joey Stallings of McComb, who spent several days in intensive care in medically induced comas, their mother, Karen, said in a telephone interview.", "paragraph_id": "5d700d4ec8e4820a9b66b8da"} +{"question": "What company was Colin Callender the former president of?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt\u2019s an extraordinary job for me,\u201d Mr. Rylance said after shooting multiple takes of a confrontation with an ailing Catherine of Aragon (Joanne Whalley). \u201cThere are about 70 or 80 scenes per episode, and I\u2019m in most of them. The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking. So you can\u2019t compromise his expressionlessness, but you have to convey what might be going on for him.\u201d Although the series has arrived after the plays, Colin Callender, a former president of HBO films whose production company Playground produced the series (with Company Pictures, \u201cMasterpiece\u201d and BBC Two), began negotiations to secure the rights in 2012. Mr. Callender said that as soon as he read the books, he envisaged a television production.", "answer": "HBO films", "sentence": "Although the series has arrived after the plays, Colin Callender, a former president of HBO films whose production company Playground produced the series (with Company Pictures, \u201cMasterpiece\u201d and BBC Two), began negotiations to secure the rights in 2012.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s an extraordinary job for me,\u201d Mr. Rylance said after shooting multiple takes of a confrontation with an ailing Catherine of Aragon (Joanne Whalley). \u201cThere are about 70 or 80 scenes per episode, and I\u2019m in most of them. The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking. So you can\u2019t compromise his expressionlessness, but you have to convey what might be going on for him.\u201d Although the series has arrived after the plays, Colin Callender, a former president of HBO films whose production company Playground produced the series (with Company Pictures, \u201cMasterpiece\u201d and BBC Two), began negotiations to secure the rights in 2012. Mr. Callender said that as soon as he read the books, he envisaged a television production.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s an extraordinary job for me,\u201d Mr. Rylance said after shooting multiple takes of a confrontation with an ailing Catherine of Aragon (Joanne Whalley). \u201cThere are about 70 or 80 scenes per episode, and I\u2019m in most of them. The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking. So you can\u2019t compromise his expressionlessness, but you have to convey what might be going on for him.\u201d Although the series has arrived after the plays, Colin Callender, a former president of HBO films whose production company Playground produced the series (with Company Pictures, \u201cMasterpiece\u201d and BBC Two), began negotiations to secure the rights in 2012. Mr. Callender said that as soon as he read the books, he envisaged a television production.", "sentence_answer": "Although the series has arrived after the plays, Colin Callender, a former president of HBO films whose production company Playground produced the series (with Company Pictures, \u201cMasterpiece\u201d and BBC Two), began negotiations to secure the rights in 2012.", "paragraph_id": "5d70734ec8e4820a9b66f20d"} +{"question": "who is the author?", "paragraph": "Parents and prospective students often think of colleges as cohesive institutions, each with their own cultures and academic standards. To attend, say, the University of North Carolina \u2014 regardless of what you study \u2014 is supposed to mean something different from attending nearby Duke, North Carolina State or a faraway college. In reality, colleges are much less cohesive than many outsiders realize, especially when it comes to academics. Many instead resemble a collection of disparate departments \u2014 or even just disparate professors \u2014 who happen to work on the same campus. These disparate groups rarely interact, share little in common and face little accountability. Yes, higher education is generally worth it, by any empirical definition, as I\u2019ve often written. But higher education is also full of expensive, damaging inefficiencies and inconsistencies. Our contributor Kevin Carey has written an important and eye-opening piece on this subject, and I encourage you to read it. He starts the piece with a notorious football scandal but goes far beyond sports and scandal. Colleges, Kevin writes, \u201care not coherent academic enterprises with consistent standards of classroom excellence. When it comes to exerting influence over teaching and learning, they\u2019re Easter eggs. They barely exist.\u201d Let us know what you think of his argument, in the comments section at the bottom or through Facebook or Twitter. And I hope you enjoy your weekend. David Leonhardt", "answer": "Leonhardt", "sentence": "David Leonhardt", "paragraph_sentence": "Parents and prospective students often think of colleges as cohesive institutions, each with their own cultures and academic standards. To attend, say, the University of North Carolina \u2014 regardless of what you study \u2014 is supposed to mean something different from attending nearby Duke, North Carolina State or a faraway college. In reality, colleges are much less cohesive than many outsiders realize, especially when it comes to academics. Many instead resemble a collection of disparate departments \u2014 or even just disparate professors \u2014 who happen to work on the same campus. These disparate groups rarely interact, share little in common and face little accountability. Yes, higher education is generally worth it, by any empirical definition, as I\u2019ve often written. But higher education is also full of expensive, damaging inefficiencies and inconsistencies. Our contributor Kevin Carey has written an important and eye-opening piece on this subject, and I encourage you to read it. He starts the piece with a notorious football scandal but goes far beyond sports and scandal. Colleges, Kevin writes, \u201care not coherent academic enterprises with consistent standards of classroom excellence. When it comes to exerting influence over teaching and learning, they\u2019re Easter eggs. They barely exist.\u201d Let us know what you think of his argument, in the comments section at the bottom or through Facebook or Twitter. And I hope you enjoy your weekend. David Leonhardt ", "paragraph_answer": "Parents and prospective students often think of colleges as cohesive institutions, each with their own cultures and academic standards. To attend, say, the University of North Carolina \u2014 regardless of what you study \u2014 is supposed to mean something different from attending nearby Duke, North Carolina State or a faraway college. In reality, colleges are much less cohesive than many outsiders realize, especially when it comes to academics. Many instead resemble a collection of disparate departments \u2014 or even just disparate professors \u2014 who happen to work on the same campus. These disparate groups rarely interact, share little in common and face little accountability. Yes, higher education is generally worth it, by any empirical definition, as I\u2019ve often written. But higher education is also full of expensive, damaging inefficiencies and inconsistencies. Our contributor Kevin Carey has written an important and eye-opening piece on this subject, and I encourage you to read it. He starts the piece with a notorious football scandal but goes far beyond sports and scandal. Colleges, Kevin writes, \u201care not coherent academic enterprises with consistent standards of classroom excellence. When it comes to exerting influence over teaching and learning, they\u2019re Easter eggs. They barely exist.\u201d Let us know what you think of his argument, in the comments section at the bottom or through Facebook or Twitter. And I hope you enjoy your weekend. David Leonhardt ", "sentence_answer": "David Leonhardt ", "paragraph_id": "5d704185c8e4820a9b66e5a3"} +{"question": "How much did data center chips bring in a year ago?", "paragraph": "Now, the new hot trend of cloud computing \u2014 data centers filled with tightly connected servers \u2014 is remaking Intel. On Tuesday, Intel, based in Santa Clara, Calif., said that in the three months that ended Sept. 26, PC chips brought in $8.5 billion and chips for servers in cloud computing data centers brought in $4.1 billion. A year ago, PC chips brought in $9.2 billion and data center chips brought in $3.7 billion. The shifting businesses at Intel reflect broader changes in the computing industry, and what Intel chooses to focus on can affect the choices of many other companies.", "answer": "$3.7 billion", "sentence": "A year ago, PC chips brought in $9.2 billion and data center chips brought in $3.7 billion .", "paragraph_sentence": "Now, the new hot trend of cloud computing \u2014 data centers filled with tightly connected servers \u2014 is remaking Intel. On Tuesday, Intel, based in Santa Clara, Calif., said that in the three months that ended Sept. 26, PC chips brought in $8.5 billion and chips for servers in cloud computing data centers brought in $4.1 billion. A year ago, PC chips brought in $9.2 billion and data center chips brought in $3.7 billion . The shifting businesses at Intel reflect broader changes in the computing industry, and what Intel chooses to focus on can affect the choices of many other companies.", "paragraph_answer": "Now, the new hot trend of cloud computing \u2014 data centers filled with tightly connected servers \u2014 is remaking Intel. On Tuesday, Intel, based in Santa Clara, Calif., said that in the three months that ended Sept. 26, PC chips brought in $8.5 billion and chips for servers in cloud computing data centers brought in $4.1 billion. A year ago, PC chips brought in $9.2 billion and data center chips brought in $3.7 billion . The shifting businesses at Intel reflect broader changes in the computing industry, and what Intel chooses to focus on can affect the choices of many other companies.", "sentence_answer": "A year ago, PC chips brought in $9.2 billion and data center chips brought in $3.7 billion .", "paragraph_id": "5d701f0ec8e4820a9b66cacd"} +{"question": "Who portrays Dalton Trumbo in \"Trumbo\"?", "paragraph": "\u2018Trumbo\u2019 (R, 2:04) This clunker about the blacklisted screenwriter Dalton Trumbo (Bryan Cranston) tells a great-man story with a patchwork of fact and fiction, mixing in the odd bit of newsreel with a great many dull, visually flat and poorly lighted dramatic scenes. Jay Roach directed. (Dargis) \u2605 \u2018Truth\u2019 (R, 2:01) The title of \u201cTruth,\u201d a gripping, beautifully executed journalistic thriller about the events that ended Dan Rather\u2019s career as a CBS anchorman, should probably be appended with a question mark. More than most docudramas about fairly recent events, it is so well-written and acted that it conveys an eerie illusion of veracity. (Holden) \u2018Victor Frankenstein\u2019 (PG-13, 1:49) A pop romp that exhumes Mary Shelley\u2019s famous monster-maker (James McAvoy) for a jaunty bromance with his bestie, Igor (Daniel Radcliffe). It\u2019s a hyperventilated resurrection, larded with cheerful violence and self-regarding smiles. (Dargis)", "answer": "Bryan Cranston", "sentence": "This clunker about the blacklisted screenwriter Dalton Trumbo ( Bryan Cranston ) tells a great-man story with a patchwork of fact and fiction, mixing in the odd bit of newsreel with a great many dull, visually flat and poorly lighted dramatic scenes.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Trumbo\u2019 (R, 2:04) This clunker about the blacklisted screenwriter Dalton Trumbo ( Bryan Cranston ) tells a great-man story with a patchwork of fact and fiction, mixing in the odd bit of newsreel with a great many dull, visually flat and poorly lighted dramatic scenes. Jay Roach directed. (Dargis) \u2605 \u2018Truth\u2019 (R, 2:01) The title of \u201cTruth,\u201d a gripping, beautifully executed journalistic thriller about the events that ended Dan Rather\u2019s career as a CBS anchorman, should probably be appended with a question mark. More than most docudramas about fairly recent events, it is so well-written and acted that it conveys an eerie illusion of veracity. (Holden) \u2018Victor Frankenstein\u2019 (PG-13, 1:49) A pop romp that exhumes Mary Shelley\u2019s famous monster-maker (James McAvoy) for a jaunty bromance with his bestie, Igor (Daniel Radcliffe). It\u2019s a hyperventilated resurrection, larded with cheerful violence and self-regarding smiles. (Dargis)", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Trumbo\u2019 (R, 2:04) This clunker about the blacklisted screenwriter Dalton Trumbo ( Bryan Cranston ) tells a great-man story with a patchwork of fact and fiction, mixing in the odd bit of newsreel with a great many dull, visually flat and poorly lighted dramatic scenes. Jay Roach directed. (Dargis) \u2605 \u2018Truth\u2019 (R, 2:01) The title of \u201cTruth,\u201d a gripping, beautifully executed journalistic thriller about the events that ended Dan Rather\u2019s career as a CBS anchorman, should probably be appended with a question mark. More than most docudramas about fairly recent events, it is so well-written and acted that it conveys an eerie illusion of veracity. (Holden) \u2018Victor Frankenstein\u2019 (PG-13, 1:49) A pop romp that exhumes Mary Shelley\u2019s famous monster-maker (James McAvoy) for a jaunty bromance with his bestie, Igor (Daniel Radcliffe). It\u2019s a hyperventilated resurrection, larded with cheerful violence and self-regarding smiles. (Dargis)", "sentence_answer": "This clunker about the blacklisted screenwriter Dalton Trumbo ( Bryan Cranston ) tells a great-man story with a patchwork of fact and fiction, mixing in the odd bit of newsreel with a great many dull, visually flat and poorly lighted dramatic scenes.", "paragraph_id": "5d702a49c8e4820a9b66d7ed"} +{"question": "Who is Arsenal's goalkeeper?", "paragraph": "Robert Lewandowski and Thomas M\u00fcller have been harder to stop than just about any other strikers in Europe this season, and Douglas Costa, Munich\u2019s new Brazilian winger, has bamboozled many a defense with his combination of speed, sorcery and delivery. For much of Tuesday\u2019s game, Bayern looked like what it is: The most attack-minded, fluent and controlling team in soccer. And when Arsenal did break through, about 30 minutes in, Bayern goalkeeper Manuel Neuer was able to make a wonderful save as he dove low to his left to block a header by Theo Walcott from six yards out. Had Walcott\u2019s header been more decisive, the keeper might never have reached the ball. But then again, had Lewandowski shot earlier than he did late in the second half, then Arsenal\u2019s goalkeeper, Petr Cech, would not have been able to race from his line and make a bold interception with his legs.", "answer": "Petr Cech", "sentence": "But then again, had Lewandowski shot earlier than he did late in the second half, then Arsenal\u2019s goalkeeper, Petr Cech , would not have been able to race from his line and make a bold interception with his legs.", "paragraph_sentence": "Robert Lewandowski and Thomas M\u00fcller have been harder to stop than just about any other strikers in Europe this season, and Douglas Costa, Munich\u2019s new Brazilian winger, has bamboozled many a defense with his combination of speed, sorcery and delivery. For much of Tuesday\u2019s game, Bayern looked like what it is: The most attack-minded, fluent and controlling team in soccer. And when Arsenal did break through, about 30 minutes in, Bayern goalkeeper Manuel Neuer was able to make a wonderful save as he dove low to his left to block a header by Theo Walcott from six yards out. Had Walcott\u2019s header been more decisive, the keeper might never have reached the ball. But then again, had Lewandowski shot earlier than he did late in the second half, then Arsenal\u2019s goalkeeper, Petr Cech , would not have been able to race from his line and make a bold interception with his legs. ", "paragraph_answer": "Robert Lewandowski and Thomas M\u00fcller have been harder to stop than just about any other strikers in Europe this season, and Douglas Costa, Munich\u2019s new Brazilian winger, has bamboozled many a defense with his combination of speed, sorcery and delivery. For much of Tuesday\u2019s game, Bayern looked like what it is: The most attack-minded, fluent and controlling team in soccer. And when Arsenal did break through, about 30 minutes in, Bayern goalkeeper Manuel Neuer was able to make a wonderful save as he dove low to his left to block a header by Theo Walcott from six yards out. Had Walcott\u2019s header been more decisive, the keeper might never have reached the ball. But then again, had Lewandowski shot earlier than he did late in the second half, then Arsenal\u2019s goalkeeper, Petr Cech , would not have been able to race from his line and make a bold interception with his legs.", "sentence_answer": "But then again, had Lewandowski shot earlier than he did late in the second half, then Arsenal\u2019s goalkeeper, Petr Cech , would not have been able to race from his line and make a bold interception with his legs.", "paragraph_id": "5d70280bc8e4820a9b66d5c0"} +{"question": "What do Woody Allen's characters evince?", "paragraph": "You might almost mistake this for a middle- or late-period Woody Allen movie, in other words. Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance, but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground. His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis. Their conversation is stripped of cultural references and instead of grappling with the meaning of existence they struggle with the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility. They want to be cool, fun, laid back and nonjudgmental, but they also want to behave decently.", "answer": "eloquent neurosis", "sentence": "His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis .", "paragraph_sentence": "You might almost mistake this for a middle- or late-period Woody Allen movie, in other words. Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance, but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground. His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis . Their conversation is stripped of cultural references and instead of grappling with the meaning of existence they struggle with the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility. They want to be cool, fun, laid back and nonjudgmental, but they also want to behave decently.", "paragraph_answer": "You might almost mistake this for a middle- or late-period Woody Allen movie, in other words. Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance, but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground. His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis . Their conversation is stripped of cultural references and instead of grappling with the meaning of existence they struggle with the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility. They want to be cool, fun, laid back and nonjudgmental, but they also want to behave decently.", "sentence_answer": "His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis .", "paragraph_id": "5d708315c8e4820a9b66f419"} +{"question": "Who was pitching for the opposite team?", "paragraph": "Syndergaard then gave the type of performance that defines a player\u2019s season, the kind that can instill confidence in a rookie and propel him to new heights. He suffocated the Dodgers, holding them to two hits and one run in six innings. He pitched even with Kershaw, perhaps even better, and gave the Mets\u2019 porous offense the chance to squeak out a 2-1 win. Syndergaard pitched so well that, afterward, a reporter asked him if this start had stamped him as one of the best young pitchers in baseball, and he did not scoff at the question. \u201cI hope so,\u201d Syndergaard said. \u201cBut, I mean, I certainly don\u2019t think I\u2019m there yet to carry the name as Clayton Kershaw does. But hopefully I\u2019ll get there.\u201d", "answer": "Clayton Kershaw", "sentence": "\u201cBut, I mean, I certainly don\u2019t think I\u2019m there yet to carry the name as Clayton Kershaw does.", "paragraph_sentence": "Syndergaard then gave the type of performance that defines a player\u2019s season, the kind that can instill confidence in a rookie and propel him to new heights. He suffocated the Dodgers, holding them to two hits and one run in six innings. He pitched even with Kershaw, perhaps even better, and gave the Mets\u2019 porous offense the chance to squeak out a 2-1 win. Syndergaard pitched so well that, afterward, a reporter asked him if this start had stamped him as one of the best young pitchers in baseball, and he did not scoff at the question. \u201cI hope so,\u201d Syndergaard said. \u201cBut, I mean, I certainly don\u2019t think I\u2019m there yet to carry the name as Clayton Kershaw does. But hopefully I\u2019ll get there.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Syndergaard then gave the type of performance that defines a player\u2019s season, the kind that can instill confidence in a rookie and propel him to new heights. He suffocated the Dodgers, holding them to two hits and one run in six innings. He pitched even with Kershaw, perhaps even better, and gave the Mets\u2019 porous offense the chance to squeak out a 2-1 win. Syndergaard pitched so well that, afterward, a reporter asked him if this start had stamped him as one of the best young pitchers in baseball, and he did not scoff at the question. \u201cI hope so,\u201d Syndergaard said. \u201cBut, I mean, I certainly don\u2019t think I\u2019m there yet to carry the name as Clayton Kershaw does. But hopefully I\u2019ll get there.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cBut, I mean, I certainly don\u2019t think I\u2019m there yet to carry the name as Clayton Kershaw does.", "paragraph_id": "5d705471c8e4820a9b66ec7a"} +{"question": "Where was the Giants game moved?", "paragraph": "Coughlin called Beckham \u201cemotional\u201d and said curbing his on-field excesses was an ongoing process. Disciplining Beckham could not have been easy for the N.F.L., which moved the Giants\u2019 next game, in Minnesota, to Sunday night from its original 1 p.m. scheduled start, in part to feature Beckham in prime time. In that game, the Giants may be trying to keep their playoff hopes alive. Just last week, Beckham received the most votes of any wide receiver from fans in the league\u2019s Pro Bowl balloting. A Sunday night appearance would also have put Beckham in a highlighted spot for fantasy football contestants nationwide.", "answer": "Minnesota", "sentence": "Disciplining Beckham could not have been easy for the N.F.L., which moved the Giants\u2019 next game, in Minnesota , to Sunday night from its original 1 p.m. scheduled start, in part to feature Beckham in prime time.", "paragraph_sentence": "Coughlin called Beckham \u201cemotional\u201d and said curbing his on-field excesses was an ongoing process. Disciplining Beckham could not have been easy for the N.F.L., which moved the Giants\u2019 next game, in Minnesota , to Sunday night from its original 1 p.m. scheduled start, in part to feature Beckham in prime time. In that game, the Giants may be trying to keep their playoff hopes alive. Just last week, Beckham received the most votes of any wide receiver from fans in the league\u2019s Pro Bowl balloting. A Sunday night appearance would also have put Beckham in a highlighted spot for fantasy football contestants nationwide.", "paragraph_answer": "Coughlin called Beckham \u201cemotional\u201d and said curbing his on-field excesses was an ongoing process. Disciplining Beckham could not have been easy for the N.F.L., which moved the Giants\u2019 next game, in Minnesota , to Sunday night from its original 1 p.m. scheduled start, in part to feature Beckham in prime time. In that game, the Giants may be trying to keep their playoff hopes alive. Just last week, Beckham received the most votes of any wide receiver from fans in the league\u2019s Pro Bowl balloting. A Sunday night appearance would also have put Beckham in a highlighted spot for fantasy football contestants nationwide.", "sentence_answer": "Disciplining Beckham could not have been easy for the N.F.L., which moved the Giants\u2019 next game, in Minnesota , to Sunday night from its original 1 p.m. scheduled start, in part to feature Beckham in prime time.", "paragraph_id": "5d703a86c8e4820a9b66e23a"} +{"question": "About how many residents live in Park Slope?", "paragraph": "A principal draw of Park Slope has always been the rolling meadows and sinuous paths of Prospect Park, a masterpiece designed by Calvert Vaux and Frederick Law Olmsted. The neighborhood, home to about 60,000, stretches west from the park to the rumbling river of traffic known as Fourth Avenue, and south from Flatbush Avenue. There is no unanimity on the southern boundary. Many longtime residents define it as 15th Street; others say the vicinity of the Prospect Expressway. Spurred in part by the opening of the Brooklyn Bridge in 1883, a Gold Coast of ornate townhouses and mansions arose around Plaza Street and Prospect Park West. Some of these were later replaced by fine prewar apartment houses, but others survive. On Prospect Park West, a Romanesque Revival limestone mansion houses the Poly Prep Lower School; next door, a neo-Jacobean mansion built for a Bon Ami cleansing powder magnate is now home to the Brooklyn Society for Ethical Culture. At 105 Eighth Avenue, the neoclassical Tracy Mansion, which served for years as a Montessori school, is on the market for $13 million.", "answer": "60,000", "sentence": "The neighborhood, home to about 60,000 , stretches west from the park to the rumbling river of traffic known as Fourth Avenue, and south from Flatbush Avenue.", "paragraph_sentence": "A principal draw of Park Slope has always been the rolling meadows and sinuous paths of Prospect Park, a masterpiece designed by Calvert Vaux and Frederick Law Olmsted. The neighborhood, home to about 60,000 , stretches west from the park to the rumbling river of traffic known as Fourth Avenue, and south from Flatbush Avenue. There is no unanimity on the southern boundary. Many longtime residents define it as 15th Street; others say the vicinity of the Prospect Expressway. Spurred in part by the opening of the Brooklyn Bridge in 1883, a Gold Coast of ornate townhouses and mansions arose around Plaza Street and Prospect Park West. Some of these were later replaced by fine prewar apartment houses, but others survive. On Prospect Park West, a Romanesque Revival limestone mansion houses the Poly Prep Lower School; next door, a neo-Jacobean mansion built for a Bon Ami cleansing powder magnate is now home to the Brooklyn Society for Ethical Culture. At 105 Eighth Avenue, the neoclassical Tracy Mansion, which served for years as a Montessori school, is on the market for $13 million.", "paragraph_answer": "A principal draw of Park Slope has always been the rolling meadows and sinuous paths of Prospect Park, a masterpiece designed by Calvert Vaux and Frederick Law Olmsted. The neighborhood, home to about 60,000 , stretches west from the park to the rumbling river of traffic known as Fourth Avenue, and south from Flatbush Avenue. There is no unanimity on the southern boundary. Many longtime residents define it as 15th Street; others say the vicinity of the Prospect Expressway. Spurred in part by the opening of the Brooklyn Bridge in 1883, a Gold Coast of ornate townhouses and mansions arose around Plaza Street and Prospect Park West. Some of these were later replaced by fine prewar apartment houses, but others survive. On Prospect Park West, a Romanesque Revival limestone mansion houses the Poly Prep Lower School; next door, a neo-Jacobean mansion built for a Bon Ami cleansing powder magnate is now home to the Brooklyn Society for Ethical Culture. At 105 Eighth Avenue, the neoclassical Tracy Mansion, which served for years as a Montessori school, is on the market for $13 million.", "sentence_answer": "The neighborhood, home to about 60,000 , stretches west from the park to the rumbling river of traffic known as Fourth Avenue, and south from Flatbush Avenue.", "paragraph_id": "5d708e7ec8e4820a9b66f55a"} +{"question": "What is the Bridge of Spies movie about?", "paragraph": "\u2605 \u2018Bridge of Spies\u2019 (PG-13, 2:15) In this gravely moody, perfectly directed thriller about a real 1962 spy swap, Steven Spielberg returns you to the good old bad days of the Cold War and its fictions, with their bottomless political chasms and moral gray areas. Tom Hanks leads a terrific cast that includes Mark Rylance as a Soviet mole and Scott Shepherd as a C.I.A. operative. (Dargis) \u2605 \u2018Brooklyn\u2019 (PG-13, 1:51) Saoirse Ronan gives a remarkably lively and subtle performance as Eilis Lacey, a young woman who emigrates from Ireland to New York in the early 1950s, in John Crowley\u2019s lovely adaptation of the novel by Colm Toibin. (Scott) \u2018Burnt\u2019 (R, 1:40) Bradley Cooper plays a once-hot chef who is trying to regain his stature. If reality TV hasn\u2019t provided you with enough tyrannical chefs and images of artfully arranged food, this movie\u2019s for you. (Neil Genzlinger)", "answer": "1962 spy swap", "sentence": "In this gravely moody, perfectly directed thriller about a real 1962 spy swap , Steven Spielberg returns you to the good old bad days of the Cold War and its fictions, with their bottomless political chasms and moral gray areas.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2605 \u2018Bridge of Spies\u2019 (PG-13, 2:15) In this gravely moody, perfectly directed thriller about a real 1962 spy swap , Steven Spielberg returns you to the good old bad days of the Cold War and its fictions, with their bottomless political chasms and moral gray areas. Tom Hanks leads a terrific cast that includes Mark Rylance as a Soviet mole and Scott Shepherd as a C.I.A. operative. (Dargis) \u2605 \u2018Brooklyn\u2019 (PG-13, 1:51) Saoirse Ronan gives a remarkably lively and subtle performance as Eilis Lacey, a young woman who emigrates from Ireland to New York in the early 1950s, in John Crowley\u2019s lovely adaptation of the novel by Colm Toibin. (Scott) \u2018Burnt\u2019 (R, 1:40) Bradley Cooper plays a once-hot chef who is trying to regain his stature. If reality TV hasn\u2019t provided you with enough tyrannical chefs and images of artfully arranged food, this movie\u2019s for you. (Neil Genzlinger)", "paragraph_answer": "\u2605 \u2018Bridge of Spies\u2019 (PG-13, 2:15) In this gravely moody, perfectly directed thriller about a real 1962 spy swap , Steven Spielberg returns you to the good old bad days of the Cold War and its fictions, with their bottomless political chasms and moral gray areas. Tom Hanks leads a terrific cast that includes Mark Rylance as a Soviet mole and Scott Shepherd as a C.I.A. operative. (Dargis) \u2605 \u2018Brooklyn\u2019 (PG-13, 1:51) Saoirse Ronan gives a remarkably lively and subtle performance as Eilis Lacey, a young woman who emigrates from Ireland to New York in the early 1950s, in John Crowley\u2019s lovely adaptation of the novel by Colm Toibin. (Scott) \u2018Burnt\u2019 (R, 1:40) Bradley Cooper plays a once-hot chef who is trying to regain his stature. If reality TV hasn\u2019t provided you with enough tyrannical chefs and images of artfully arranged food, this movie\u2019s for you. (Neil Genzlinger)", "sentence_answer": "In this gravely moody, perfectly directed thriller about a real 1962 spy swap , Steven Spielberg returns you to the good old bad days of the Cold War and its fictions, with their bottomless political chasms and moral gray areas.", "paragraph_id": "5d701ea1c8e4820a9b66ca2f"} +{"question": "What did McConnell consider the appropriations fight?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt has been a mess for a very long time under majorities of both parties, and I am going to try very hard to fix that next year,\u201d Mr. McConnell said as he warned Democrats against trying the same tactic again. \u201cHopefully we will not see some new excuse for not doing the basic work of government because we have already agreed on how much we are going to spend.\u201d Mr. McConnell considered the appropriations fight a low point in the year, while he rated his chief victory the mere fact that the Senate showed actual signs of life. \u201cWe have demonstrated that if you open the place up, give people the opportunity to participate, they will cooperate in getting an outcome in a body that requires fairly significant bipartisan buy-in to get somewhere,\u201d he said.", "answer": "a low point in the year", "sentence": "Mr. McConnell considered the appropriations fight a low point in the year , while he rated his chief victory the mere fact that the Senate showed actual signs of life.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt has been a mess for a very long time under majorities of both parties, and I am going to try very hard to fix that next year,\u201d Mr. McConnell said as he warned Democrats against trying the same tactic again. \u201cHopefully we will not see some new excuse for not doing the basic work of government because we have already agreed on how much we are going to spend.\u201d Mr. McConnell considered the appropriations fight a low point in the year , while he rated his chief victory the mere fact that the Senate showed actual signs of life. \u201cWe have demonstrated that if you open the place up, give people the opportunity to participate, they will cooperate in getting an outcome in a body that requires fairly significant bipartisan buy-in to get somewhere,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt has been a mess for a very long time under majorities of both parties, and I am going to try very hard to fix that next year,\u201d Mr. McConnell said as he warned Democrats against trying the same tactic again. \u201cHopefully we will not see some new excuse for not doing the basic work of government because we have already agreed on how much we are going to spend.\u201d Mr. McConnell considered the appropriations fight a low point in the year , while he rated his chief victory the mere fact that the Senate showed actual signs of life. \u201cWe have demonstrated that if you open the place up, give people the opportunity to participate, they will cooperate in getting an outcome in a body that requires fairly significant bipartisan buy-in to get somewhere,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. McConnell considered the appropriations fight a low point in the year , while he rated his chief victory the mere fact that the Senate showed actual signs of life.", "paragraph_id": "5d701311c8e4820a9b66bfab"} +{"question": "What happened to the gender researcher member while in custody?", "paragraph": "Now five of them \u2014 core members of China\u2019s new feminist movement \u2014 sit in jail, accused of provoking social instability. One of the women, Wu Rongrong, 30, an AIDS activist, is said to be ailing after the police withheld the medication she takes for hepatitis. Another, Wang Man, 33, a gender researcher, was said to have had a mild heart attack while in custody. Lawyers for the detainees, who include Zheng Churan, 25, affectionately known as Big Rabbit, say the women have been subjected to near-constant interrogation.", "answer": "had a mild heart attack", "sentence": "Another, Wang Man, 33, a gender researcher, was said to have had a mild heart attack while in custody.", "paragraph_sentence": "Now five of them \u2014 core members of China\u2019s new feminist movement \u2014 sit in jail, accused of provoking social instability. One of the women, Wu Rongrong, 30, an AIDS activist, is said to be ailing after the police withheld the medication she takes for hepatitis. Another, Wang Man, 33, a gender researcher, was said to have had a mild heart attack while in custody. Lawyers for the detainees, who include Zheng Churan, 25, affectionately known as Big Rabbit, say the women have been subjected to near-constant interrogation.", "paragraph_answer": "Now five of them \u2014 core members of China\u2019s new feminist movement \u2014 sit in jail, accused of provoking social instability. One of the women, Wu Rongrong, 30, an AIDS activist, is said to be ailing after the police withheld the medication she takes for hepatitis. Another, Wang Man, 33, a gender researcher, was said to have had a mild heart attack while in custody. Lawyers for the detainees, who include Zheng Churan, 25, affectionately known as Big Rabbit, say the women have been subjected to near-constant interrogation.", "sentence_answer": "Another, Wang Man, 33, a gender researcher, was said to have had a mild heart attack while in custody.", "paragraph_id": "5d701766c8e4820a9b66c35e"} +{"question": "What is the record of the Islanders right now?", "paragraph": "The Rangers (17-6-2) have lost three of their last four. Worse, center Derek Stepan is out four to six weeks with broken ribs, and Kevin Klein, their most consistent defenseman this season, will miss two to three weeks after sustaining a strained oblique Monday against Carolina. The Rangers head to Brooklyn for their first game at Barclays Center, playing the rival Islanders for the first time this season. The Islanders (13-8-4), who have won three of four, are expected to have their first sellout since opening night in October.", "answer": "(13-8-4)", "sentence": "The Islanders (13-8-4) , who have won three of four, are expected to have their first sellout since opening night in October.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Rangers (17-6-2) have lost three of their last four. Worse, center Derek Stepan is out four to six weeks with broken ribs, and Kevin Klein, their most consistent defenseman this season, will miss two to three weeks after sustaining a strained oblique Monday against Carolina. The Rangers head to Brooklyn for their first game at Barclays Center, playing the rival Islanders for the first time this season. The Islanders (13-8-4) , who have won three of four, are expected to have their first sellout since opening night in October. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Rangers (17-6-2) have lost three of their last four. Worse, center Derek Stepan is out four to six weeks with broken ribs, and Kevin Klein, their most consistent defenseman this season, will miss two to three weeks after sustaining a strained oblique Monday against Carolina. The Rangers head to Brooklyn for their first game at Barclays Center, playing the rival Islanders for the first time this season. The Islanders (13-8-4) , who have won three of four, are expected to have their first sellout since opening night in October.", "sentence_answer": "The Islanders (13-8-4) , who have won three of four, are expected to have their first sellout since opening night in October.", "paragraph_id": "5d701fdac8e4820a9b66cb7f"} +{"question": "For how many years has banking regulation grown?", "paragraph": "The N.Y.U. research cuts against both the standard left- and right-\u00adleaning critiques of Wall Street. The perception of many on the left is that banks were once well \u00adregulated and then the oversight stopped. But banking regulation has in fact grown over the past 30 years, with more regulators enforcing more (and more complicated) rules. For many on the right, of course, this is itself the problem: All that government intrusion, they argue, is stifling the financial system. But Richardson and Acharya\u2019s research shows that we\u2019re in a scarier place than either side realizes. By freeing banks\u2019 hands, reducing regulation might incentivize them to engage in more rent-\u00adseeking. But by increasing the complexity of the rules, overregulation can enable rent-\u00adseeking just as easily.", "answer": "30 years", "sentence": "But banking regulation has in fact grown over the past 30 years , with more regulators enforcing more (and more complicated) rules.", "paragraph_sentence": "The N.Y.U. research cuts against both the standard left- and right-\u00adleaning critiques of Wall Street. The perception of many on the left is that banks were once well \u00adregulated and then the oversight stopped. But banking regulation has in fact grown over the past 30 years , with more regulators enforcing more (and more complicated) rules. For many on the right, of course, this is itself the problem: All that government intrusion, they argue, is stifling the financial system. But Richardson and Acharya\u2019s research shows that we\u2019re in a scarier place than either side realizes. By freeing banks\u2019 hands, reducing regulation might incentivize them to engage in more rent-\u00adseeking. But by increasing the complexity of the rules, overregulation can enable rent-\u00adseeking just as easily.", "paragraph_answer": "The N.Y.U. research cuts against both the standard left- and right-\u00adleaning critiques of Wall Street. The perception of many on the left is that banks were once well \u00adregulated and then the oversight stopped. But banking regulation has in fact grown over the past 30 years , with more regulators enforcing more (and more complicated) rules. For many on the right, of course, this is itself the problem: All that government intrusion, they argue, is stifling the financial system. But Richardson and Acharya\u2019s research shows that we\u2019re in a scarier place than either side realizes. By freeing banks\u2019 hands, reducing regulation might incentivize them to engage in more rent-\u00adseeking. But by increasing the complexity of the rules, overregulation can enable rent-\u00adseeking just as easily.", "sentence_answer": "But banking regulation has in fact grown over the past 30 years , with more regulators enforcing more (and more complicated) rules.", "paragraph_id": "5d70070cc8e4820a9b66acbc"} +{"question": "What company almost died?", "paragraph": "He has not recouped his initial investments, including about $350,000 for structures that accommodate as many as 80 guests, and $6,000 for solar heaters and water filtration and biogas-capture systems. The expense \u201calmost killed my company,\u201d he said with a laugh, referring to his motorcycle touring business.", "answer": "motorcycle touring business", "sentence": "The expense \u201calmost killed my company,\u201d he said with a laugh, referring to his motorcycle touring business .", "paragraph_sentence": "He has not recouped his initial investments, including about $350,000 for structures that accommodate as many as 80 guests, and $6,000 for solar heaters and water filtration and biogas-capture systems. The expense \u201calmost killed my company,\u201d he said with a laugh, referring to his motorcycle touring business . ", "paragraph_answer": "He has not recouped his initial investments, including about $350,000 for structures that accommodate as many as 80 guests, and $6,000 for solar heaters and water filtration and biogas-capture systems. The expense \u201calmost killed my company,\u201d he said with a laugh, referring to his motorcycle touring business .", "sentence_answer": "The expense \u201calmost killed my company,\u201d he said with a laugh, referring to his motorcycle touring business .", "paragraph_id": "5d700ca4c8e4820a9b66b7ef"} +{"question": "Which players will Kevin Hayes center?", "paragraph": "\u201cI know he does some acting on the side,\u201d Julien said in a postgame news conference Friday, \u201cbut it doesn\u2019t need to be on the ice.\u201d Lundqvist called Julien\u2019s remarks \u201cdisrespectful,\u201d adding that his head and neck were still sore from the collision. \u201cDiving has never been an option for me,\u201d Lundqvist said. With Stepan out indefinitely, Vigneault recast his forward-line combinations Saturday, with the rookie Oscar Lindberg centering J. T. Miller and Jesper Fast, and Kevin Hayes centering Emerson Etem and Chris Kreider, who has one goal in his last 10 games.", "answer": "Emerson Etem and Chris Kreider", "sentence": "With Stepan out indefinitely, Vigneault recast his forward-line combinations Saturday, with the rookie Oscar Lindberg centering J. T. Miller and Jesper Fast, and Kevin Hayes centering Emerson Etem and Chris Kreider , who has one goal in his last 10 games.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI know he does some acting on the side,\u201d Julien said in a postgame news conference Friday, \u201cbut it doesn\u2019t need to be on the ice.\u201d Lundqvist called Julien\u2019s remarks \u201cdisrespectful,\u201d adding that his head and neck were still sore from the collision. \u201cDiving has never been an option for me,\u201d Lundqvist said. With Stepan out indefinitely, Vigneault recast his forward-line combinations Saturday, with the rookie Oscar Lindberg centering J. T. Miller and Jesper Fast, and Kevin Hayes centering Emerson Etem and Chris Kreider , who has one goal in his last 10 games. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI know he does some acting on the side,\u201d Julien said in a postgame news conference Friday, \u201cbut it doesn\u2019t need to be on the ice.\u201d Lundqvist called Julien\u2019s remarks \u201cdisrespectful,\u201d adding that his head and neck were still sore from the collision. \u201cDiving has never been an option for me,\u201d Lundqvist said. With Stepan out indefinitely, Vigneault recast his forward-line combinations Saturday, with the rookie Oscar Lindberg centering J. T. Miller and Jesper Fast, and Kevin Hayes centering Emerson Etem and Chris Kreider , who has one goal in his last 10 games.", "sentence_answer": "With Stepan out indefinitely, Vigneault recast his forward-line combinations Saturday, with the rookie Oscar Lindberg centering J. T. Miller and Jesper Fast, and Kevin Hayes centering Emerson Etem and Chris Kreider , who has one goal in his last 10 games.", "paragraph_id": "5d702384c8e4820a9b66cf9d"} +{"question": "For what was Mattingly once fined and benched for?", "paragraph": "Mattingly\u2019s election to baseball\u2019s Hall of Fame in this, his last year of eligibility, is probably not forthcoming (this year\u2019s class of inductees will be announced Tuesday), a melancholy fact. But then, his playing days as a Yankee had something of a melancholy cast. He arrived for a cup of coffee in 1982, a year after the Yankees went to the World Series, and retired in 1995, a year before they returned. And in the last half of his career he was a diminished player, his skills attenuated by the persistent back problems that forced him to quit prematurely at 34, his spirit likely withered by the mortifying shenanigans of the Yankees\u2019 principal owner, George Steinbrenner, and his minions (who once ordered Mattingly fined and benched for not getting a haircut), not to mention the ignominy of a last-place finish in 1990.", "answer": "not getting a haircut", "sentence": "And in the last half of his career he was a diminished player, his skills attenuated by the persistent back problems that forced him to quit prematurely at 34, his spirit likely withered by the mortifying shenanigans of the Yankees\u2019 principal owner, George Steinbrenner, and his minions (who once ordered Mattingly fined and benched for not getting a haircut ), not to mention the ignominy of a last-place finish in 1990.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mattingly\u2019s election to baseball\u2019s Hall of Fame in this, his last year of eligibility, is probably not forthcoming (this year\u2019s class of inductees will be announced Tuesday), a melancholy fact. But then, his playing days as a Yankee had something of a melancholy cast. He arrived for a cup of coffee in 1982, a year after the Yankees went to the World Series, and retired in 1995, a year before they returned. And in the last half of his career he was a diminished player, his skills attenuated by the persistent back problems that forced him to quit prematurely at 34, his spirit likely withered by the mortifying shenanigans of the Yankees\u2019 principal owner, George Steinbrenner, and his minions (who once ordered Mattingly fined and benched for not getting a haircut ), not to mention the ignominy of a last-place finish in 1990. ", "paragraph_answer": "Mattingly\u2019s election to baseball\u2019s Hall of Fame in this, his last year of eligibility, is probably not forthcoming (this year\u2019s class of inductees will be announced Tuesday), a melancholy fact. But then, his playing days as a Yankee had something of a melancholy cast. He arrived for a cup of coffee in 1982, a year after the Yankees went to the World Series, and retired in 1995, a year before they returned. And in the last half of his career he was a diminished player, his skills attenuated by the persistent back problems that forced him to quit prematurely at 34, his spirit likely withered by the mortifying shenanigans of the Yankees\u2019 principal owner, George Steinbrenner, and his minions (who once ordered Mattingly fined and benched for not getting a haircut ), not to mention the ignominy of a last-place finish in 1990.", "sentence_answer": "And in the last half of his career he was a diminished player, his skills attenuated by the persistent back problems that forced him to quit prematurely at 34, his spirit likely withered by the mortifying shenanigans of the Yankees\u2019 principal owner, George Steinbrenner, and his minions (who once ordered Mattingly fined and benched for not getting a haircut ), not to mention the ignominy of a last-place finish in 1990.", "paragraph_id": "5d704772c8e4820a9b66e893"} +{"question": "What is one specific benefit that is mentioned for Same-Sex Military couples?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt is perverse,\u201d the Chadbourne & Parke brief said, \u201cfor the government to grant leave to enable a same-sex couple to travel to a state where they can legally marry, for the government to recognize that marriage as valid for however many more years the service member continues to serve, and then suddenly ignore that marriage as soon as the service member retires and obtains veteran\u2019s status.\u201d A federal appeals court in Washington is considering a challenge to that interpretation, but the Supreme Court\u2019s decision in the four same-sex marriage cases to be argued next week, among them Obergefell v. Hodges, No. 14-556, may make the challenge moot.", "answer": "to grant leave to enable a same-sex couple to travel to a state where they can legally marry", "sentence": "\u201cIt is perverse,\u201d the Chadbourne & Parke brief said, \u201cfor the government to grant leave to enable a same-sex couple to travel to a state where they can legally marry , for the government to recognize that marriage as valid for however many more years the service member continues to serve, and then suddenly ignore that marriage as soon as the service member retires and obtains veteran\u2019s status.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cIt is perverse,\u201d the Chadbourne & Parke brief said, \u201cfor the government to grant leave to enable a same-sex couple to travel to a state where they can legally marry , for the government to recognize that marriage as valid for however many more years the service member continues to serve, and then suddenly ignore that marriage as soon as the service member retires and obtains veteran\u2019s status.\u201d A federal appeals court in Washington is considering a challenge to that interpretation, but the Supreme Court\u2019s decision in the four same-sex marriage cases to be argued next week, among them Obergefell v. Hodges, No. 14-556, may make the challenge moot.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt is perverse,\u201d the Chadbourne & Parke brief said, \u201cfor the government to grant leave to enable a same-sex couple to travel to a state where they can legally marry , for the government to recognize that marriage as valid for however many more years the service member continues to serve, and then suddenly ignore that marriage as soon as the service member retires and obtains veteran\u2019s status.\u201d A federal appeals court in Washington is considering a challenge to that interpretation, but the Supreme Court\u2019s decision in the four same-sex marriage cases to be argued next week, among them Obergefell v. Hodges, No. 14-556, may make the challenge moot.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt is perverse,\u201d the Chadbourne & Parke brief said, \u201cfor the government to grant leave to enable a same-sex couple to travel to a state where they can legally marry , for the government to recognize that marriage as valid for however many more years the service member continues to serve, and then suddenly ignore that marriage as soon as the service member retires and obtains veteran\u2019s status.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d70109ec8e4820a9b66bd0a"} +{"question": "Who did the republicans try to prove wrong with the senate up for grabs in 2016?", "paragraph": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Barney Frank once told me that asking Republicans to govern was like asking him, the first openly gay member of Congress, to judge the Miss America contest: He would do it, but he wouldn\u2019t enjoy it much or be very good at it. With control of the Senate up for grabs in 2016, Senate Republicans have spent the year trying to prove Mr. Frank wrong. And Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, believes they have been pretty good at it \u2014 particularly when measured against the vicious stalemate of the previous four years. \u201cI think the Senate is functioning again and producing results,\u201d Mr. McConnell said in an interview as he assessed 2015 and looked ahead to a challenging election cycle that could quickly end his control of the Senate agenda if the public disagrees with his take.", "answer": "Mr. Frank", "sentence": "With control of the Senate up for grabs in 2016, Senate Republicans have spent the year trying to prove Mr. Frank wrong.", "paragraph_sentence": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Barney Frank once told me that asking Republicans to govern was like asking him, the first openly gay member of Congress, to judge the Miss America contest: He would do it, but he wouldn\u2019t enjoy it much or be very good at it. With control of the Senate up for grabs in 2016, Senate Republicans have spent the year trying to prove Mr. Frank wrong. And Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, believes they have been pretty good at it \u2014 particularly when measured against the vicious stalemate of the previous four years. \u201cI think the Senate is functioning again and producing results,\u201d Mr. McConnell said in an interview as he assessed 2015 and looked ahead to a challenging election cycle that could quickly end his control of the Senate agenda if the public disagrees with his take.", "paragraph_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Barney Frank once told me that asking Republicans to govern was like asking him, the first openly gay member of Congress, to judge the Miss America contest: He would do it, but he wouldn\u2019t enjoy it much or be very good at it. With control of the Senate up for grabs in 2016, Senate Republicans have spent the year trying to prove Mr. Frank wrong. And Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, believes they have been pretty good at it \u2014 particularly when measured against the vicious stalemate of the previous four years. \u201cI think the Senate is functioning again and producing results,\u201d Mr. McConnell said in an interview as he assessed 2015 and looked ahead to a challenging election cycle that could quickly end his control of the Senate agenda if the public disagrees with his take.", "sentence_answer": "With control of the Senate up for grabs in 2016, Senate Republicans have spent the year trying to prove Mr. Frank wrong.", "paragraph_id": "5d701056c8e4820a9b66bc79"} +{"question": "How long ago was the last debate?", "paragraph": "Cruz then grabbed the ball, skewering Clinton more sharply and showing that he could out-eloquent Rubio and out-nasty anyone. Has a young politician ever managed to be so impressive and so repulsive all at once? That\u2019s the fascination of Cruz, and the most fun Tuesday night was his stumble on the very ground that tripped up Rick Perry four years ago. During a debate back then, Perry said he wanted to eliminate three federal departments or agencies and could name only two. Cruz said he wanted to eliminate five and named the Commerce Department twice.", "answer": "four years", "sentence": "That\u2019s the fascination of Cruz, and the most fun Tuesday night was his stumble on the very ground that tripped up Rick Perry four years ago.", "paragraph_sentence": "Cruz then grabbed the ball, skewering Clinton more sharply and showing that he could out-eloquent Rubio and out-nasty anyone. Has a young politician ever managed to be so impressive and so repulsive all at once? That\u2019s the fascination of Cruz, and the most fun Tuesday night was his stumble on the very ground that tripped up Rick Perry four years ago. During a debate back then, Perry said he wanted to eliminate three federal departments or agencies and could name only two. Cruz said he wanted to eliminate five and named the Commerce Department twice.", "paragraph_answer": "Cruz then grabbed the ball, skewering Clinton more sharply and showing that he could out-eloquent Rubio and out-nasty anyone. Has a young politician ever managed to be so impressive and so repulsive all at once? That\u2019s the fascination of Cruz, and the most fun Tuesday night was his stumble on the very ground that tripped up Rick Perry four years ago. During a debate back then, Perry said he wanted to eliminate three federal departments or agencies and could name only two. Cruz said he wanted to eliminate five and named the Commerce Department twice.", "sentence_answer": "That\u2019s the fascination of Cruz, and the most fun Tuesday night was his stumble on the very ground that tripped up Rick Perry four years ago.", "paragraph_id": "5d708d6fc8e4820a9b66f536"} +{"question": "What was the boy suspected of?", "paragraph": "A 15-year-old boy lured an 8-year-old girl into his apartment in Santa Cruz, Calif., and killed her before hiding her body in a recycling bin, the police said Tuesday. Chief Kevin Vogel of the Santa Cruz police said the girl, Madyson Middleton, went willingly into the apartment at the Tannery Arts Center, a housing complex for artists where they lived, and was probably dead before she was reported missing Sunday night, sparking a search by hundreds of volunteers. The suspect, whose name was not released because he is a juvenile, knew the victim, Chief Vogel said. The boy was arrested on suspicion of murder.", "answer": "murder", "sentence": "The boy was arrested on suspicion of murder .", "paragraph_sentence": "A 15-year-old boy lured an 8-year-old girl into his apartment in Santa Cruz, Calif., and killed her before hiding her body in a recycling bin, the police said Tuesday. Chief Kevin Vogel of the Santa Cruz police said the girl, Madyson Middleton, went willingly into the apartment at the Tannery Arts Center, a housing complex for artists where they lived, and was probably dead before she was reported missing Sunday night, sparking a search by hundreds of volunteers. The suspect, whose name was not released because he is a juvenile, knew the victim, Chief Vogel said. The boy was arrested on suspicion of murder . ", "paragraph_answer": "A 15-year-old boy lured an 8-year-old girl into his apartment in Santa Cruz, Calif., and killed her before hiding her body in a recycling bin, the police said Tuesday. Chief Kevin Vogel of the Santa Cruz police said the girl, Madyson Middleton, went willingly into the apartment at the Tannery Arts Center, a housing complex for artists where they lived, and was probably dead before she was reported missing Sunday night, sparking a search by hundreds of volunteers. The suspect, whose name was not released because he is a juvenile, knew the victim, Chief Vogel said. The boy was arrested on suspicion of murder .", "sentence_answer": "The boy was arrested on suspicion of murder .", "paragraph_id": "5d700d55c8e4820a9b66b8e5"} +{"question": "What brand of camera does Sally use?", "paragraph": "Soon it becomes clear from the wails that Mann needs to intervene in the dispute. But by the time Jessie comes running up the stairs in tears, shouting \u201cI hate her, Mommy\u201d and disappearing into the woods, the opportunity for peacemaking has slipped away. Our interview falls off into awkward silence. Ten minutes later, however, tears dried, Jessie is prowling around in the cabin, having spontaneously fashioned a skirt and bolero for herself out of green leaves, like a sprite of nature. Acting quickly to seize the moment, Mann sets up her Toyo on the tripod. Disappearing beneath the photographer\u2019s cloth, her hands protruding as they adjust the knobs that control the accordionlike bellows, she tilts and focuses the image that appears upside down on the screen at the back of the camera. The process takes several long minutes.", "answer": "Toyo", "sentence": "Acting quickly to seize the moment, Mann sets up her Toyo on the tripod.", "paragraph_sentence": "Soon it becomes clear from the wails that Mann needs to intervene in the dispute. But by the time Jessie comes running up the stairs in tears, shouting \u201cI hate her, Mommy\u201d and disappearing into the woods, the opportunity for peacemaking has slipped away. Our interview falls off into awkward silence. Ten minutes later, however, tears dried, Jessie is prowling around in the cabin, having spontaneously fashioned a skirt and bolero for herself out of green leaves, like a sprite of nature. Acting quickly to seize the moment, Mann sets up her Toyo on the tripod. Disappearing beneath the photographer\u2019s cloth, her hands protruding as they adjust the knobs that control the accordionlike bellows, she tilts and focuses the image that appears upside down on the screen at the back of the camera. The process takes several long minutes.", "paragraph_answer": "Soon it becomes clear from the wails that Mann needs to intervene in the dispute. But by the time Jessie comes running up the stairs in tears, shouting \u201cI hate her, Mommy\u201d and disappearing into the woods, the opportunity for peacemaking has slipped away. Our interview falls off into awkward silence. Ten minutes later, however, tears dried, Jessie is prowling around in the cabin, having spontaneously fashioned a skirt and bolero for herself out of green leaves, like a sprite of nature. Acting quickly to seize the moment, Mann sets up her Toyo on the tripod. Disappearing beneath the photographer\u2019s cloth, her hands protruding as they adjust the knobs that control the accordionlike bellows, she tilts and focuses the image that appears upside down on the screen at the back of the camera. The process takes several long minutes.", "sentence_answer": "Acting quickly to seize the moment, Mann sets up her Toyo on the tripod.", "paragraph_id": "5d700c68c8e4820a9b66b78c"} +{"question": "What meal did they have?", "paragraph": "\u201cYou\u2019re not listening!\u201d he said. \u201cAfter that, whenever I went out with people more successful than me, I always judged them by the words of my boss. The people I wanted to do business with or start a friendship with were those who offered to pick up the bill; the shady characters were those who just sat back and waited for someone to pay. And when I started picking up the tab for my friends and on business meals as I became wealthier, everyone\u2019s view of me changed. They knew me now as someone who would take care of business,\u201d whether that meant the meal in front of them or things of more substance. \u201cHow about if I pay this time, and you pay next time?\u201d I said. \u201cBut you don\u2019t pay the bill to build a reputation,\u201d he replied, ignoring my offer. \u201cYou pay because it\u2019s the right thing to do. You really don\u2019t know the financial situation of the other person whenever you go out, so just offer; if the person is wealthier than you, he\u2019ll take care of you, no worries. You always take care of those worse off than you \u2014 call it Jesus or charity or good business or whatever, but you always do. Now, let me pay the bill.\u201d He won. Best business lunch I ever had (high-end chilaquiles, by the way). The lesson I learned that day is a mantra I\u2019ve followed ever since and have repeated to everyone I know, not just because it\u2019s the right thing to do, but also because of what my exec pal told me as we left the restaurant:", "answer": "business lunch", "sentence": "Best business lunch I ever had (high-end chilaquiles, by the way).", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cYou\u2019re not listening!\u201d he said. \u201cAfter that, whenever I went out with people more successful than me, I always judged them by the words of my boss. The people I wanted to do business with or start a friendship with were those who offered to pick up the bill; the shady characters were those who just sat back and waited for someone to pay. And when I started picking up the tab for my friends and on business meals as I became wealthier, everyone\u2019s view of me changed. They knew me now as someone who would take care of business,\u201d whether that meant the meal in front of them or things of more substance. \u201cHow about if I pay this time, and you pay next time?\u201d I said. \u201cBut you don\u2019t pay the bill to build a reputation,\u201d he replied, ignoring my offer. \u201cYou pay because it\u2019s the right thing to do. You really don\u2019t know the financial situation of the other person whenever you go out, so just offer; if the person is wealthier than you, he\u2019ll take care of you, no worries. You always take care of those worse off than you \u2014 call it Jesus or charity or good business or whatever, but you always do. Now, let me pay the bill.\u201d He won. Best business lunch I ever had (high-end chilaquiles, by the way). The lesson I learned that day is a mantra I\u2019ve followed ever since and have repeated to everyone I know, not just because it\u2019s the right thing to do, but also because of what my exec pal told me as we left the restaurant:", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cYou\u2019re not listening!\u201d he said. \u201cAfter that, whenever I went out with people more successful than me, I always judged them by the words of my boss. The people I wanted to do business with or start a friendship with were those who offered to pick up the bill; the shady characters were those who just sat back and waited for someone to pay. And when I started picking up the tab for my friends and on business meals as I became wealthier, everyone\u2019s view of me changed. They knew me now as someone who would take care of business,\u201d whether that meant the meal in front of them or things of more substance. \u201cHow about if I pay this time, and you pay next time?\u201d I said. \u201cBut you don\u2019t pay the bill to build a reputation,\u201d he replied, ignoring my offer. \u201cYou pay because it\u2019s the right thing to do. You really don\u2019t know the financial situation of the other person whenever you go out, so just offer; if the person is wealthier than you, he\u2019ll take care of you, no worries. You always take care of those worse off than you \u2014 call it Jesus or charity or good business or whatever, but you always do. Now, let me pay the bill.\u201d He won. Best business lunch I ever had (high-end chilaquiles, by the way). The lesson I learned that day is a mantra I\u2019ve followed ever since and have repeated to everyone I know, not just because it\u2019s the right thing to do, but also because of what my exec pal told me as we left the restaurant:", "sentence_answer": "Best business lunch I ever had (high-end chilaquiles, by the way).", "paragraph_id": "5d702815c8e4820a9b66d5cc"} +{"question": "Which percentage of spots will be kept for the above said students?", "paragraph": "Taking a small step to address segregation in New York City schools, the Education Department announced on Friday that it would allow seven schools to reserve slots for children from low-income or non-English speaking families. Six of the seven schools that will change their policies are unzoned, meaning that they admit students by lottery rather than by drawing from the surrounding neighborhood, the Education Department said. Under the pilot program, students who qualify for free or reduced lunch, are in the child welfare system, are English-language learners or have incarcerated parents would be given priority in those lotteries. The schools would set aside from about 20 percent to 60 percent of their seats for students in those groups, many of them black or Hispanic. All the affected schools are elementary schools, and the changes will take effect for the upcoming kindergarten application cycle. The program grew out of recommendations that the schools\u2019 principals made to the Education Department last year, as Mayor Bill de Blasio has faced growing pressure from principals and community leaders to increase diversity.", "answer": "about 20 percent to 60 percent", "sentence": "The schools would set aside from about 20 percent to 60 percent of their seats for students in those groups, many of them black or Hispanic.", "paragraph_sentence": "Taking a small step to address segregation in New York City schools, the Education Department announced on Friday that it would allow seven schools to reserve slots for children from low-income or non-English speaking families. Six of the seven schools that will change their policies are unzoned, meaning that they admit students by lottery rather than by drawing from the surrounding neighborhood, the Education Department said. Under the pilot program, students who qualify for free or reduced lunch, are in the child welfare system, are English-language learners or have incarcerated parents would be given priority in those lotteries. The schools would set aside from about 20 percent to 60 percent of their seats for students in those groups, many of them black or Hispanic. All the affected schools are elementary schools, and the changes will take effect for the upcoming kindergarten application cycle. The program grew out of recommendations that the schools\u2019 principals made to the Education Department last year, as Mayor Bill de Blasio has faced growing pressure from principals and community leaders to increase diversity.", "paragraph_answer": "Taking a small step to address segregation in New York City schools, the Education Department announced on Friday that it would allow seven schools to reserve slots for children from low-income or non-English speaking families. Six of the seven schools that will change their policies are unzoned, meaning that they admit students by lottery rather than by drawing from the surrounding neighborhood, the Education Department said. Under the pilot program, students who qualify for free or reduced lunch, are in the child welfare system, are English-language learners or have incarcerated parents would be given priority in those lotteries. The schools would set aside from about 20 percent to 60 percent of their seats for students in those groups, many of them black or Hispanic. All the affected schools are elementary schools, and the changes will take effect for the upcoming kindergarten application cycle. The program grew out of recommendations that the schools\u2019 principals made to the Education Department last year, as Mayor Bill de Blasio has faced growing pressure from principals and community leaders to increase diversity.", "sentence_answer": "The schools would set aside from about 20 percent to 60 percent of their seats for students in those groups, many of them black or Hispanic.", "paragraph_id": "5d70140ac8e4820a9b66c064"} +{"question": "How many testimonials were presented by Uber?", "paragraph": "Shannon Liss-Riordan, a lawyer representing the drivers, called the ruling \u201ca major victory for Uber drivers.\u201d Uber has contested the suit since its filing, asserting that the company is in the technology and logistics business, and is essentially an online marketplace that matches willing riders with available drivers. Uber has frequently also said that its drivers are able to set their own schedules and do not have to abide by the many other requirements that companies can impose on employees. In July, the company came out strongly against the class-action suit, presenting testimonials from more than 400 drivers who say they appreciate Uber\u2019s flexibility.", "answer": "more than 400 drivers", "sentence": "In July, the company came out strongly against the class-action suit, presenting testimonials from more than 400 drivers who say they appreciate Uber\u2019s flexibility.", "paragraph_sentence": "Shannon Liss-Riordan, a lawyer representing the drivers, called the ruling \u201ca major victory for Uber drivers.\u201d Uber has contested the suit since its filing, asserting that the company is in the technology and logistics business, and is essentially an online marketplace that matches willing riders with available drivers. Uber has frequently also said that its drivers are able to set their own schedules and do not have to abide by the many other requirements that companies can impose on employees. In July, the company came out strongly against the class-action suit, presenting testimonials from more than 400 drivers who say they appreciate Uber\u2019s flexibility. ", "paragraph_answer": "Shannon Liss-Riordan, a lawyer representing the drivers, called the ruling \u201ca major victory for Uber drivers.\u201d Uber has contested the suit since its filing, asserting that the company is in the technology and logistics business, and is essentially an online marketplace that matches willing riders with available drivers. Uber has frequently also said that its drivers are able to set their own schedules and do not have to abide by the many other requirements that companies can impose on employees. In July, the company came out strongly against the class-action suit, presenting testimonials from more than 400 drivers who say they appreciate Uber\u2019s flexibility.", "sentence_answer": "In July, the company came out strongly against the class-action suit, presenting testimonials from more than 400 drivers who say they appreciate Uber\u2019s flexibility.", "paragraph_id": "5d7040fac8e4820a9b66e53d"} +{"question": "How long was LeBron out due to injury?", "paragraph": "Of course, in his first game back since a strained left knee and a sore lower back sidelined him for two weeks, James did do a decent impersonation of his kingly self. He played 37 minutes and finished with 33 points on 11 for 18 shooting while collecting seven rebounds and five assists. James\u2019s first points at US Airways Center even came on a reverse dunk. That was heartening news because before he was sidelined, he seemed to have lost a step and, with it, a gear of aggression. In all, James, who was averaging less than a dunk a game before his injuries, had three against the Suns, a formidable team with a 23-18 record. Afterward, David Blatt, the embattled Cavaliers coach, described James\u2019s performance as \u201cterrific\u201d and added, \u201cI just thought he laid it out there.\u201d", "answer": "two weeks", "sentence": "Of course, in his first game back since a strained left knee and a sore lower back sidelined him for two weeks , James did do a decent impersonation of his kingly self.", "paragraph_sentence": " Of course, in his first game back since a strained left knee and a sore lower back sidelined him for two weeks , James did do a decent impersonation of his kingly self. He played 37 minutes and finished with 33 points on 11 for 18 shooting while collecting seven rebounds and five assists. James\u2019s first points at US Airways Center even came on a reverse dunk. That was heartening news because before he was sidelined, he seemed to have lost a step and, with it, a gear of aggression. In all, James, who was averaging less than a dunk a game before his injuries, had three against the Suns, a formidable team with a 23-18 record. Afterward, David Blatt, the embattled Cavaliers coach, described James\u2019s performance as \u201cterrific\u201d and added, \u201cI just thought he laid it out there.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Of course, in his first game back since a strained left knee and a sore lower back sidelined him for two weeks , James did do a decent impersonation of his kingly self. He played 37 minutes and finished with 33 points on 11 for 18 shooting while collecting seven rebounds and five assists. James\u2019s first points at US Airways Center even came on a reverse dunk. That was heartening news because before he was sidelined, he seemed to have lost a step and, with it, a gear of aggression. In all, James, who was averaging less than a dunk a game before his injuries, had three against the Suns, a formidable team with a 23-18 record. Afterward, David Blatt, the embattled Cavaliers coach, described James\u2019s performance as \u201cterrific\u201d and added, \u201cI just thought he laid it out there.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Of course, in his first game back since a strained left knee and a sore lower back sidelined him for two weeks , James did do a decent impersonation of his kingly self.", "paragraph_id": "5d703874c8e4820a9b66e13a"} +{"question": "What type of company is Majestic Realty Group?", "paragraph": "For years, the N.F.L. played cat and mouse with the city of Los Angeles. Every so often a team in, say, Minnesota, would threaten to move to L.A. in an effort to crowbar concessions out of its government leaders back home. Once the team got public financing, it stayed put. To move the ball, AEG, the sports and entertainment group, and Majestic Realty Group, a big real estate developer, promised to build stadiums in Los Angeles County if a team would commit to moving. For years, none did. But the roulette wheel has spun a lot faster this year. In January, the owner of the St. Louis Rams, Stan Kroenke, said he planned to build an 80,000-seat stadium in Inglewood, 10 miles south of downtown Los Angeles. Last week, the Inglewood City Council voted unanimously to give the project the green light. The Rams switched to a year-to-year lease at the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis, giving them the flexibility to move. Alarmed by the possibility that the Rams could move back to Los Angeles, the San Diego Chargers and the Oakland Raiders last month said they would build their own stadium in Carson, about 15 miles farther south. The move was viewed as a way for the teams to maintain leverage in stadium negotiations with their home cities and potentially forestall the Rams. In the blink of an eye, the N.F.L. went from shadow boxing to boxing in Los Angeles. Faced with the possibility of three teams rushing to the city at once, the N.F.L. established an owners committee to oversee the process. But the process appears to be a work in a progress. AEG, which secured environmental approvals and sold naming rights for its proposed stadium next to Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles, and which perhaps fears being shut out of the N.F.L. stadium sweepstakes, re-entered the fray. The company commissioned a report by Tom Ridge, a former secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, who outlined several safety and operational risks of locating a stadium in Inglewood just a few miles from the runways at Los Angeles International Airport.", "answer": "real estate developer", "sentence": "To move the ball, AEG, the sports and entertainment group, and Majestic Realty Group, a big real estate developer , promised to build stadiums in Los Angeles County if a team would commit to moving.", "paragraph_sentence": "For years, the N.F.L. played cat and mouse with the city of Los Angeles. Every so often a team in, say, Minnesota, would threaten to move to L.A. in an effort to crowbar concessions out of its government leaders back home. Once the team got public financing, it stayed put. To move the ball, AEG, the sports and entertainment group, and Majestic Realty Group, a big real estate developer , promised to build stadiums in Los Angeles County if a team would commit to moving. For years, none did. But the roulette wheel has spun a lot faster this year. In January, the owner of the St. Louis Rams, Stan Kroenke, said he planned to build an 80,000-seat stadium in Inglewood, 10 miles south of downtown Los Angeles. Last week, the Inglewood City Council voted unanimously to give the project the green light. The Rams switched to a year-to-year lease at the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis, giving them the flexibility to move. Alarmed by the possibility that the Rams could move back to Los Angeles, the San Diego Chargers and the Oakland Raiders last month said they would build their own stadium in Carson, about 15 miles farther south. The move was viewed as a way for the teams to maintain leverage in stadium negotiations with their home cities and potentially forestall the Rams. In the blink of an eye, the N.F.L. went from shadow boxing to boxing in Los Angeles. Faced with the possibility of three teams rushing to the city at once, the N.F.L. established an owners committee to oversee the process. But the process appears to be a work in a progress. AEG, which secured environmental approvals and sold naming rights for its proposed stadium next to Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles, and which perhaps fears being shut out of the N.F.L. stadium sweepstakes, re-entered the fray. The company commissioned a report by Tom Ridge, a former secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, who outlined several safety and operational risks of locating a stadium in Inglewood just a few miles from the runways at Los Angeles International Airport.", "paragraph_answer": "For years, the N.F.L. played cat and mouse with the city of Los Angeles. Every so often a team in, say, Minnesota, would threaten to move to L.A. in an effort to crowbar concessions out of its government leaders back home. Once the team got public financing, it stayed put. To move the ball, AEG, the sports and entertainment group, and Majestic Realty Group, a big real estate developer , promised to build stadiums in Los Angeles County if a team would commit to moving. For years, none did. But the roulette wheel has spun a lot faster this year. In January, the owner of the St. Louis Rams, Stan Kroenke, said he planned to build an 80,000-seat stadium in Inglewood, 10 miles south of downtown Los Angeles. Last week, the Inglewood City Council voted unanimously to give the project the green light. The Rams switched to a year-to-year lease at the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis, giving them the flexibility to move. Alarmed by the possibility that the Rams could move back to Los Angeles, the San Diego Chargers and the Oakland Raiders last month said they would build their own stadium in Carson, about 15 miles farther south. The move was viewed as a way for the teams to maintain leverage in stadium negotiations with their home cities and potentially forestall the Rams. In the blink of an eye, the N.F.L. went from shadow boxing to boxing in Los Angeles. Faced with the possibility of three teams rushing to the city at once, the N.F.L. established an owners committee to oversee the process. But the process appears to be a work in a progress. AEG, which secured environmental approvals and sold naming rights for its proposed stadium next to Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles, and which perhaps fears being shut out of the N.F.L. stadium sweepstakes, re-entered the fray. The company commissioned a report by Tom Ridge, a former secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, who outlined several safety and operational risks of locating a stadium in Inglewood just a few miles from the runways at Los Angeles International Airport.", "sentence_answer": "To move the ball, AEG, the sports and entertainment group, and Majestic Realty Group, a big real estate developer , promised to build stadiums in Los Angeles County if a team would commit to moving.", "paragraph_id": "5d701119c8e4820a9b66bd8d"} +{"question": "When can I see Arthur Vitellos work In Stamford?", "paragraph": "STAMFORD P.M.W. Gallery \u201cNoir 2,\u201d etchings, lithographs, drawings and paintings by Ann Chernow. Through June 21. By appointment only. P.M.W. Gallery, 530 Roxbury Road. 203-322-5427; pmwgallery.com. STAMFORD Stamford Art Association \u201cUp, Down, All Around \u2014 Small Works,\u201d group show. \u201cFamiliar/Unfamiliar,\u201d Arthur Vitello III. Through July 9. Thursdays and Fridays, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays, noon to 3 p.m. Stamford Art Association, 39 Franklin Street. 203-325-1139; stamfordartassociation.org.", "answer": "Through July 9", "sentence": "Through July 9 .", "paragraph_sentence": "STAMFORD P.M.W. Gallery \u201cNoir 2,\u201d etchings, lithographs, drawings and paintings by Ann Chernow. Through June 21. By appointment only. P.M.W. Gallery, 530 Roxbury Road. 203-322-5427; pmwgallery.com. STAMFORD Stamford Art Association \u201cUp, Down, All Around \u2014 Small Works,\u201d group show. \u201cFamiliar/Unfamiliar,\u201d Arthur Vitello III. Through July 9 . Thursdays and Fridays, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays, noon to 3 p.m. Stamford Art Association, 39 Franklin Street. 203-325-1139; stamfordartassociation.org.", "paragraph_answer": "STAMFORD P.M.W. Gallery \u201cNoir 2,\u201d etchings, lithographs, drawings and paintings by Ann Chernow. Through June 21. By appointment only. P.M.W. Gallery, 530 Roxbury Road. 203-322-5427; pmwgallery.com. STAMFORD Stamford Art Association \u201cUp, Down, All Around \u2014 Small Works,\u201d group show. \u201cFamiliar/Unfamiliar,\u201d Arthur Vitello III. Through July 9 . Thursdays and Fridays, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays, noon to 3 p.m. Stamford Art Association, 39 Franklin Street. 203-325-1139; stamfordartassociation.org.", "sentence_answer": " Through July 9 .", "paragraph_id": "5d7045b3c8e4820a9b66e807"} +{"question": "How many tests did Eichel win in?", "paragraph": "McDavid, who tends to be more soft-spoken, said: \u201cIt\u2019s not up to me to decide. A lot of people will do a lot of talking, and they\u2019ll judge with their own eyes. I believe in my abilities, and I feel I\u2019m the best player in the draft. I\u2019m not sure, maybe you\u2019ll hear a different answer from Jack.\u201d When it came to testing this week, Eichel was superior to McDavid. Eichel prevailed in five tests: bench press, pull-ups and agility, and vertical and standing broad jumps. Eichel\u2019s results ranked well against other prospects, too. He had the best endurance result (12 minutes 15 seconds) in a grueling test in which the prospects pedal a bike against stiff resistance while wearing an oxygen mask. He ranked fifth in vertical jump, fourth in bench press and fifth in the standing broad jump, and he had the strongest right-hand grip. None of that will alter his or McDavid\u2019s standings, which are cast. Things get more interesting with the next picks, starting with the Arizona Coyotes\u2019 selection in the third slot. Don Maloney, Arizona\u2019s general manager, was reluctant to reveal his hand. He indicated that little of what had happened at the combine would determine his course early in the draft. He did allow, though, that some of his team\u2019s later selections could be affected.", "answer": "five", "sentence": "Eichel prevailed in five tests: bench press, pull-ups and agility, and vertical and standing broad jumps.", "paragraph_sentence": "McDavid, who tends to be more soft-spoken, said: \u201cIt\u2019s not up to me to decide. A lot of people will do a lot of talking, and they\u2019ll judge with their own eyes. I believe in my abilities, and I feel I\u2019m the best player in the draft. I\u2019m not sure, maybe you\u2019ll hear a different answer from Jack.\u201d When it came to testing this week, Eichel was superior to McDavid. Eichel prevailed in five tests: bench press, pull-ups and agility, and vertical and standing broad jumps. Eichel\u2019s results ranked well against other prospects, too. He had the best endurance result (12 minutes 15 seconds) in a grueling test in which the prospects pedal a bike against stiff resistance while wearing an oxygen mask. He ranked fifth in vertical jump, fourth in bench press and fifth in the standing broad jump, and he had the strongest right-hand grip. None of that will alter his or McDavid\u2019s standings, which are cast. Things get more interesting with the next picks, starting with the Arizona Coyotes\u2019 selection in the third slot. Don Maloney, Arizona\u2019s general manager, was reluctant to reveal his hand. He indicated that little of what had happened at the combine would determine his course early in the draft. He did allow, though, that some of his team\u2019s later selections could be affected.", "paragraph_answer": "McDavid, who tends to be more soft-spoken, said: \u201cIt\u2019s not up to me to decide. A lot of people will do a lot of talking, and they\u2019ll judge with their own eyes. I believe in my abilities, and I feel I\u2019m the best player in the draft. I\u2019m not sure, maybe you\u2019ll hear a different answer from Jack.\u201d When it came to testing this week, Eichel was superior to McDavid. Eichel prevailed in five tests: bench press, pull-ups and agility, and vertical and standing broad jumps. Eichel\u2019s results ranked well against other prospects, too. He had the best endurance result (12 minutes 15 seconds) in a grueling test in which the prospects pedal a bike against stiff resistance while wearing an oxygen mask. He ranked fifth in vertical jump, fourth in bench press and fifth in the standing broad jump, and he had the strongest right-hand grip. None of that will alter his or McDavid\u2019s standings, which are cast. Things get more interesting with the next picks, starting with the Arizona Coyotes\u2019 selection in the third slot. Don Maloney, Arizona\u2019s general manager, was reluctant to reveal his hand. He indicated that little of what had happened at the combine would determine his course early in the draft. He did allow, though, that some of his team\u2019s later selections could be affected.", "sentence_answer": "Eichel prevailed in five tests: bench press, pull-ups and agility, and vertical and standing broad jumps.", "paragraph_id": "5d700632c8e4820a9b66aac7"} +{"question": "How many gradations of diamonds are there?", "paragraph": "The Basel Committee, a panel of central bankers and regulators from around the world that meets in the Swiss city of Basel, probably did not give much thought to the diamond industry when it was formulating new guidelines. But some diamond wholesalers may have been engaging in the kind of practices that the committee is trying to prevent, including excessive dependence on borrowed money. (Lending to the diamond industry is inherently risky in any case. There are thousands of gradations of diamonds, and it is extremely difficult to value the gems used as collateral.) Meanwhile, the diamond industry faces many other challenges. Sales in China, a large market, have slowed, in part because an anticorruption campaign has made government officials and their families wary of displays of wealth.", "answer": "thousands", "sentence": "There are thousands of gradations of diamonds, and it is extremely difficult to value the gems used as collateral.)", "paragraph_sentence": "The Basel Committee, a panel of central bankers and regulators from around the world that meets in the Swiss city of Basel, probably did not give much thought to the diamond industry when it was formulating new guidelines. But some diamond wholesalers may have been engaging in the kind of practices that the committee is trying to prevent, including excessive dependence on borrowed money. (Lending to the diamond industry is inherently risky in any case. There are thousands of gradations of diamonds, and it is extremely difficult to value the gems used as collateral.) Meanwhile, the diamond industry faces many other challenges. Sales in China, a large market, have slowed, in part because an anticorruption campaign has made government officials and their families wary of displays of wealth.", "paragraph_answer": "The Basel Committee, a panel of central bankers and regulators from around the world that meets in the Swiss city of Basel, probably did not give much thought to the diamond industry when it was formulating new guidelines. But some diamond wholesalers may have been engaging in the kind of practices that the committee is trying to prevent, including excessive dependence on borrowed money. (Lending to the diamond industry is inherently risky in any case. There are thousands of gradations of diamonds, and it is extremely difficult to value the gems used as collateral.) Meanwhile, the diamond industry faces many other challenges. Sales in China, a large market, have slowed, in part because an anticorruption campaign has made government officials and their families wary of displays of wealth.", "sentence_answer": "There are thousands of gradations of diamonds, and it is extremely difficult to value the gems used as collateral.)", "paragraph_id": "5d701c93c8e4820a9b66c81d"} +{"question": "Who is Americas second largest bank?", "paragraph": "All the large United States banks passed an annual regulatory test that aims to assess whether they can make it through a financial and economic calamity, the Federal Reserve said on Wednesday. But Bank of America, the nation\u2019s second-largest bank by assets after JPMorgan Chase, passed only provisionally and could still fail later this year if it does not fix deficiencies that the Fed identified. Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase and Morgan Stanley, which dominate Wall Street, each had to alter their planned payouts to investors to achieve passing grades.", "answer": "Bank of America", "sentence": "But Bank of America , the nation\u2019s second-largest bank by assets after JPMorgan Chase, passed only provisionally and could still fail later this year if it does not fix deficiencies that the Fed identified.", "paragraph_sentence": "All the large United States banks passed an annual regulatory test that aims to assess whether they can make it through a financial and economic calamity, the Federal Reserve said on Wednesday. But Bank of America , the nation\u2019s second-largest bank by assets after JPMorgan Chase, passed only provisionally and could still fail later this year if it does not fix deficiencies that the Fed identified. Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase and Morgan Stanley, which dominate Wall Street, each had to alter their planned payouts to investors to achieve passing grades.", "paragraph_answer": "All the large United States banks passed an annual regulatory test that aims to assess whether they can make it through a financial and economic calamity, the Federal Reserve said on Wednesday. But Bank of America , the nation\u2019s second-largest bank by assets after JPMorgan Chase, passed only provisionally and could still fail later this year if it does not fix deficiencies that the Fed identified. Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase and Morgan Stanley, which dominate Wall Street, each had to alter their planned payouts to investors to achieve passing grades.", "sentence_answer": "But Bank of America , the nation\u2019s second-largest bank by assets after JPMorgan Chase, passed only provisionally and could still fail later this year if it does not fix deficiencies that the Fed identified.", "paragraph_id": "5d7006b0c8e4820a9b66abf7"} +{"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", "paragraph_id": "5d700839c8e4820a9b66af9b"} +{"question": "Where did the business start?", "paragraph": "A. They are easier to buy. We did start our business in the B office building, and we found ourselves in that niche and felt very, very comfortable there. B buildings are very management-intensive, because there are many, many tenants involved. But we find that we do that very well and we can create value. We like to give our tenants a high-quality office environment. We don\u2019t want them to think that they\u2019re in a low-quality, traditional, old-fashioned B building, where they feel like they\u2019re giving something up. Q. Would you ever consider investing in Class A buildings? A. Absolutely, but right now it would not be possible given the competition.", "answer": "B office building", "sentence": "We did start our business in the B office building , and we found ourselves in that niche and felt very, very comfortable there.", "paragraph_sentence": "A. They are easier to buy. We did start our business in the B office building , and we found ourselves in that niche and felt very, very comfortable there. B buildings are very management-intensive, because there are many, many tenants involved. But we find that we do that very well and we can create value. We like to give our tenants a high-quality office environment. We don\u2019t want them to think that they\u2019re in a low-quality, traditional, old-fashioned B building, where they feel like they\u2019re giving something up. Q. Would you ever consider investing in Class A buildings? A. Absolutely, but right now it would not be possible given the competition.", "paragraph_answer": "A. They are easier to buy. We did start our business in the B office building , and we found ourselves in that niche and felt very, very comfortable there. B buildings are very management-intensive, because there are many, many tenants involved. But we find that we do that very well and we can create value. We like to give our tenants a high-quality office environment. We don\u2019t want them to think that they\u2019re in a low-quality, traditional, old-fashioned B building, where they feel like they\u2019re giving something up. Q. Would you ever consider investing in Class A buildings? A. Absolutely, but right now it would not be possible given the competition.", "sentence_answer": "We did start our business in the B office building , and we found ourselves in that niche and felt very, very comfortable there.", "paragraph_id": "5d703b2bc8e4820a9b66e283"} +{"question": "What is Quin Ivy's occupation?", "paragraph": "\u201cWhen a Man Loves a Woman\u201d was his first recording for Atlantic Records, after a patient at the hospital introduced him to the record producer Quin Ivy. It reached No. 1 on the pop charts in 1966 and sold more than a million copies, becoming the label\u2019s first gold record. (The Recording Industry Association of America began certifying records as gold in 1958.) Raw and lovelorn, the song was a response to a woman who had left him for another man, Mr. Sledge said. He called its composition a \u201cmiracle.\u201d", "answer": "record producer", "sentence": "\u201cWhen a Man Loves a Woman\u201d was his first recording for Atlantic Records, after a patient at the hospital introduced him to the record producer Quin Ivy.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cWhen a Man Loves a Woman\u201d was his first recording for Atlantic Records, after a patient at the hospital introduced him to the record producer Quin Ivy. It reached No. 1 on the pop charts in 1966 and sold more than a million copies, becoming the label\u2019s first gold record. (The Recording Industry Association of America began certifying records as gold in 1958.) Raw and lovelorn, the song was a response to a woman who had left him for another man, Mr. Sledge said. He called its composition a \u201cmiracle.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWhen a Man Loves a Woman\u201d was his first recording for Atlantic Records, after a patient at the hospital introduced him to the record producer Quin Ivy. It reached No. 1 on the pop charts in 1966 and sold more than a million copies, becoming the label\u2019s first gold record. (The Recording Industry Association of America began certifying records as gold in 1958.) Raw and lovelorn, the song was a response to a woman who had left him for another man, Mr. Sledge said. He called its composition a \u201cmiracle.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWhen a Man Loves a Woman\u201d was his first recording for Atlantic Records, after a patient at the hospital introduced him to the record producer Quin Ivy.", "paragraph_id": "5d70410ac8e4820a9b66e543"} +{"question": "What team did Lionel Messi practice with while he was injured?", "paragraph": "The only must-see club match this weekend \u2014 other than Cambuur\u2019s visit to mighty Ajax on Saturday, of course \u2014 is the season\u2019s first Cl\u00e1sico: Barcelona at Real Madrid on Saturday (12:15 p.m., beIN). And the only story to pay attention to related to that is Lionel Messi\u2019s health; Messi has been out for months with a knee injury, but he trained with Barcelona\u2019s B team over the weekend \u2014 reportedly looking sharp \u2014 and may make his return in Madrid. That would surely spice up things a bit.", "answer": "Barcelona\u2019s B team", "sentence": "And the only story to pay attention to related to that is Lionel Messi\u2019s health; Messi has been out for months with a knee injury, but he trained with Barcelona\u2019s B team over the weekend \u2014 reportedly looking sharp \u2014 and may make his return in Madrid.", "paragraph_sentence": "The only must-see club match this weekend \u2014 other than Cambuur\u2019s visit to mighty Ajax on Saturday, of course \u2014 is the season\u2019s first Cl\u00e1sico: Barcelona at Real Madrid on Saturday (12:15 p.m., beIN). And the only story to pay attention to related to that is Lionel Messi\u2019s health; Messi has been out for months with a knee injury, but he trained with Barcelona\u2019s B team over the weekend \u2014 reportedly looking sharp \u2014 and may make his return in Madrid. That would surely spice up things a bit.", "paragraph_answer": "The only must-see club match this weekend \u2014 other than Cambuur\u2019s visit to mighty Ajax on Saturday, of course \u2014 is the season\u2019s first Cl\u00e1sico: Barcelona at Real Madrid on Saturday (12:15 p.m., beIN). And the only story to pay attention to related to that is Lionel Messi\u2019s health; Messi has been out for months with a knee injury, but he trained with Barcelona\u2019s B team over the weekend \u2014 reportedly looking sharp \u2014 and may make his return in Madrid. That would surely spice up things a bit.", "sentence_answer": "And the only story to pay attention to related to that is Lionel Messi\u2019s health; Messi has been out for months with a knee injury, but he trained with Barcelona\u2019s B team over the weekend \u2014 reportedly looking sharp \u2014 and may make his return in Madrid.", "paragraph_id": "5d7063dfc8e4820a9b66f06b"} +{"question": "In banking, what is very advantageous in America?", "paragraph": "FRANKFURT \u2014 Anshu Jain, the co-chief executive of Deutsche Bank, chuckled when he was asked on Monday whether the United States had become inhospitable to foreign banks. \u201cThere is a big advantage to being American in America,\u201d he said. In fact, zealous regulators and aggressive law enforcement authorities have prompted most other European banks to curtail their operations in the United States. On Monday, Deutsche Bank responded to the tense atmosphere with a sweeping plan to shrink its investment bank and reduce its dependence on borrowed money. The changes probably make Deutsche Bank less of a threat to the global financial system. But they are sure to raise questions about whether Germany\u2019s signature bank can continue to compete in the same league as Goldman Sachs or JPMorgan Chase.", "answer": "being American", "sentence": "\u201cThere is a big advantage to being American in America", "paragraph_sentence": "FRANKFURT \u2014 Anshu Jain, the co-chief executive of Deutsche Bank, chuckled when he was asked on Monday whether the United States had become inhospitable to foreign banks. \u201cThere is a big advantage to being American in America ,\u201d he said. In fact, zealous regulators and aggressive law enforcement authorities have prompted most other European banks to curtail their operations in the United States. On Monday, Deutsche Bank responded to the tense atmosphere with a sweeping plan to shrink its investment bank and reduce its dependence on borrowed money. The changes probably make Deutsche Bank less of a threat to the global financial system. But they are sure to raise questions about whether Germany\u2019s signature bank can continue to compete in the same league as Goldman Sachs or JPMorgan Chase.", "paragraph_answer": "FRANKFURT \u2014 Anshu Jain, the co-chief executive of Deutsche Bank, chuckled when he was asked on Monday whether the United States had become inhospitable to foreign banks. \u201cThere is a big advantage to being American in America,\u201d he said. In fact, zealous regulators and aggressive law enforcement authorities have prompted most other European banks to curtail their operations in the United States. On Monday, Deutsche Bank responded to the tense atmosphere with a sweeping plan to shrink its investment bank and reduce its dependence on borrowed money. The changes probably make Deutsche Bank less of a threat to the global financial system. But they are sure to raise questions about whether Germany\u2019s signature bank can continue to compete in the same league as Goldman Sachs or JPMorgan Chase.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThere is a big advantage to being American in America", "paragraph_id": "5d700cccc8e4820a9b66b82a"} +{"question": "how many company directors some of their pay in cash?", "paragraph": "Pay is also on the rise as courts crack down on compensation plans for non-executive directors. A Delaware court ruled this year that plans should be evaluated under stricter standards, particularly where directors were deciding on equity compensation. The Equilar study found that 97.8 percent of S.&P. 500 company directors had some of their pay in cash, 36 percent had some stock and 59.4 percent had restricted stock units. In health care, 70 percent of the companies offered stock units as part of director pay. In financial services, only 48 percent offered units. Director roles matter, too. Non-executive board chairmen had a median retainer of $387,500, up 12.7 percent from 2010.", "answer": "500", "sentence": "500 company directors had some of their pay in cash, 36 percent had some stock and 59.4 percent had restricted stock units.", "paragraph_sentence": "Pay is also on the rise as courts crack down on compensation plans for non-executive directors. A Delaware court ruled this year that plans should be evaluated under stricter standards, particularly where directors were deciding on equity compensation. The Equilar study found that 97.8 percent of S.&P. 500 company directors had some of their pay in cash, 36 percent had some stock and 59.4 percent had restricted stock units. In health care, 70 percent of the companies offered stock units as part of director pay. In financial services, only 48 percent offered units. Director roles matter, too. Non-executive board chairmen had a median retainer of $387,500, up 12.7 percent from 2010.", "paragraph_answer": "Pay is also on the rise as courts crack down on compensation plans for non-executive directors. A Delaware court ruled this year that plans should be evaluated under stricter standards, particularly where directors were deciding on equity compensation. The Equilar study found that 97.8 percent of S.&P. 500 company directors had some of their pay in cash, 36 percent had some stock and 59.4 percent had restricted stock units. In health care, 70 percent of the companies offered stock units as part of director pay. In financial services, only 48 percent offered units. Director roles matter, too. Non-executive board chairmen had a median retainer of $387,500, up 12.7 percent from 2010.", "sentence_answer": " 500 company directors had some of their pay in cash, 36 percent had some stock and 59.4 percent had restricted stock units.", "paragraph_id": "5d70132fc8e4820a9b66bfb5"} +{"question": "What threshold was required for the purchase of F-35 fighter jets?", "paragraph": "He found the resources to commit to the 2 percent threshold, committed to buying F-35 fighter jets and maritime patrol planes for Britain\u2019s new aircraft carriers, and vowed to renew Britain\u2019s submarine-based nuclear deterrent. He is now seeking to follow through on his promise to expand airstrikes against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. Mr. Cameron has announced an increase in military spending in real terms of 3 percent over the next four years, including for special forces, intelligence gathering and a doubling of Britain\u2019s drone fleet. Nevertheless, after the recent conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan, Britons remain wary about involvement in Syria, and Mr. Cameron has had to spend considerable effort cajoling lawmakers \u2014 including in his own party \u2014 to support him.", "answer": "2 percent", "sentence": "He found the resources to commit to the 2 percent threshold, committed to buying F-35 fighter jets and maritime patrol planes for Britain\u2019s new aircraft carriers, and vowed to renew Britain\u2019s submarine-based nuclear deterrent.", "paragraph_sentence": " He found the resources to commit to the 2 percent threshold, committed to buying F-35 fighter jets and maritime patrol planes for Britain\u2019s new aircraft carriers, and vowed to renew Britain\u2019s submarine-based nuclear deterrent. He is now seeking to follow through on his promise to expand airstrikes against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. Mr. Cameron has announced an increase in military spending in real terms of 3 percent over the next four years, including for special forces, intelligence gathering and a doubling of Britain\u2019s drone fleet. Nevertheless, after the recent conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan, Britons remain wary about involvement in Syria, and Mr. Cameron has had to spend considerable effort cajoling lawmakers \u2014 including in his own party \u2014 to support him.", "paragraph_answer": "He found the resources to commit to the 2 percent threshold, committed to buying F-35 fighter jets and maritime patrol planes for Britain\u2019s new aircraft carriers, and vowed to renew Britain\u2019s submarine-based nuclear deterrent. He is now seeking to follow through on his promise to expand airstrikes against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. Mr. Cameron has announced an increase in military spending in real terms of 3 percent over the next four years, including for special forces, intelligence gathering and a doubling of Britain\u2019s drone fleet. Nevertheless, after the recent conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan, Britons remain wary about involvement in Syria, and Mr. Cameron has had to spend considerable effort cajoling lawmakers \u2014 including in his own party \u2014 to support him.", "sentence_answer": "He found the resources to commit to the 2 percent threshold, committed to buying F-35 fighter jets and maritime patrol planes for Britain\u2019s new aircraft carriers, and vowed to renew Britain\u2019s submarine-based nuclear deterrent.", "paragraph_id": "5d704325c8e4820a9b66e687"} +{"question": "Who is associated with the Bridal Bar?", "paragraph": "\u201cPeople don\u2019t want to miss that part of the evening, and thus they\u2019re learning to pace themselves,\u201d said Maureen Farley, director of hospitality at the Plaza hotel in New York, which hosts approximately 60 weddings a year. Eighty percent of those events have after-parties, she said. \u201cThese parties are marathons, not sprints,\u201d Ms. Farley said. \u201cAnd if they consume too much at the wedding, they won\u2019t make it to the next leg, which is where the D.J. and dancing take place.\u201d The after-parties often start at 1:30 a.m. and can run til 4 a.m. What is being served is also helping to control the impulse to overindulge. A growing foodie culture in the millennial generation is putting emphasis on the quality of the meal, craft cocktails and other specialties, said Ms. Walton of the Bridal Bar.", "answer": "Ms. Walton", "sentence": "A growing foodie culture in the millennial generation is putting emphasis on the quality of the meal, craft cocktails and other specialties, said Ms. Walton of the Bridal Bar.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cPeople don\u2019t want to miss that part of the evening, and thus they\u2019re learning to pace themselves,\u201d said Maureen Farley, director of hospitality at the Plaza hotel in New York, which hosts approximately 60 weddings a year. Eighty percent of those events have after-parties, she said. \u201cThese parties are marathons, not sprints,\u201d Ms. Farley said. \u201cAnd if they consume too much at the wedding, they won\u2019t make it to the next leg, which is where the D.J. and dancing take place.\u201d The after-parties often start at 1:30 a.m. and can run til 4 a.m. What is being served is also helping to control the impulse to overindulge. A growing foodie culture in the millennial generation is putting emphasis on the quality of the meal, craft cocktails and other specialties, said Ms. Walton of the Bridal Bar. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cPeople don\u2019t want to miss that part of the evening, and thus they\u2019re learning to pace themselves,\u201d said Maureen Farley, director of hospitality at the Plaza hotel in New York, which hosts approximately 60 weddings a year. Eighty percent of those events have after-parties, she said. \u201cThese parties are marathons, not sprints,\u201d Ms. Farley said. \u201cAnd if they consume too much at the wedding, they won\u2019t make it to the next leg, which is where the D.J. and dancing take place.\u201d The after-parties often start at 1:30 a.m. and can run til 4 a.m. What is being served is also helping to control the impulse to overindulge. A growing foodie culture in the millennial generation is putting emphasis on the quality of the meal, craft cocktails and other specialties, said Ms. Walton of the Bridal Bar.", "sentence_answer": "A growing foodie culture in the millennial generation is putting emphasis on the quality of the meal, craft cocktails and other specialties, said Ms. Walton of the Bridal Bar.", "paragraph_id": "5d70175ac8e4820a9b66c341"} +{"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 .", "paragraph_id": "5d700e53c8e4820a9b66ba3f"} +{"question": "What bracket of the tournament were Nishikori and Warinka competing to enter?", "paragraph": "Nishikori trailed by 6-1 in the third-set tiebreaker before he saved five consecutive match points to level the score at 6-6, sending the resigned crowd into unlikely excitement. But with Wawrinka pinned behind the baseline on the next point, an attempted drop shot by Nishikori hit the bottom of the net tape and slid down onto his side of the court, sending his coach, Michael Chang, similarly slumping into his seat. The error gave Wawrinka a sixth match point, which he converted with an ace for a spot in the semifinals.", "answer": "semifinals", "sentence": "The error gave Wawrinka a sixth match point, which he converted with an ace for a spot in the semifinals .", "paragraph_sentence": "Nishikori trailed by 6-1 in the third-set tiebreaker before he saved five consecutive match points to level the score at 6-6, sending the resigned crowd into unlikely excitement. But with Wawrinka pinned behind the baseline on the next point, an attempted drop shot by Nishikori hit the bottom of the net tape and slid down onto his side of the court, sending his coach, Michael Chang, similarly slumping into his seat. The error gave Wawrinka a sixth match point, which he converted with an ace for a spot in the semifinals . ", "paragraph_answer": "Nishikori trailed by 6-1 in the third-set tiebreaker before he saved five consecutive match points to level the score at 6-6, sending the resigned crowd into unlikely excitement. But with Wawrinka pinned behind the baseline on the next point, an attempted drop shot by Nishikori hit the bottom of the net tape and slid down onto his side of the court, sending his coach, Michael Chang, similarly slumping into his seat. The error gave Wawrinka a sixth match point, which he converted with an ace for a spot in the semifinals .", "sentence_answer": "The error gave Wawrinka a sixth match point, which he converted with an ace for a spot in the semifinals .", "paragraph_id": "5d70895ec8e4820a9b66f4a3"} +{"question": "Who directed \"Tamasha\"?", "paragraph": "\u2605 \u2018Steve Jobs\u2019 (R, 2:02) This three-panel portrait of the Apple co-founder, written by Aaron Sorkin and directed by Danny Boyle, portrays Jobs (Michael Fassbender) as a complicated, ambitious man caught in a tangle of messy personal and business relationships. Isolating Jobs at three crucial moments in his career, the film plays like a fast, busy backstage comedy and ends up being a richly intelligent exploration of our ambivalence about technology, genius and consumer capitalism. (Scott) \u2018Suffragette\u2019 (PG-13, 1:47) Carey Mulligan plays Maud Watts, a laundry worker in London in 1912 who becomes a militant supporter of women\u2019s voting rights. In telling her story, Sarah Gavron (the director) and Abi Morgan (who wrote the screenplay) hit a few soft and sentimental notes, but they also explore the vital and still relevant connection between feminism and class consciousness in modern democratic politics. (Scott) \u2018Tamasha\u2019 (No rating, 2:35, in Hindi) Imtiaz Ali\u2019s Bollywood melodrama begins as an agreeable romance between a vacationing young man (Ranbir Kapoor) and woman (a charismatic but largely squandered Deepika Padukone); morphs into a professional identity crisis for the man; and concludes as a lavish self-serving ode by the director to his own calling. (Webster)", "answer": "Imtiaz Ali", "sentence": "(Scott) \u2018Tamasha\u2019 (No rating, 2:35, in Hindi) Imtiaz Ali \u2019s Bollywood melodrama begins as an agreeable romance between a vacationing young man (Ranbir Kapoor) and woman (a charismatic but largely squandered Deepika Padukone); morphs into a professional identity crisis for the man; and concludes as a lavish self-serving ode by the director to his own calling.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2605 \u2018Steve Jobs\u2019 (R, 2:02) This three-panel portrait of the Apple co-founder, written by Aaron Sorkin and directed by Danny Boyle, portrays Jobs (Michael Fassbender) as a complicated, ambitious man caught in a tangle of messy personal and business relationships. Isolating Jobs at three crucial moments in his career, the film plays like a fast, busy backstage comedy and ends up being a richly intelligent exploration of our ambivalence about technology, genius and consumer capitalism. (Scott) \u2018Suffragette\u2019 (PG-13, 1:47) Carey Mulligan plays Maud Watts, a laundry worker in London in 1912 who becomes a militant supporter of women\u2019s voting rights. In telling her story, Sarah Gavron (the director) and Abi Morgan (who wrote the screenplay) hit a few soft and sentimental notes, but they also explore the vital and still relevant connection between feminism and class consciousness in modern democratic politics. (Scott) \u2018Tamasha\u2019 (No rating, 2:35, in Hindi) Imtiaz Ali \u2019s Bollywood melodrama begins as an agreeable romance between a vacationing young man (Ranbir Kapoor) and woman (a charismatic but largely squandered Deepika Padukone); morphs into a professional identity crisis for the man; and concludes as a lavish self-serving ode by the director to his own calling. (Webster)", "paragraph_answer": "\u2605 \u2018Steve Jobs\u2019 (R, 2:02) This three-panel portrait of the Apple co-founder, written by Aaron Sorkin and directed by Danny Boyle, portrays Jobs (Michael Fassbender) as a complicated, ambitious man caught in a tangle of messy personal and business relationships. Isolating Jobs at three crucial moments in his career, the film plays like a fast, busy backstage comedy and ends up being a richly intelligent exploration of our ambivalence about technology, genius and consumer capitalism. (Scott) \u2018Suffragette\u2019 (PG-13, 1:47) Carey Mulligan plays Maud Watts, a laundry worker in London in 1912 who becomes a militant supporter of women\u2019s voting rights. In telling her story, Sarah Gavron (the director) and Abi Morgan (who wrote the screenplay) hit a few soft and sentimental notes, but they also explore the vital and still relevant connection between feminism and class consciousness in modern democratic politics. (Scott) \u2018Tamasha\u2019 (No rating, 2:35, in Hindi) Imtiaz Ali \u2019s Bollywood melodrama begins as an agreeable romance between a vacationing young man (Ranbir Kapoor) and woman (a charismatic but largely squandered Deepika Padukone); morphs into a professional identity crisis for the man; and concludes as a lavish self-serving ode by the director to his own calling. (Webster)", "sentence_answer": "(Scott) \u2018Tamasha\u2019 (No rating, 2:35, in Hindi) Imtiaz Ali \u2019s Bollywood melodrama begins as an agreeable romance between a vacationing young man (Ranbir Kapoor) and woman (a charismatic but largely squandered Deepika Padukone); morphs into a professional identity crisis for the man; and concludes as a lavish self-serving ode by the director to his own calling.", "paragraph_id": "5d702994c8e4820a9b66d731"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700a73c8e4820a9b66b433"} +{"question": "What do police have to do?", "paragraph": "Kwame Anthony Appiah: If the police haven\u2019t changed the behavior, that suggests they haven\u2019t done enough. Unless this child is a committed lifelong criminal and doesn\u2019t care about this sort of thing, the fact of going before a juvenile court might make a difference. Being scared a little bit by police intervention would be a good thing. I grew up in a place where every adult was Auntie This or Uncle That and everybody was in charge of you. You had absolutely no right as a child to ignore the suggestions, advice and admonishment of other adults; that was one of the reasons we all felt so safe. There would always be somebody looking out for us.", "answer": "changed the behavior", "sentence": "If the police haven\u2019t changed the behavior , that suggests they haven\u2019t done enough.", "paragraph_sentence": "Kwame Anthony Appiah: If the police haven\u2019t changed the behavior , that suggests they haven\u2019t done enough. Unless this child is a committed lifelong criminal and doesn\u2019t care about this sort of thing, the fact of going before a juvenile court might make a difference. Being scared a little bit by police intervention would be a good thing. I grew up in a place where every adult was Auntie This or Uncle That and everybody was in charge of you. You had absolutely no right as a child to ignore the suggestions, advice and admonishment of other adults; that was one of the reasons we all felt so safe. There would always be somebody looking out for us.", "paragraph_answer": "Kwame Anthony Appiah: If the police haven\u2019t changed the behavior , that suggests they haven\u2019t done enough. Unless this child is a committed lifelong criminal and doesn\u2019t care about this sort of thing, the fact of going before a juvenile court might make a difference. Being scared a little bit by police intervention would be a good thing. I grew up in a place where every adult was Auntie This or Uncle That and everybody was in charge of you. You had absolutely no right as a child to ignore the suggestions, advice and admonishment of other adults; that was one of the reasons we all felt so safe. There would always be somebody looking out for us.", "sentence_answer": "If the police haven\u2019t changed the behavior , that suggests they haven\u2019t done enough.", "paragraph_id": "5d7028b2c8e4820a9b66d65f"} +{"question": "What types of devices are hard to disinfect?", "paragraph": "The devices are uniquely difficult to disinfect, and there is no expert consensus on the best way to do so now that standard methods have been called into question. Even when health care providers \u201cappear to be doing everything right, there has been transmission of CRE,\u201d said Dr. Arjun Srinivasan, the associate director for health care associated infection prevention programs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Makers of the special scopes defended their disinfection recommendations. John Haberstock, a spokesman for Pentax Medical, said its cleaning protocols achieved a \u201chigh level disinfection of duodenoscopes.\u201d Diane Rainey, a spokeswoman for Fujifilm, said the company\u2019s instructions to providers \u201care appropriate to maintain patient safety.\u201d", "answer": "duodenoscopes", "sentence": "John Haberstock, a spokesman for Pentax Medical, said its cleaning protocols achieved a \u201chigh level disinfection of duodenoscopes .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "The devices are uniquely difficult to disinfect, and there is no expert consensus on the best way to do so now that standard methods have been called into question. Even when health care providers \u201cappear to be doing everything right, there has been transmission of CRE,\u201d said Dr. Arjun Srinivasan, the associate director for health care associated infection prevention programs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Makers of the special scopes defended their disinfection recommendations. John Haberstock, a spokesman for Pentax Medical, said its cleaning protocols achieved a \u201chigh level disinfection of duodenoscopes .\u201d Diane Rainey, a spokeswoman for Fujifilm, said the company\u2019s instructions to providers \u201care appropriate to maintain patient safety.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The devices are uniquely difficult to disinfect, and there is no expert consensus on the best way to do so now that standard methods have been called into question. Even when health care providers \u201cappear to be doing everything right, there has been transmission of CRE,\u201d said Dr. Arjun Srinivasan, the associate director for health care associated infection prevention programs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Makers of the special scopes defended their disinfection recommendations. John Haberstock, a spokesman for Pentax Medical, said its cleaning protocols achieved a \u201chigh level disinfection of duodenoscopes .\u201d Diane Rainey, a spokeswoman for Fujifilm, said the company\u2019s instructions to providers \u201care appropriate to maintain patient safety.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "John Haberstock, a spokesman for Pentax Medical, said its cleaning protocols achieved a \u201chigh level disinfection of duodenoscopes .\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d7043efc8e4820a9b66e727"} +{"question": "What does PEPS stand for?", "paragraph": "That\u2019s because customers are purchasing cars with so-called PEPS, or Passive Entry, Passive Start capabilities. Rather than needing to pull out a key from one\u2019s pocket or purse, the key sends a signal to the car that it\u2019s nearby, and the car creates a digital \u201chandshake\u201d with the authorized key. Touching the door\u2019s handle unlocks it, and the car is started by pushing a button. The car cannot be locked if the key is left in the car. \u201cThis type of key is a huge convenience for drivers,\u201d said Jeff J. Owens, chief technology officer for Delphi, another supplier of automotive systems. \u201cA watch or phone used instead must offer more than today\u2019s key.\u201d In some ways, they offer less, by increasing the complexity of operating a vehicle. In Tesla\u2019s case, one needs to open the app and then enter a PIN to start the car or unlock the doors. Using the Internet to transfer vehicle starting or unlocking information, while useful in an emergency, \u201cis not a viable way forward,\u201d said David Green, market development director at Volvo.", "answer": "Passive Entry, Passive Start", "sentence": "That\u2019s because customers are purchasing cars with so-called PEPS, or Passive Entry, Passive Start capabilities.", "paragraph_sentence": " That\u2019s because customers are purchasing cars with so-called PEPS, or Passive Entry, Passive Start capabilities. Rather than needing to pull out a key from one\u2019s pocket or purse, the key sends a signal to the car that it\u2019s nearby, and the car creates a digital \u201chandshake\u201d with the authorized key. Touching the door\u2019s handle unlocks it, and the car is started by pushing a button. The car cannot be locked if the key is left in the car. \u201cThis type of key is a huge convenience for drivers,\u201d said Jeff J. Owens, chief technology officer for Delphi, another supplier of automotive systems. \u201cA watch or phone used instead must offer more than today\u2019s key.\u201d In some ways, they offer less, by increasing the complexity of operating a vehicle. In Tesla\u2019s case, one needs to open the app and then enter a PIN to start the car or unlock the doors. Using the Internet to transfer vehicle starting or unlocking information, while useful in an emergency, \u201cis not a viable way forward,\u201d said David Green, market development director at Volvo.", "paragraph_answer": "That\u2019s because customers are purchasing cars with so-called PEPS, or Passive Entry, Passive Start capabilities. Rather than needing to pull out a key from one\u2019s pocket or purse, the key sends a signal to the car that it\u2019s nearby, and the car creates a digital \u201chandshake\u201d with the authorized key. Touching the door\u2019s handle unlocks it, and the car is started by pushing a button. The car cannot be locked if the key is left in the car. \u201cThis type of key is a huge convenience for drivers,\u201d said Jeff J. Owens, chief technology officer for Delphi, another supplier of automotive systems. \u201cA watch or phone used instead must offer more than today\u2019s key.\u201d In some ways, they offer less, by increasing the complexity of operating a vehicle. In Tesla\u2019s case, one needs to open the app and then enter a PIN to start the car or unlock the doors. Using the Internet to transfer vehicle starting or unlocking information, while useful in an emergency, \u201cis not a viable way forward,\u201d said David Green, market development director at Volvo.", "sentence_answer": "That\u2019s because customers are purchasing cars with so-called PEPS, or Passive Entry, Passive Start capabilities.", "paragraph_id": "5d70073ac8e4820a9b66ad1b"} +{"question": "What percentage of American households are not getting enough food to live active, healthy lifestyles?", "paragraph": "To the Editor: Re \u201cFood Waste Is Becoming Serious Economic and Environmental Issue, Report Says\u201d (news article, Feb. 26): You rightly highlight the effects of the loss of wholesome food and emissions of greenhouse gases from landfills. With 14 percent of American households not getting enough food to live active, healthy lifestyles, it is unforgivable to allow wasted food to rot in landfills. To address the 60 percent of wasted food in the United States coming from the commercial sector, the Environmental Protection Agency created the Food Recovery Challenge, which asks critical sectors, including grocers and entertainment venues, to reduce excess purchases and donate surplus food to local hunger relief organizations; more than 36,000 tons was donated in 2013. An astounding amount of wasted food also comes from individual consumers. A family of four wastes an estimated $1,600 worth of food each year. By making small changes in how you buy (like creating a shopping list to buy only what you need), prepare and store food, families can lower their grocery bills and reduce their impact on the environment. MATHY STANISLAUS Assistant Administrator, Office of", "answer": "14", "sentence": "With 14 percent of American households not getting enough food to live active, healthy lifestyles, it is unforgivable to allow wasted food to rot in landfills.", "paragraph_sentence": "To the Editor: Re \u201cFood Waste Is Becoming Serious Economic and Environmental Issue, Report Says\u201d (news article, Feb. 26): You rightly highlight the effects of the loss of wholesome food and emissions of greenhouse gases from landfills. With 14 percent of American households not getting enough food to live active, healthy lifestyles, it is unforgivable to allow wasted food to rot in landfills. To address the 60 percent of wasted food in the United States coming from the commercial sector, the Environmental Protection Agency created the Food Recovery Challenge, which asks critical sectors, including grocers and entertainment venues, to reduce excess purchases and donate surplus food to local hunger relief organizations; more than 36,000 tons was donated in 2013. An astounding amount of wasted food also comes from individual consumers. A family of four wastes an estimated $1,600 worth of food each year. By making small changes in how you buy (like creating a shopping list to buy only what you need), prepare and store food, families can lower their grocery bills and reduce their impact on the environment. MATHY STANISLAUS Assistant Administrator, Office of", "paragraph_answer": "To the Editor: Re \u201cFood Waste Is Becoming Serious Economic and Environmental Issue, Report Says\u201d (news article, Feb. 26): You rightly highlight the effects of the loss of wholesome food and emissions of greenhouse gases from landfills. With 14 percent of American households not getting enough food to live active, healthy lifestyles, it is unforgivable to allow wasted food to rot in landfills. To address the 60 percent of wasted food in the United States coming from the commercial sector, the Environmental Protection Agency created the Food Recovery Challenge, which asks critical sectors, including grocers and entertainment venues, to reduce excess purchases and donate surplus food to local hunger relief organizations; more than 36,000 tons was donated in 2013. An astounding amount of wasted food also comes from individual consumers. A family of four wastes an estimated $1,600 worth of food each year. By making small changes in how you buy (like creating a shopping list to buy only what you need), prepare and store food, families can lower their grocery bills and reduce their impact on the environment. MATHY STANISLAUS Assistant Administrator, Office of", "sentence_answer": "With 14 percent of American households not getting enough food to live active, healthy lifestyles, it is unforgivable to allow wasted food to rot in landfills.", "paragraph_id": "5d700701c8e4820a9b66ac94"} +{"question": "What changes do one some of the New bills want to make to the legislature?", "paragraph": "For his part, Mr. Heastie, through a spokesman, declined to comment on Mr. Silver\u2019s case. In comments to reporters last week, however, he said he was \u201cjust not sure\u201d what new ethics laws could be passed to stop the series of scandals that have shaken Albany, noting that several new laws passed last spring have yet to take effect. \u201cWhat do you think legislatively we could do that would respond to what either Sheldon Silver or Dean Skelos is on trial for?\u201d he said. That is not to say that legislators will not take another crack at addressing ethics in the coming session. Mr. Kolb, for instance, suggested a cap on outside income, an issue that has percolated through the Silver and Skelos trials. New bills to make the Legislature full time, and to increase lawmakers\u2019 pay, may be pursued, a cause taken up by editorial boards whose outrage continues to boil at scandals in the capital.", "answer": "to make the Legislature full time", "sentence": "New bills to make the Legislature full time , and to increase lawmakers\u2019 pay, may be pursued, a cause taken up by editorial boards whose outrage continues to boil at scandals in the capital.", "paragraph_sentence": "For his part, Mr. Heastie, through a spokesman, declined to comment on Mr. Silver\u2019s case. In comments to reporters last week, however, he said he was \u201cjust not sure\u201d what new ethics laws could be passed to stop the series of scandals that have shaken Albany, noting that several new laws passed last spring have yet to take effect. \u201cWhat do you think legislatively we could do that would respond to what either Sheldon Silver or Dean Skelos is on trial for?\u201d he said. That is not to say that legislators will not take another crack at addressing ethics in the coming session. Mr. Kolb, for instance, suggested a cap on outside income, an issue that has percolated through the Silver and Skelos trials. New bills to make the Legislature full time , and to increase lawmakers\u2019 pay, may be pursued, a cause taken up by editorial boards whose outrage continues to boil at scandals in the capital. ", "paragraph_answer": "For his part, Mr. Heastie, through a spokesman, declined to comment on Mr. Silver\u2019s case. In comments to reporters last week, however, he said he was \u201cjust not sure\u201d what new ethics laws could be passed to stop the series of scandals that have shaken Albany, noting that several new laws passed last spring have yet to take effect. \u201cWhat do you think legislatively we could do that would respond to what either Sheldon Silver or Dean Skelos is on trial for?\u201d he said. That is not to say that legislators will not take another crack at addressing ethics in the coming session. Mr. Kolb, for instance, suggested a cap on outside income, an issue that has percolated through the Silver and Skelos trials. New bills to make the Legislature full time , and to increase lawmakers\u2019 pay, may be pursued, a cause taken up by editorial boards whose outrage continues to boil at scandals in the capital.", "sentence_answer": "New bills to make the Legislature full time , and to increase lawmakers\u2019 pay, may be pursued, a cause taken up by editorial boards whose outrage continues to boil at scandals in the capital.", "paragraph_id": "5d701d4dc8e4820a9b66c8d0"} +{"question": "At which university hospital does William A. Rutala work?", "paragraph": "A duodenoscope is a long, flexible tube with a tiny camera at the tip. It is typically inserted down the throat of an anesthetized patient to examine the very small ducts that drain the liver or gallbladder. The inner tubing is intricate and difficult to clean, and can harbor up to 10 billion individual bacteria, said William A. Rutala, an infection control specialist at University of North Carolina Hospitals. By contrast, a surgical forceps may have roughly 100 bacteria on its surface after use in the operating room, he said, and is easily cleaned with heat, detergents and high-pressure sprays.", "answer": "University of North Carolina", "sentence": "The inner tubing is intricate and difficult to clean, and can harbor up to 10 billion individual bacteria, said William A. Rutala, an infection control specialist at University of North Carolina Hospitals.", "paragraph_sentence": "A duodenoscope is a long, flexible tube with a tiny camera at the tip. It is typically inserted down the throat of an anesthetized patient to examine the very small ducts that drain the liver or gallbladder. The inner tubing is intricate and difficult to clean, and can harbor up to 10 billion individual bacteria, said William A. Rutala, an infection control specialist at University of North Carolina Hospitals. By contrast, a surgical forceps may have roughly 100 bacteria on its surface after use in the operating room, he said, and is easily cleaned with heat, detergents and high-pressure sprays.", "paragraph_answer": "A duodenoscope is a long, flexible tube with a tiny camera at the tip. It is typically inserted down the throat of an anesthetized patient to examine the very small ducts that drain the liver or gallbladder. The inner tubing is intricate and difficult to clean, and can harbor up to 10 billion individual bacteria, said William A. Rutala, an infection control specialist at University of North Carolina Hospitals. By contrast, a surgical forceps may have roughly 100 bacteria on its surface after use in the operating room, he said, and is easily cleaned with heat, detergents and high-pressure sprays.", "sentence_answer": "The inner tubing is intricate and difficult to clean, and can harbor up to 10 billion individual bacteria, said William A. Rutala, an infection control specialist at University of North Carolina Hospitals.", "paragraph_id": "5d704486c8e4820a9b66e786"} +{"question": "What did a group of retired military officers say would be threatened as they argued in front of the supreme court in 2003?", "paragraph": "WASHINGTON \u2014 The most influential friend-of-the-court brief in living memory was filed by a group of retired military officers in a 2003 affirmative action case. When the case was argued, the justices echoed the brief\u2019s argument that military preparedness would be threatened if service academies could not ensure a diverse officer corps. Justice Sandra Day O\u2019Connor\u2019s majority opinion, allowing race-conscious admissions at public universities, quoted at length from the brief. The law firm that filed the brief, now called Sidley Austin, has filed a new one by former military officials in the same-sex marriage cases to be heard next week. Their message this time is that the patchwork of marriage laws around the country hurts military families and threatens national security.", "answer": "military preparedness", "sentence": "that military preparedness would be threatened if service academies could not ensure a diverse officer corps.", "paragraph_sentence": "WASHINGTON \u2014 The most influential friend-of-the-court brief in living memory was filed by a group of retired military officers in a 2003 affirmative action case. When the case was argued, the justices echoed the brief\u2019s argument that military preparedness would be threatened if service academies could not ensure a diverse officer corps. Justice Sandra Day O\u2019Connor\u2019s majority opinion, allowing race-conscious admissions at public universities, quoted at length from the brief. The law firm that filed the brief, now called Sidley Austin, has filed a new one by former military officials in the same-sex marriage cases to be heard next week. Their message this time is that the patchwork of marriage laws around the country hurts military families and threatens national security.", "paragraph_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 The most influential friend-of-the-court brief in living memory was filed by a group of retired military officers in a 2003 affirmative action case. When the case was argued, the justices echoed the brief\u2019s argument that military preparedness would be threatened if service academies could not ensure a diverse officer corps. Justice Sandra Day O\u2019Connor\u2019s majority opinion, allowing race-conscious admissions at public universities, quoted at length from the brief. The law firm that filed the brief, now called Sidley Austin, has filed a new one by former military officials in the same-sex marriage cases to be heard next week. Their message this time is that the patchwork of marriage laws around the country hurts military families and threatens national security.", "sentence_answer": "that military preparedness would be threatened if service academies could not ensure a diverse officer corps.", "paragraph_id": "5d700796c8e4820a9b66ae1d"} +{"question": "Who is Amin Hassan Omar?", "paragraph": "Ibrahim Ghandour, a Sudanese government negotiator, attributed the failure of the talks to the rebels \u201cbeing held hostage\u201d to their alliances with one another. Yasser Arman, a negotiator with the SPLM-N, said the government was not able to make firm decisions. \u201cOutstanding issues have been identified and they need decisions,\u201d he said. The government said it did not want to revisit issues relating to Darfur that had already agreed upon with one of the groups in 2011. \u201cPerhaps a new faction will come and say an agreement in Addis Ababa does not concern us and we start all over again,\u201d said Amin Hassan Omar, a government negotiator. Some have called for greater international involvement in the negotiations. In what some see as a breakthrough, Sudan\u2019s rebels, opposition parties and civil society groups signed a declaration late last year, known as the Sudan Call, uniting efforts to push for change in Sudan, but the impact of the declaration remains to be seen. \u201cIt has unified the opposition,\u201d said Mahjoub Mohamed Salih, editor in chief of Al-Ayam newspaper in Khartoum. \u201cBut it remains to be seen how it will be used and what political power it will bring.\u201d Talks are to resume this month, but Mr. Salih is not holding his breath. \u201cYou have to be either a prophet or fool to predict what will happen in Sudan,\u201d he said. For many Sudanese, though, the urgency is clear. \u201cThere needs to be compromises from all sides for the sake of the people,\u201d said Hamid Hussein, 45, a used-books seller in downtown Khartoum. He is originally from South Kordofan, where fighting continues. \u201cWe are the ones who pay the price of war,\u201d he said.", "answer": "government negotiator", "sentence": "Ibrahim Ghandour, a Sudanese government negotiator , attributed the failure of the talks to the rebels \u201cbeing held hostage\u201d to their alliances with one another.", "paragraph_sentence": " Ibrahim Ghandour, a Sudanese government negotiator , attributed the failure of the talks to the rebels \u201cbeing held hostage\u201d to their alliances with one another. Yasser Arman, a negotiator with the SPLM-N, said the government was not able to make firm decisions. \u201cOutstanding issues have been identified and they need decisions,\u201d he said. The government said it did not want to revisit issues relating to Darfur that had already agreed upon with one of the groups in 2011. \u201cPerhaps a new faction will come and say an agreement in Addis Ababa does not concern us and we start all over again,\u201d said Amin Hassan Omar, a government negotiator. Some have called for greater international involvement in the negotiations. In what some see as a breakthrough, Sudan\u2019s rebels, opposition parties and civil society groups signed a declaration late last year, known as the Sudan Call, uniting efforts to push for change in Sudan, but the impact of the declaration remains to be seen. \u201cIt has unified the opposition,\u201d said Mahjoub Mohamed Salih, editor in chief of Al-Ayam newspaper in Khartoum. \u201cBut it remains to be seen how it will be used and what political power it will bring.\u201d Talks are to resume this month, but Mr. Salih is not holding his breath. \u201cYou have to be either a prophet or fool to predict what will happen in Sudan,\u201d he said. For many Sudanese, though, the urgency is clear. \u201cThere needs to be compromises from all sides for the sake of the people,\u201d said Hamid Hussein, 45, a used-books seller in downtown Khartoum. He is originally from South Kordofan, where fighting continues. \u201cWe are the ones who pay the price of war,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "Ibrahim Ghandour, a Sudanese government negotiator , attributed the failure of the talks to the rebels \u201cbeing held hostage\u201d to their alliances with one another. Yasser Arman, a negotiator with the SPLM-N, said the government was not able to make firm decisions. \u201cOutstanding issues have been identified and they need decisions,\u201d he said. The government said it did not want to revisit issues relating to Darfur that had already agreed upon with one of the groups in 2011. \u201cPerhaps a new faction will come and say an agreement in Addis Ababa does not concern us and we start all over again,\u201d said Amin Hassan Omar, a government negotiator. Some have called for greater international involvement in the negotiations. In what some see as a breakthrough, Sudan\u2019s rebels, opposition parties and civil society groups signed a declaration late last year, known as the Sudan Call, uniting efforts to push for change in Sudan, but the impact of the declaration remains to be seen. \u201cIt has unified the opposition,\u201d said Mahjoub Mohamed Salih, editor in chief of Al-Ayam newspaper in Khartoum. \u201cBut it remains to be seen how it will be used and what political power it will bring.\u201d Talks are to resume this month, but Mr. Salih is not holding his breath. \u201cYou have to be either a prophet or fool to predict what will happen in Sudan,\u201d he said. For many Sudanese, though, the urgency is clear. \u201cThere needs to be compromises from all sides for the sake of the people,\u201d said Hamid Hussein, 45, a used-books seller in downtown Khartoum. He is originally from South Kordofan, where fighting continues. \u201cWe are the ones who pay the price of war,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "Ibrahim Ghandour, a Sudanese government negotiator , attributed the failure of the talks to the rebels \u201cbeing held hostage\u201d to their alliances with one another.", "paragraph_id": "5d703f90c8e4820a9b66e485"} +{"question": "Where were the cars with 1.6-liter motors imported from?", "paragraph": "Beginning with the 2013 model year, cars like the Passat were equipped with a system that uses the chemical urea to neutralize nitrogen oxide emissions and is considered effective when properly configured. Those vehicles may be easier to repair. Volkswagen did not sell any engines smaller than 2 liters in the United States, though a small number of cars with 1.6-liter motors may have been imported from Mexico or other countries. Representatives of Volkswagen and its Audi division have been in talks with the Environmental Protection Agency about how to make cars in the United States compliant.", "answer": "Mexico", "sentence": "Volkswagen did not sell any engines smaller than 2 liters in the United States, though a small number of cars with 1.6-liter motors may have been imported from Mexico or other countries.", "paragraph_sentence": "Beginning with the 2013 model year, cars like the Passat were equipped with a system that uses the chemical urea to neutralize nitrogen oxide emissions and is considered effective when properly configured. Those vehicles may be easier to repair. Volkswagen did not sell any engines smaller than 2 liters in the United States, though a small number of cars with 1.6-liter motors may have been imported from Mexico or other countries. Representatives of Volkswagen and its Audi division have been in talks with the Environmental Protection Agency about how to make cars in the United States compliant.", "paragraph_answer": "Beginning with the 2013 model year, cars like the Passat were equipped with a system that uses the chemical urea to neutralize nitrogen oxide emissions and is considered effective when properly configured. Those vehicles may be easier to repair. Volkswagen did not sell any engines smaller than 2 liters in the United States, though a small number of cars with 1.6-liter motors may have been imported from Mexico or other countries. Representatives of Volkswagen and its Audi division have been in talks with the Environmental Protection Agency about how to make cars in the United States compliant.", "sentence_answer": "Volkswagen did not sell any engines smaller than 2 liters in the United States, though a small number of cars with 1.6-liter motors may have been imported from Mexico or other countries.", "paragraph_id": "5d709037c8e4820a9b66f57d"} +{"question": "What car does Sally Mann drive?", "paragraph": "The doorbell at the Mann home in Lexington, Va., is a small, black, wrought-iron breast. Visitors announce themselves by pressing a red nipple within the raised areola. Like the red-metal dragons that line the driveway or the 20-by-24-inch blowups of the children in the foyer or the photograph on the living room wall of Sally Mann\u2019s father, dead in his bathrobe, the doorbell seems designed to give a start to the uninitiated and to put some comic distance between the occupants and their neighbors. The same attitude of defiance is there in the cover portrait of \u201cImmediate Family.\u201d Bare-chested with arms crossed or akimbo, the three little Manns level their gaze at the world. Children and house both project the sensibilities of Sally Mann herself. A 41-year-old dark-haired beauty whose turned-up nose accentuates a natural hauteur, she is a cool mom. With her brood safely strapped in, she drives a black BMW 735i, very fast, and favors a subdued, asexual preppy look \u2014 turtle-necks and T-shirts, cut-off shorts, dirty Reeboks. Lexington is a genteel town, site of Stonewall Jackson\u2019s house, Washington and Lee University and the Virginia Military Institute. Born and raised here, married to the same man for 22 years, Mann is secure enough in her surroundings to take liberties with the mores of a place only 50 miles from the headquarters of the Rev. Jerry Falwell and his Moral Majority. \u201cI think the South depends on its eccentrics,\u201d she says one summer afternoon on the back porch as Jessie and Virginia weave in and out of the house. (Emmett is away at camp.) \u201cIt loves them, and it rewards them in lots of ways. This community allows itself to be scandalized by me and by my work, but they love it. What else would they do if it wasn\u2019t for me? I take being iconoclastic sort of seriously. It\u2019s my role here.\u201d Ex-\u201ddirt hippies\u201d who still grow much of their own food and until a decade and a half ago barely made enough money to pay taxes, Sally and Larry Mann are a tight couple. Both \u201cImmediate Family\u201d and \u201cAt Twelve,\u201d her portraits of local girls on the cusp of puberty, are dedicated to him. While she has pursued her photography career with singleminded purpose, he has been a blacksmith and a two-term City Councilman; recently, he got a law degree. His office in town is 10 minutes away, and he walks home nearly every day for lunch. Their house has an airy mood of understated comfort, its three levels overlooking a wisteria arbor and a well-tended vegetable garden in a yard that slopes down to a creek. Rope swings and hammocks hang from ash-leaved maples. The decor includes photographs by Diane Arbus and Emmet Gowin, both important figures for Mann; walls of books; marble torsos of nude women; finches in cages and flying free; the skeletons of lizards and cats. An expansion completed this year provides each child his or her own room; Sally and Larry reside in a connecting wing, which also houses her new darkroom and offices. To meet the demand for her work, she can now afford to hire an assistant. The slow, wet air of southern Virginia in July and August, when even the trees perspire, serves as a backdrop for Mann\u2019s idylls of leisure. \u201cEven though I take pictures of my children, they\u2019re still about here,\u201d she says. \u201cIt exerts a hold on me that I can\u2019t define.\u201d", "answer": "BMW 735i", "sentence": "With her brood safely strapped in, she drives a black BMW 735i , very fast, and favors a subdued, asexual preppy look \u2014 turtle-necks and T-shirts, cut-off shorts, dirty Reeboks.", "paragraph_sentence": "The doorbell at the Mann home in Lexington, Va., is a small, black, wrought-iron breast. Visitors announce themselves by pressing a red nipple within the raised areola. Like the red-metal dragons that line the driveway or the 20-by-24-inch blowups of the children in the foyer or the photograph on the living room wall of Sally Mann\u2019s father, dead in his bathrobe, the doorbell seems designed to give a start to the uninitiated and to put some comic distance between the occupants and their neighbors. The same attitude of defiance is there in the cover portrait of \u201cImmediate Family.\u201d Bare-chested with arms crossed or akimbo, the three little Manns level their gaze at the world. Children and house both project the sensibilities of Sally Mann herself. A 41-year-old dark-haired beauty whose turned-up nose accentuates a natural hauteur, she is a cool mom. With her brood safely strapped in, she drives a black BMW 735i , very fast, and favors a subdued, asexual preppy look \u2014 turtle-necks and T-shirts, cut-off shorts, dirty Reeboks. Lexington is a genteel town, site of Stonewall Jackson\u2019s house, Washington and Lee University and the Virginia Military Institute. Born and raised here, married to the same man for 22 years, Mann is secure enough in her surroundings to take liberties with the mores of a place only 50 miles from the headquarters of the Rev. Jerry Falwell and his Moral Majority. \u201cI think the South depends on its eccentrics,\u201d she says one summer afternoon on the back porch as Jessie and Virginia weave in and out of the house. (Emmett is away at camp.) \u201cIt loves them, and it rewards them in lots of ways. This community allows itself to be scandalized by me and by my work, but they love it. What else would they do if it wasn\u2019t for me? I take being iconoclastic sort of seriously. It\u2019s my role here.\u201d Ex-\u201ddirt hippies\u201d who still grow much of their own food and until a decade and a half ago barely made enough money to pay taxes, Sally and Larry Mann are a tight couple. Both \u201cImmediate Family\u201d and \u201cAt Twelve,\u201d her portraits of local girls on the cusp of puberty, are dedicated to him. While she has pursued her photography career with singleminded purpose, he has been a blacksmith and a two-term City Councilman; recently, he got a law degree. His office in town is 10 minutes away, and he walks home nearly every day for lunch. Their house has an airy mood of understated comfort, its three levels overlooking a wisteria arbor and a well-tended vegetable garden in a yard that slopes down to a creek. Rope swings and hammocks hang from ash-leaved maples. The decor includes photographs by Diane Arbus and Emmet Gowin, both important figures for Mann; walls of books; marble torsos of nude women; finches in cages and flying free; the skeletons of lizards and cats. An expansion completed this year provides each child his or her own room; Sally and Larry reside in a connecting wing, which also houses her new darkroom and offices. To meet the demand for her work, she can now afford to hire an assistant. The slow, wet air of southern Virginia in July and August, when even the trees perspire, serves as a backdrop for Mann\u2019s idylls of leisure. \u201cEven though I take pictures of my children, they\u2019re still about here,\u201d she says. \u201cIt exerts a hold on me that I can\u2019t define.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The doorbell at the Mann home in Lexington, Va., is a small, black, wrought-iron breast. Visitors announce themselves by pressing a red nipple within the raised areola. Like the red-metal dragons that line the driveway or the 20-by-24-inch blowups of the children in the foyer or the photograph on the living room wall of Sally Mann\u2019s father, dead in his bathrobe, the doorbell seems designed to give a start to the uninitiated and to put some comic distance between the occupants and their neighbors. The same attitude of defiance is there in the cover portrait of \u201cImmediate Family.\u201d Bare-chested with arms crossed or akimbo, the three little Manns level their gaze at the world. Children and house both project the sensibilities of Sally Mann herself. A 41-year-old dark-haired beauty whose turned-up nose accentuates a natural hauteur, she is a cool mom. With her brood safely strapped in, she drives a black BMW 735i , very fast, and favors a subdued, asexual preppy look \u2014 turtle-necks and T-shirts, cut-off shorts, dirty Reeboks. Lexington is a genteel town, site of Stonewall Jackson\u2019s house, Washington and Lee University and the Virginia Military Institute. Born and raised here, married to the same man for 22 years, Mann is secure enough in her surroundings to take liberties with the mores of a place only 50 miles from the headquarters of the Rev. Jerry Falwell and his Moral Majority. \u201cI think the South depends on its eccentrics,\u201d she says one summer afternoon on the back porch as Jessie and Virginia weave in and out of the house. (Emmett is away at camp.) \u201cIt loves them, and it rewards them in lots of ways. This community allows itself to be scandalized by me and by my work, but they love it. What else would they do if it wasn\u2019t for me? I take being iconoclastic sort of seriously. It\u2019s my role here.\u201d Ex-\u201ddirt hippies\u201d who still grow much of their own food and until a decade and a half ago barely made enough money to pay taxes, Sally and Larry Mann are a tight couple. Both \u201cImmediate Family\u201d and \u201cAt Twelve,\u201d her portraits of local girls on the cusp of puberty, are dedicated to him. While she has pursued her photography career with singleminded purpose, he has been a blacksmith and a two-term City Councilman; recently, he got a law degree. His office in town is 10 minutes away, and he walks home nearly every day for lunch. Their house has an airy mood of understated comfort, its three levels overlooking a wisteria arbor and a well-tended vegetable garden in a yard that slopes down to a creek. Rope swings and hammocks hang from ash-leaved maples. The decor includes photographs by Diane Arbus and Emmet Gowin, both important figures for Mann; walls of books; marble torsos of nude women; finches in cages and flying free; the skeletons of lizards and cats. An expansion completed this year provides each child his or her own room; Sally and Larry reside in a connecting wing, which also houses her new darkroom and offices. To meet the demand for her work, she can now afford to hire an assistant. The slow, wet air of southern Virginia in July and August, when even the trees perspire, serves as a backdrop for Mann\u2019s idylls of leisure. \u201cEven though I take pictures of my children, they\u2019re still about here,\u201d she says. \u201cIt exerts a hold on me that I can\u2019t define.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "With her brood safely strapped in, she drives a black BMW 735i , very fast, and favors a subdued, asexual preppy look \u2014 turtle-necks and T-shirts, cut-off shorts, dirty Reeboks.", "paragraph_id": "5d700606c8e4820a9b66aa58"} +{"question": "Commonly referred to as Obamacare, what is the official name of Obama's flagship healthcare reform act?", "paragraph": "Consider Idaho, arguably the reddest state in the union, where Republicans control everything but a handful of latte stands. After much bluster and protest, Idaho politicians caved and set up a state health care exchange under Obamacare. To the surprise of the experts, Idahoans have embraced the private coverage available under the Affordable Care Act \u2014 \u201cone of the most successful enrollments of any state,\u201d as Kaiser Health News reported. Obama was in Boise on Wednesday, speaking to a crowd of more than 6,000 people at an event where all tickets were gone within an hour. \u201cNow there are 10 black people in Idaho,\u201d was one of the tweets from Boise. The president was fully energized, jocular, primed for a strong finish. A handful of protesters held up the usual hate posters, one comparing him to Hitler. But it did not escape notice that his motorcade passed a Shell station selling regular gasoline for $1.77 a gallon.", "answer": "the Affordable Care Act", "sentence": "To the surprise of the experts, Idahoans have embraced the private coverage available under the Affordable Care Act \u2014 \u201cone of the most successful enrollments of any state,\u201d as Kaiser Health News reported.", "paragraph_sentence": "Consider Idaho, arguably the reddest state in the union, where Republicans control everything but a handful of latte stands. After much bluster and protest, Idaho politicians caved and set up a state health care exchange under Obamacare. To the surprise of the experts, Idahoans have embraced the private coverage available under the Affordable Care Act \u2014 \u201cone of the most successful enrollments of any state,\u201d as Kaiser Health News reported. Obama was in Boise on Wednesday, speaking to a crowd of more than 6,000 people at an event where all tickets were gone within an hour. \u201cNow there are 10 black people in Idaho,\u201d was one of the tweets from Boise. The president was fully energized, jocular, primed for a strong finish. A handful of protesters held up the usual hate posters, one comparing him to Hitler. But it did not escape notice that his motorcade passed a Shell station selling regular gasoline for $1.77 a gallon.", "paragraph_answer": "Consider Idaho, arguably the reddest state in the union, where Republicans control everything but a handful of latte stands. After much bluster and protest, Idaho politicians caved and set up a state health care exchange under Obamacare. To the surprise of the experts, Idahoans have embraced the private coverage available under the Affordable Care Act \u2014 \u201cone of the most successful enrollments of any state,\u201d as Kaiser Health News reported. Obama was in Boise on Wednesday, speaking to a crowd of more than 6,000 people at an event where all tickets were gone within an hour. \u201cNow there are 10 black people in Idaho,\u201d was one of the tweets from Boise. The president was fully energized, jocular, primed for a strong finish. A handful of protesters held up the usual hate posters, one comparing him to Hitler. But it did not escape notice that his motorcade passed a Shell station selling regular gasoline for $1.77 a gallon.", "sentence_answer": "To the surprise of the experts, Idahoans have embraced the private coverage available under the Affordable Care Act \u2014 \u201cone of the most successful enrollments of any state,\u201d as Kaiser Health News reported.", "paragraph_id": "5d703769c8e4820a9b66e0b0"} +{"question": "How many seats did Daw Aung San Suu Kyi's party National League for Democracy win?", "paragraph": "BANGKOK \u2014 Myanmar\u2019s election commission on Friday announced the final tally of the country\u2019s Nov. 8 landmark election, a rout by the opposition, led by the Nobel Peace Prize laureate Daw Aung San Suu Kyi. Her party, the National League for Democracy, won 390 seats compared with 42 for the governing party, a state-run television station reported in its Friday evening broadcast. The remaining 59 available seats in Parliament were won by smaller parties. One-quarter of the seats were not contested and are controlled by the military.", "answer": "390 seats", "sentence": "Her party, the National League for Democracy, won 390 seats compared with 42 for the governing party, a state-run television station reported in its Friday evening broadcast.", "paragraph_sentence": "BANGKOK \u2014 Myanmar\u2019s election commission on Friday announced the final tally of the country\u2019s Nov. 8 landmark election, a rout by the opposition, led by the Nobel Peace Prize laureate Daw Aung San Suu Kyi. Her party, the National League for Democracy, won 390 seats compared with 42 for the governing party, a state-run television station reported in its Friday evening broadcast. The remaining 59 available seats in Parliament were won by smaller parties. One-quarter of the seats were not contested and are controlled by the military.", "paragraph_answer": "BANGKOK \u2014 Myanmar\u2019s election commission on Friday announced the final tally of the country\u2019s Nov. 8 landmark election, a rout by the opposition, led by the Nobel Peace Prize laureate Daw Aung San Suu Kyi. Her party, the National League for Democracy, won 390 seats compared with 42 for the governing party, a state-run television station reported in its Friday evening broadcast. The remaining 59 available seats in Parliament were won by smaller parties. One-quarter of the seats were not contested and are controlled by the military.", "sentence_answer": "Her party, the National League for Democracy, won 390 seats compared with 42 for the governing party, a state-run television station reported in its Friday evening broadcast.", "paragraph_id": "5d70076ec8e4820a9b66ad8e"} +{"question": "Who is the Clinton County district attorney?", "paragraph": "The investigation, and a review of the corrections agency\u2019s policies and procedures at Clinton by the office of the state inspector general, Catherine Leahy Scott, is continuing. Mr. Sweat\u2019s account, along with interviews of corrections officers and prison officials, documents and reviews of other evidence, will no doubt play a significant role in determining what went wrong at the prison and within the culture of the agency. An initial investigation led to the arrest of Ms. Mitchell. The charges, brought by the Clinton County district attorney, Andrew M. Wylie, accused her of smuggling hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools into the prison. The superintendent at Clinton, two senior members of his staff and nine correction officers were also placed on administrative leave, according to prison agency officials, who said the superintendent was expected to retire at the end of July.", "answer": "Andrew M. Wylie", "sentence": "The charges, brought by the Clinton County district attorney, Andrew M. Wylie , accused her of smuggling hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools into the prison.", "paragraph_sentence": "The investigation, and a review of the corrections agency\u2019s policies and procedures at Clinton by the office of the state inspector general, Catherine Leahy Scott, is continuing. Mr. Sweat\u2019s account, along with interviews of corrections officers and prison officials, documents and reviews of other evidence, will no doubt play a significant role in determining what went wrong at the prison and within the culture of the agency. An initial investigation led to the arrest of Ms. Mitchell. The charges, brought by the Clinton County district attorney, Andrew M. Wylie , accused her of smuggling hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools into the prison. The superintendent at Clinton, two senior members of his staff and nine correction officers were also placed on administrative leave, according to prison agency officials, who said the superintendent was expected to retire at the end of July.", "paragraph_answer": "The investigation, and a review of the corrections agency\u2019s policies and procedures at Clinton by the office of the state inspector general, Catherine Leahy Scott, is continuing. Mr. Sweat\u2019s account, along with interviews of corrections officers and prison officials, documents and reviews of other evidence, will no doubt play a significant role in determining what went wrong at the prison and within the culture of the agency. An initial investigation led to the arrest of Ms. Mitchell. The charges, brought by the Clinton County district attorney, Andrew M. Wylie , accused her of smuggling hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools into the prison. The superintendent at Clinton, two senior members of his staff and nine correction officers were also placed on administrative leave, according to prison agency officials, who said the superintendent was expected to retire at the end of July.", "sentence_answer": "The charges, brought by the Clinton County district attorney, Andrew M. Wylie , accused her of smuggling hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools into the prison.", "paragraph_id": "5d7058e5c8e4820a9b66edea"} +{"question": "What kind of deal was referred to with Staples and Office DePot stores being merged?", "paragraph": "Major markets in Europe ended mixed. France\u2019s CAC 40 rose 0.4 percent and Germany\u2019s DAX edged up 0.2 percent. Britain\u2019s FTSE 100 closed with a loss of 0.2 percent. In the United States, Staples announced that it was buying Office Depot for $6 billion in a widely anticipated merger of the two largest office supply retailers. The cash-and-stock deal comes a little more than a year after Office Depot merged with OfficeMax, and still needs approval from regulators. Staples shares dropped $2.28, or 12 percent, to $16.73.", "answer": "cash-and-stock", "sentence": "The cash-and-stock deal comes a little more than a year after Office Depot merged with OfficeMax, and still needs approval from regulators.", "paragraph_sentence": "Major markets in Europe ended mixed. France\u2019s CAC 40 rose 0.4 percent and Germany\u2019s DAX edged up 0.2 percent. Britain\u2019s FTSE 100 closed with a loss of 0.2 percent. In the United States, Staples announced that it was buying Office Depot for $6 billion in a widely anticipated merger of the two largest office supply retailers. The cash-and-stock deal comes a little more than a year after Office Depot merged with OfficeMax, and still needs approval from regulators. Staples shares dropped $2.28, or 12 percent, to $16.73.", "paragraph_answer": "Major markets in Europe ended mixed. France\u2019s CAC 40 rose 0.4 percent and Germany\u2019s DAX edged up 0.2 percent. Britain\u2019s FTSE 100 closed with a loss of 0.2 percent. In the United States, Staples announced that it was buying Office Depot for $6 billion in a widely anticipated merger of the two largest office supply retailers. The cash-and-stock deal comes a little more than a year after Office Depot merged with OfficeMax, and still needs approval from regulators. Staples shares dropped $2.28, or 12 percent, to $16.73.", "sentence_answer": "The cash-and-stock deal comes a little more than a year after Office Depot merged with OfficeMax, and still needs approval from regulators.", "paragraph_id": "5d703907c8e4820a9b66e165"} +{"question": "Where was the wine made?", "paragraph": "On a balmy September evening, the place was marked by the hushed whispers of diners trying to figure out their first dish, ourselves included. After a cursory, but necessary, explanation from one of the chefs, we all tucked into fresh tortellini stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion in an Iranian lemon bouillon with chunks of orange-hued Mimolette cheese. This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes, then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e. Sesame ice cream crowned with crumbled hazelnuts and fresh figs ended the meal. Going against the local grain, the wine offering is a careful edit of foreign producers. \u201cThe idea behind the wine was like our cooking: Make it as international as possible,\u201d Mr. Lahaut said.", "answer": "foreign producers", "sentence": "Going against the local grain, the wine offering is a careful edit of foreign producers .", "paragraph_sentence": "On a balmy September evening, the place was marked by the hushed whispers of diners trying to figure out their first dish, ourselves included. After a cursory, but necessary, explanation from one of the chefs, we all tucked into fresh tortellini stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion in an Iranian lemon bouillon with chunks of orange-hued Mimolette cheese. This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes, then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e. Sesame ice cream crowned with crumbled hazelnuts and fresh figs ended the meal. Going against the local grain, the wine offering is a careful edit of foreign producers . \u201cThe idea behind the wine was like our cooking: Make it as international as possible,\u201d Mr. Lahaut said.", "paragraph_answer": "On a balmy September evening, the place was marked by the hushed whispers of diners trying to figure out their first dish, ourselves included. After a cursory, but necessary, explanation from one of the chefs, we all tucked into fresh tortellini stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion in an Iranian lemon bouillon with chunks of orange-hued Mimolette cheese. This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes, then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e. Sesame ice cream crowned with crumbled hazelnuts and fresh figs ended the meal. Going against the local grain, the wine offering is a careful edit of foreign producers . \u201cThe idea behind the wine was like our cooking: Make it as international as possible,\u201d Mr. Lahaut said.", "sentence_answer": "Going against the local grain, the wine offering is a careful edit of foreign producers .", "paragraph_id": "5d704e57c8e4820a9b66ea97"} +{"question": "Where is the restaurant Charritos located?", "paragraph": "One ideal place to be this summer is the slender terrace overlooking Manhattan at Charritos, a restaurant in Weehawken specializing in the colorful dishes of Oaxaca, a region in southern Mexico. For those unfamiliar with Oaxacan cuisine, it is known for chocolate-infused moles, which Charritos does serve, and grasshoppers, which it does not. From this tiny terrace perched on the Palisades, you can peer as far north as the George Washington Bridge and as far south as the Verrazano. If you order a mojito, which the bartender perfects with muddled mint and a generous squeeze of fresh lime, the view can seem even more enchanting.", "answer": "Charritos, a restaurant in Weehawken", "sentence": "One ideal place to be this summer is the slender terrace overlooking Manhattan at Charritos, a restaurant in Weehawken specializing in the colorful dishes of Oaxaca, a region in southern Mexico.", "paragraph_sentence": " One ideal place to be this summer is the slender terrace overlooking Manhattan at Charritos, a restaurant in Weehawken specializing in the colorful dishes of Oaxaca, a region in southern Mexico. For those unfamiliar with Oaxacan cuisine, it is known for chocolate-infused moles, which Charritos does serve, and grasshoppers, which it does not. From this tiny terrace perched on the Palisades, you can peer as far north as the George Washington Bridge and as far south as the Verrazano. If you order a mojito, which the bartender perfects with muddled mint and a generous squeeze of fresh lime, the view can seem even more enchanting.", "paragraph_answer": "One ideal place to be this summer is the slender terrace overlooking Manhattan at Charritos, a restaurant in Weehawken specializing in the colorful dishes of Oaxaca, a region in southern Mexico. For those unfamiliar with Oaxacan cuisine, it is known for chocolate-infused moles, which Charritos does serve, and grasshoppers, which it does not. From this tiny terrace perched on the Palisades, you can peer as far north as the George Washington Bridge and as far south as the Verrazano. If you order a mojito, which the bartender perfects with muddled mint and a generous squeeze of fresh lime, the view can seem even more enchanting.", "sentence_answer": "One ideal place to be this summer is the slender terrace overlooking Manhattan at Charritos, a restaurant in Weehawken specializing in the colorful dishes of Oaxaca, a region in southern Mexico.", "paragraph_id": "5d703c8fc8e4820a9b66e337"} +{"question": "How much per week was Mr Edwards able to earn in the tailor shop[?", "paragraph": "During an interview last week at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Westchester County, Mr. Nu\u00f1ez showed reporters purple scars around his right ankle that he said were the result of CERT officers\u2019 intentionally shackling him too tightly. Some of the former honor block residents have lost privileges that had taken years to earn at Clinton. Mr. Edwards, who had supervised 50 inmates at the prison tailor shop, had been able to earn as much as $45 a week. Since being moved to Sing Sing, he has been working as a porter making $3 a week. \u201cThey took everything from me,\u201d he said. \u201cThey did everything they could to blame the ones who stayed.\u201d", "answer": "$45", "sentence": "Mr. Edwards, who had supervised 50 inmates at the prison tailor shop, had been able to earn as much as $45 a week.", "paragraph_sentence": "During an interview last week at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Westchester County, Mr. Nu\u00f1ez showed reporters purple scars around his right ankle that he said were the result of CERT officers\u2019 intentionally shackling him too tightly. Some of the former honor block residents have lost privileges that had taken years to earn at Clinton. Mr. Edwards, who had supervised 50 inmates at the prison tailor shop, had been able to earn as much as $45 a week. Since being moved to Sing Sing, he has been working as a porter making $3 a week. \u201cThey took everything from me,\u201d he said. \u201cThey did everything they could to blame the ones who stayed.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "During an interview last week at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Westchester County, Mr. Nu\u00f1ez showed reporters purple scars around his right ankle that he said were the result of CERT officers\u2019 intentionally shackling him too tightly. Some of the former honor block residents have lost privileges that had taken years to earn at Clinton. Mr. Edwards, who had supervised 50 inmates at the prison tailor shop, had been able to earn as much as $45 a week. Since being moved to Sing Sing, he has been working as a porter making $3 a week. \u201cThey took everything from me,\u201d he said. \u201cThey did everything they could to blame the ones who stayed.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Edwards, who had supervised 50 inmates at the prison tailor shop, had been able to earn as much as $45 a week.", "paragraph_id": "5d707bffc8e4820a9b66f33c"} +{"question": "What dance company did Dudley Williams belong to?", "paragraph": "An obituary on Thursday about the longtime Alvin Ailey dancer Dudley Williams, using information from Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, misstated the given name of his father and his brother. They are both Ivan, not Iban. The Times welcomes comments and suggestions, or complaints about errors that warrant correction. Messages on news coverage can be e-mailed to nytnews@nytimes.com or left toll-free at 1-888-NYT-NEWS (1-888-698-6397). Comments on editorials may be e-mailed to letters@nytimes.com or faxed to (212) 556-3622.", "answer": "Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater", "sentence": "An obituary on Thursday about the longtime Alvin Ailey dancer Dudley Williams, using information from Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater , misstated the given name of his father and his brother.", "paragraph_sentence": " An obituary on Thursday about the longtime Alvin Ailey dancer Dudley Williams, using information from Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater , misstated the given name of his father and his brother. They are both Ivan, not Iban. The Times welcomes comments and suggestions, or complaints about errors that warrant correction. Messages on news coverage can be e-mailed to nytnews@nytimes.com or left toll-free at 1-888-NYT-NEWS (1-888-698-6397). Comments on editorials may be e-mailed to letters@nytimes.com or faxed to (212) 556-3622.", "paragraph_answer": "An obituary on Thursday about the longtime Alvin Ailey dancer Dudley Williams, using information from Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater , misstated the given name of his father and his brother. They are both Ivan, not Iban. The Times welcomes comments and suggestions, or complaints about errors that warrant correction. Messages on news coverage can be e-mailed to nytnews@nytimes.com or left toll-free at 1-888-NYT-NEWS (1-888-698-6397). Comments on editorials may be e-mailed to letters@nytimes.com or faxed to (212) 556-3622.", "sentence_answer": "An obituary on Thursday about the longtime Alvin Ailey dancer Dudley Williams, using information from Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater , misstated the given name of his father and his brother.", "paragraph_id": "5d701adcc8e4820a9b66c65f"} +{"question": "What type of shrimp was served as an appetizer?", "paragraph": "We had fun sharing the appetizers, like the tamarind eggplant, thin half-dollar-size rounds of the night shade vegetable tossed with onions, chickpeas and yogurt, and topped with tamarind chutney. It was tangy and cooling. Bagari shrimp, four jumbo shrimp in a thick yogurt and tomato sauce, came with puri, puffy fried bread, to scoop every last bit of curry. It was soul food. And the calamari Cochin, flash-fried squid rings with a coarse black pepper and corn flour coating, was as addictive as good onion rings.", "answer": "Bagari shrimp", "sentence": "Bagari shrimp , four jumbo shrimp in a thick yogurt and tomato sauce, came with puri, puffy fried bread, to scoop every last bit of curry.", "paragraph_sentence": "We had fun sharing the appetizers, like the tamarind eggplant, thin half-dollar-size rounds of the night shade vegetable tossed with onions, chickpeas and yogurt, and topped with tamarind chutney. It was tangy and cooling. Bagari shrimp , four jumbo shrimp in a thick yogurt and tomato sauce, came with puri, puffy fried bread, to scoop every last bit of curry. It was soul food. And the calamari Cochin, flash-fried squid rings with a coarse black pepper and corn flour coating, was as addictive as good onion rings.", "paragraph_answer": "We had fun sharing the appetizers, like the tamarind eggplant, thin half-dollar-size rounds of the night shade vegetable tossed with onions, chickpeas and yogurt, and topped with tamarind chutney. It was tangy and cooling. Bagari shrimp , four jumbo shrimp in a thick yogurt and tomato sauce, came with puri, puffy fried bread, to scoop every last bit of curry. It was soul food. And the calamari Cochin, flash-fried squid rings with a coarse black pepper and corn flour coating, was as addictive as good onion rings.", "sentence_answer": " Bagari shrimp , four jumbo shrimp in a thick yogurt and tomato sauce, came with puri, puffy fried bread, to scoop every last bit of curry.", "paragraph_id": "5d7023dec8e4820a9b66d020"} +{"question": "In what year did Land's End reduce catalogs mailed out?", "paragraph": "However small, the recent resurgence in direct mail may be explained by a better understanding of the catalog\u2019s power to drive sales, Mr. Cohen said. He pointed to Lands\u2019 End as an early example. In 2000, that retailer reduced the number of catalogs it sent consumers. It experienced a $100 million drop in sales as a result, according to research by Kurt Salmon. Lands\u2019 End later added a pop-up survey to its website and found that 75 percent of customers who were making purchases had first reviewed the catalog.", "answer": "2000", "sentence": "In 2000 , that retailer reduced the number of catalogs it sent consumers.", "paragraph_sentence": "However small, the recent resurgence in direct mail may be explained by a better understanding of the catalog\u2019s power to drive sales, Mr. Cohen said. He pointed to Lands\u2019 End as an early example. In 2000 , that retailer reduced the number of catalogs it sent consumers. It experienced a $100 million drop in sales as a result, according to research by Kurt Salmon. Lands\u2019 End later added a pop-up survey to its website and found that 75 percent of customers who were making purchases had first reviewed the catalog.", "paragraph_answer": "However small, the recent resurgence in direct mail may be explained by a better understanding of the catalog\u2019s power to drive sales, Mr. Cohen said. He pointed to Lands\u2019 End as an early example. In 2000 , that retailer reduced the number of catalogs it sent consumers. It experienced a $100 million drop in sales as a result, according to research by Kurt Salmon. Lands\u2019 End later added a pop-up survey to its website and found that 75 percent of customers who were making purchases had first reviewed the catalog.", "sentence_answer": "In 2000 , that retailer reduced the number of catalogs it sent consumers.", "paragraph_id": "5d70260ec8e4820a9b66d254"} +{"question": "What did Mr. Mora die of?", "paragraph": "\u201cThose are years that nothing in the world can give me back, no money, no nothing,\u201d Mr. Vasquez said after the proceeding. \u201cIt\u2019s just like I lost myself in prison, I lost 33 and a half years of my life. I went in at 30, I come out at 65, so...\u201d Mr. Vasquez shook his head and his sentence trailed off. Mr. Villalobos, who like Mr. Vasquez has been out on parole since 2012, said he thought \u201call the time\u201d that he would get his conviction vacated. In 2012, he contacted New York Law School, where Adele Bernhard, a law professor and director of the Post-Conviction Innocence Clinic, and her students worked on the case. Mr. Villalobos said he had been denied parole several times because he refused to show remorse for a crime he had not committed. Still, he said: \u201cI\u2019m not angry. Why would you be angry? I know they did something bad to me, but God is there.\u201d His wife, Ernesta, who testified at his trial that she had been with him the night of the fire and who stayed with him throughout his time in prison, said she felt \u201chappy, happy, happy, happy.\u201d Eileen Mora, Mr. Mora\u2019s daughter, said she had \u201csome sweet memories\u201d of her father, who died of a heart attack in 1989. \u201cMy father was a good man, and I\u2019m glad we got to prove it today in court,\u201d she said, her voice shaking. \u201cThere\u2019s no better Christmas gift that I can get than to say that my dad was innocent, and now everybody knows.\u201d", "answer": "heart attack", "sentence": "Eileen Mora, Mr. Mora\u2019s daughter, said she had \u201csome sweet memories\u201d of her father, who died of a heart attack in 1989.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThose are years that nothing in the world can give me back, no money, no nothing,\u201d Mr. Vasquez said after the proceeding. \u201cIt\u2019s just like I lost myself in prison, I lost 33 and a half years of my life. I went in at 30, I come out at 65, so...\u201d Mr. Vasquez shook his head and his sentence trailed off. Mr. Villalobos, who like Mr. Vasquez has been out on parole since 2012, said he thought \u201call the time\u201d that he would get his conviction vacated. In 2012, he contacted New York Law School, where Adele Bernhard, a law professor and director of the Post-Conviction Innocence Clinic, and her students worked on the case. Mr. Villalobos said he had been denied parole several times because he refused to show remorse for a crime he had not committed. Still, he said: \u201cI\u2019m not angry. Why would you be angry? I know they did something bad to me, but God is there.\u201d His wife, Ernesta, who testified at his trial that she had been with him the night of the fire and who stayed with him throughout his time in prison, said she felt \u201chappy, happy, happy, happy.\u201d Eileen Mora, Mr. Mora\u2019s daughter, said she had \u201csome sweet memories\u201d of her father, who died of a heart attack in 1989. \u201cMy father was a good man, and I\u2019m glad we got to prove it today in court,\u201d she said, her voice shaking. \u201cThere\u2019s no better Christmas gift that I can get than to say that my dad was innocent, and now everybody knows.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThose are years that nothing in the world can give me back, no money, no nothing,\u201d Mr. Vasquez said after the proceeding. \u201cIt\u2019s just like I lost myself in prison, I lost 33 and a half years of my life. I went in at 30, I come out at 65, so...\u201d Mr. Vasquez shook his head and his sentence trailed off. Mr. Villalobos, who like Mr. Vasquez has been out on parole since 2012, said he thought \u201call the time\u201d that he would get his conviction vacated. In 2012, he contacted New York Law School, where Adele Bernhard, a law professor and director of the Post-Conviction Innocence Clinic, and her students worked on the case. Mr. Villalobos said he had been denied parole several times because he refused to show remorse for a crime he had not committed. Still, he said: \u201cI\u2019m not angry. Why would you be angry? I know they did something bad to me, but God is there.\u201d His wife, Ernesta, who testified at his trial that she had been with him the night of the fire and who stayed with him throughout his time in prison, said she felt \u201chappy, happy, happy, happy.\u201d Eileen Mora, Mr. Mora\u2019s daughter, said she had \u201csome sweet memories\u201d of her father, who died of a heart attack in 1989. \u201cMy father was a good man, and I\u2019m glad we got to prove it today in court,\u201d she said, her voice shaking. \u201cThere\u2019s no better Christmas gift that I can get than to say that my dad was innocent, and now everybody knows.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Eileen Mora, Mr. Mora\u2019s daughter, said she had \u201csome sweet memories\u201d of her father, who died of a heart attack in 1989.", "paragraph_id": "5d7007e1c8e4820a9b66aec9"} +{"question": "What time is the Vikings and Broncos game?", "paragraph": "Here are the best games to watch in N.F.L. Week 4: Vikings (2-1) at Broncos (3-0) 4:25 p.m. Line: Broncos by 7 \u201cWho is a better running back than me?\u201d Vikings running back Adrian Peterson asked a group of reporters last week. He may have a point. Peterson, 30, is at an age when running backs tend to wear down, but after being suspended for 15 games last season, he has emerged as an example of how an extended break from the rigors of competition can rejuvenate an aging star. Through three games, he leads the N.F.L. with 291 rushing yards, and last week he uncorked a 43-yard touchdown run that had fans checking their calendars to see if they had traveled back to 2012. One could argue for Jamaal Charles, Le\u2019Veon Bell or Matt Forte as the game\u2019s best running back, but Peterson is certainly in the discussion. The question now is whether Peterson\u2019s two-week outburst, in which he shredded the Lions and the Chargers, is a fluke or a sign that he and the Vikings are back.", "answer": "4:25 p.m", "sentence": "Here are the best games to watch in N.F.L. Week 4: Vikings (2-1) at Broncos (3-0) 4:25 p.m .", "paragraph_sentence": " Here are the best games to watch in N.F.L. Week 4: Vikings (2-1) at Broncos (3-0) 4:25 p.m . Line: Broncos by 7 \u201cWho is a better running back than me?\u201d Vikings running back Adrian Peterson asked a group of reporters last week. He may have a point. Peterson, 30, is at an age when running backs tend to wear down, but after being suspended for 15 games last season, he has emerged as an example of how an extended break from the rigors of competition can rejuvenate an aging star. Through three games, he leads the N.F.L. with 291 rushing yards, and last week he uncorked a 43-yard touchdown run that had fans checking their calendars to see if they had traveled back to 2012. One could argue for Jamaal Charles, Le\u2019Veon Bell or Matt Forte as the game\u2019s best running back, but Peterson is certainly in the discussion. The question now is whether Peterson\u2019s two-week outburst, in which he shredded the Lions and the Chargers, is a fluke or a sign that he and the Vikings are back.", "paragraph_answer": "Here are the best games to watch in N.F.L. Week 4: Vikings (2-1) at Broncos (3-0) 4:25 p.m . Line: Broncos by 7 \u201cWho is a better running back than me?\u201d Vikings running back Adrian Peterson asked a group of reporters last week. He may have a point. Peterson, 30, is at an age when running backs tend to wear down, but after being suspended for 15 games last season, he has emerged as an example of how an extended break from the rigors of competition can rejuvenate an aging star. Through three games, he leads the N.F.L. with 291 rushing yards, and last week he uncorked a 43-yard touchdown run that had fans checking their calendars to see if they had traveled back to 2012. One could argue for Jamaal Charles, Le\u2019Veon Bell or Matt Forte as the game\u2019s best running back, but Peterson is certainly in the discussion. The question now is whether Peterson\u2019s two-week outburst, in which he shredded the Lions and the Chargers, is a fluke or a sign that he and the Vikings are back.", "sentence_answer": "Here are the best games to watch in N.F.L. Week 4: Vikings (2-1) at Broncos (3-0) 4:25 p.m .", "paragraph_id": "5d702237c8e4820a9b66ce42"} +{"question": "Which three states offer paid family leave?", "paragraph": "Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees. \u201cWe always knew that we need national standards, but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave.", "answer": "California, New Jersey and Rhode Island", "sentence": "Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees.", "paragraph_sentence": " Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees. \u201cWe always knew that we need national standards, but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave.", "paragraph_answer": "Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees. \u201cWe always knew that we need national standards, but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave.", "sentence_answer": "Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees.", "paragraph_id": "5d708a2dc8e4820a9b66f4d1"} +{"question": "What types of wine are available?", "paragraph": "Noreetuh has plenty of dishes for a successful first visit. Dinner will be particularly fun for wine lovers because Mr. Ahn has compiled an overachieving list of German rieslings, Burgundies in both colors, grower Champagnes and more far-flung treats. Better still, the prices are low; just by sticking to your budget, you can drink at a higher level than usual. Noreetuh may have a trickier time converting new diners into regulars, though. The two dining rooms, while tasteful enough, don\u2019t have anything you could really call atmosphere. Noreetuh means \u201cplayground\u201d in Korean, and the owners seem to want to give a party. But where did they find their DJ.? A Motown hit parade is followed by \u201cYellow Submarine,\u201d and then by Taylor Swift, Natalie La Rose and, gosh, is that really Taylor Swift, twice in one night?", "answer": "German rieslings, Burgundies in both colors, grower Champagnes and more far-flung treats.", "sentence": "Dinner will be particularly fun for wine lovers because Mr. Ahn has compiled an overachieving list of German rieslings, Burgundies in both colors, grower Champagnes and more far-flung treats. Better still, the prices are low; just by sticking to your budget, you can drink at a higher level than usual.", "paragraph_sentence": "Noreetuh has plenty of dishes for a successful first visit. Dinner will be particularly fun for wine lovers because Mr. Ahn has compiled an overachieving list of German rieslings, Burgundies in both colors, grower Champagnes and more far-flung treats. Better still, the prices are low; just by sticking to your budget, you can drink at a higher level than usual. Noreetuh may have a trickier time converting new diners into regulars, though. The two dining rooms, while tasteful enough, don\u2019t have anything you could really call atmosphere. Noreetuh means \u201cplayground\u201d in Korean, and the owners seem to want to give a party. But where did they find their DJ.? A Motown hit parade is followed by \u201cYellow Submarine,\u201d and then by Taylor Swift, Natalie La Rose and, gosh, is that really Taylor Swift, twice in one night?", "paragraph_answer": "Noreetuh has plenty of dishes for a successful first visit. Dinner will be particularly fun for wine lovers because Mr. Ahn has compiled an overachieving list of German rieslings, Burgundies in both colors, grower Champagnes and more far-flung treats. Better still, the prices are low; just by sticking to your budget, you can drink at a higher level than usual. Noreetuh may have a trickier time converting new diners into regulars, though. The two dining rooms, while tasteful enough, don\u2019t have anything you could really call atmosphere. Noreetuh means \u201cplayground\u201d in Korean, and the owners seem to want to give a party. But where did they find their DJ.? A Motown hit parade is followed by \u201cYellow Submarine,\u201d and then by Taylor Swift, Natalie La Rose and, gosh, is that really Taylor Swift, twice in one night?", "sentence_answer": "Dinner will be particularly fun for wine lovers because Mr. Ahn has compiled an overachieving list of German rieslings, Burgundies in both colors, grower Champagnes and more far-flung treats. Better still, the prices are low; just by sticking to your budget, you can drink at a higher level than usual.", "paragraph_id": "5d703591c8e4820a9b66dfa3"} +{"question": "What is being changed by the Academy President?", "paragraph": "\u201cThis industry is so far behind sports, it\u2019s ridiculous,\u201d Mr. Lee continued. \u201cIt\u2019s easier to be president of the United States as a black person than be head of a studio. Honest.\u201d And so it went, as the film academy \u2014 stung by fierce criticism of its failure to nominate any black actors or directors in the last round of Oscar voting \u2014 used its annual Governors Awards to face its diversity issues head on. As the evening began, Cheryl Boone Isaacs, the Academy\u2019s president, set the tone with a speech about inclusiveness, and the disclosure of a five-year plan, called \u201cA2020,\u201d to broaden the demographics of the group\u2019s membership, staff and governing board.", "answer": "the demographics of the group\u2019s membership", "sentence": "As the evening began, Cheryl Boone Isaacs, the Academy\u2019s president, set the tone with a speech about inclusiveness, and the disclosure of a five-year plan, called \u201cA2020,\u201d to broaden the demographics of the group\u2019s membership , staff and governing board.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThis industry is so far behind sports, it\u2019s ridiculous,\u201d Mr. Lee continued. \u201cIt\u2019s easier to be president of the United States as a black person than be head of a studio. Honest.\u201d And so it went, as the film academy \u2014 stung by fierce criticism of its failure to nominate any black actors or directors in the last round of Oscar voting \u2014 used its annual Governors Awards to face its diversity issues head on. As the evening began, Cheryl Boone Isaacs, the Academy\u2019s president, set the tone with a speech about inclusiveness, and the disclosure of a five-year plan, called \u201cA2020,\u201d to broaden the demographics of the group\u2019s membership , staff and governing board. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThis industry is so far behind sports, it\u2019s ridiculous,\u201d Mr. Lee continued. \u201cIt\u2019s easier to be president of the United States as a black person than be head of a studio. Honest.\u201d And so it went, as the film academy \u2014 stung by fierce criticism of its failure to nominate any black actors or directors in the last round of Oscar voting \u2014 used its annual Governors Awards to face its diversity issues head on. As the evening began, Cheryl Boone Isaacs, the Academy\u2019s president, set the tone with a speech about inclusiveness, and the disclosure of a five-year plan, called \u201cA2020,\u201d to broaden the demographics of the group\u2019s membership , staff and governing board.", "sentence_answer": "As the evening began, Cheryl Boone Isaacs, the Academy\u2019s president, set the tone with a speech about inclusiveness, and the disclosure of a five-year plan, called \u201cA2020,\u201d to broaden the demographics of the group\u2019s membership , staff and governing board.", "paragraph_id": "5d700a43c8e4820a9b66b3df"} +{"question": "What country's debt problems caused havoc in the eurozone?", "paragraph": "The euro on Friday reached its lowest level against the dollar since June 7, 2010, when it hit $1.1923. The currency of the 19-nation eurozone has fallen nearly 14 percent since it climbed to $1.3910 on May 7. The last time the euro was so low, Greece\u2019s debt problems were causing havoc in the eurozone and there was fear the common currency would not survive. Greece is again in turmoil, with coming elections likely to usher in a left-wing government, but is no longer the main cause of the euro\u2019s decline. The concern now is that the eurozone is already stuck in the same kind of stagnation that has afflicted Japan for two decades. \u201cHistory shows that falling prices can be as damaging to the prosperity and stability of our countries as high inflation,\u201d Mr. Draghi told Handelsblatt.", "answer": "Greece", "sentence": "The last time the euro was so low, Greece \u2019s debt problems were causing havoc in the eurozone and there was fear the common currency would not survive.", "paragraph_sentence": "The euro on Friday reached its lowest level against the dollar since June 7, 2010, when it hit $1.1923. The currency of the 19-nation eurozone has fallen nearly 14 percent since it climbed to $1.3910 on May 7. The last time the euro was so low, Greece \u2019s debt problems were causing havoc in the eurozone and there was fear the common currency would not survive. Greece is again in turmoil, with coming elections likely to usher in a left-wing government, but is no longer the main cause of the euro\u2019s decline. The concern now is that the eurozone is already stuck in the same kind of stagnation that has afflicted Japan for two decades. \u201cHistory shows that falling prices can be as damaging to the prosperity and stability of our countries as high inflation,\u201d Mr. Draghi told Handelsblatt.", "paragraph_answer": "The euro on Friday reached its lowest level against the dollar since June 7, 2010, when it hit $1.1923. The currency of the 19-nation eurozone has fallen nearly 14 percent since it climbed to $1.3910 on May 7. The last time the euro was so low, Greece \u2019s debt problems were causing havoc in the eurozone and there was fear the common currency would not survive. Greece is again in turmoil, with coming elections likely to usher in a left-wing government, but is no longer the main cause of the euro\u2019s decline. The concern now is that the eurozone is already stuck in the same kind of stagnation that has afflicted Japan for two decades. \u201cHistory shows that falling prices can be as damaging to the prosperity and stability of our countries as high inflation,\u201d Mr. Draghi told Handelsblatt.", "sentence_answer": "The last time the euro was so low, Greece \u2019s debt problems were causing havoc in the eurozone and there was fear the common currency would not survive.", "paragraph_id": "5d706575c8e4820a9b66f08e"} +{"question": "Was the current with the athletes or against them for the last five hours?", "paragraph": "But the shark disappeared, the current turned at midmorning Tuesday, and for the final five hours of the swim, the athletes swam with the current, their every stroke infused with the momentum of the ocean. Warmuth took the final shift as the Deep Enders closed in on the Palos Verdes Peninsula. \u201cI was just gliding across the water,\u201d Warmuth said. \u201cIt was very fluid; the water was warm and glassy. It was an amazing feeling.\u201d With the Palos Verdes bluffs looming larger with every stroke, the sea became murky as four-foot waves swelled and thrashed the rocky shore. Behind Warmuth, her teammates dived into the water and swam to shore in a V formation, symbolizing victory. Warmuth checked the waves, timed it right and let the tide push her onto the rocks, crusted with razor-sharp barnacles. At 4:52 p.m. Tuesday \u2014 33 hours 37 minutes 26 seconds after the relay began \u2014 Warmuth took the required three steps clear of the tide line, not far from the Terranea Resort, in Rancho Palos Verdes. Soon her friends joined her on shore. Having navigated swirling seas, thick with jellyfish and as deep as 1,000 feet in some places, they hugged and celebrated, elated and exhausted.", "answer": "the athletes swam with the current", "sentence": "But the shark disappeared, the current turned at midmorning Tuesday, and for the final five hours of the swim, the athletes swam with the current , their every stroke infused with the momentum of the ocean.", "paragraph_sentence": " But the shark disappeared, the current turned at midmorning Tuesday, and for the final five hours of the swim, the athletes swam with the current , their every stroke infused with the momentum of the ocean. Warmuth took the final shift as the Deep Enders closed in on the Palos Verdes Peninsula. \u201cI was just gliding across the water,\u201d Warmuth said. \u201cIt was very fluid; the water was warm and glassy. It was an amazing feeling.\u201d With the Palos Verdes bluffs looming larger with every stroke, the sea became murky as four-foot waves swelled and thrashed the rocky shore. Behind Warmuth, her teammates dived into the water and swam to shore in a V formation, symbolizing victory. Warmuth checked the waves, timed it right and let the tide push her onto the rocks, crusted with razor-sharp barnacles. At 4:52 p.m. Tuesday \u2014 33 hours 37 minutes 26 seconds after the relay began \u2014 Warmuth took the required three steps clear of the tide line, not far from the Terranea Resort, in Rancho Palos Verdes. Soon her friends joined her on shore. Having navigated swirling seas, thick with jellyfish and as deep as 1,000 feet in some places, they hugged and celebrated, elated and exhausted.", "paragraph_answer": "But the shark disappeared, the current turned at midmorning Tuesday, and for the final five hours of the swim, the athletes swam with the current , their every stroke infused with the momentum of the ocean. Warmuth took the final shift as the Deep Enders closed in on the Palos Verdes Peninsula. \u201cI was just gliding across the water,\u201d Warmuth said. \u201cIt was very fluid; the water was warm and glassy. It was an amazing feeling.\u201d With the Palos Verdes bluffs looming larger with every stroke, the sea became murky as four-foot waves swelled and thrashed the rocky shore. Behind Warmuth, her teammates dived into the water and swam to shore in a V formation, symbolizing victory. Warmuth checked the waves, timed it right and let the tide push her onto the rocks, crusted with razor-sharp barnacles. At 4:52 p.m. Tuesday \u2014 33 hours 37 minutes 26 seconds after the relay began \u2014 Warmuth took the required three steps clear of the tide line, not far from the Terranea Resort, in Rancho Palos Verdes. Soon her friends joined her on shore. Having navigated swirling seas, thick with jellyfish and as deep as 1,000 feet in some places, they hugged and celebrated, elated and exhausted.", "sentence_answer": "But the shark disappeared, the current turned at midmorning Tuesday, and for the final five hours of the swim, the athletes swam with the current , their every stroke infused with the momentum of the ocean.", "paragraph_id": "5d70103bc8e4820a9b66bc5f"} +{"question": "Which country lost victory to The United States in Women's world hockey championship?", "paragraph": "The United States defended its women\u2019s world hockey championship with a 7-5 victory over Canada in the final in Malmo, Sweden. Brianna Decker and Kendall Coyne scored for the United States in the third period after the Americans blew a 5-2 lead. The United States has won five of the last six world titles.", "answer": "Canada", "sentence": "The United States defended its women\u2019s world hockey championship with a 7-5 victory over Canada in the final in Malmo, Sweden.", "paragraph_sentence": " The United States defended its women\u2019s world hockey championship with a 7-5 victory over Canada in the final in Malmo, Sweden. Brianna Decker and Kendall Coyne scored for the United States in the third period after the Americans blew a 5-2 lead. The United States has won five of the last six world titles.", "paragraph_answer": "The United States defended its women\u2019s world hockey championship with a 7-5 victory over Canada in the final in Malmo, Sweden. Brianna Decker and Kendall Coyne scored for the United States in the third period after the Americans blew a 5-2 lead. The United States has won five of the last six world titles.", "sentence_answer": "The United States defended its women\u2019s world hockey championship with a 7-5 victory over Canada in the final in Malmo, Sweden.", "paragraph_id": "5d700ed6c8e4820a9b66bad8"} +{"question": "What disorder did Ms. Harper and her son suffer from?", "paragraph": "But as she was leaving, the sheriff and his deputies intercepted her and broke the news that her son was the gunman. Ms. Harper, who divorced her husband a decade ago, appears to have been by far the most significant figure in her son\u2019s troubled life; neighbors say he rarely left their apartment. Unlike his father, who said on television that he had no idea Mr. Harper-Mercer cared so deeply about guns, his mother was well aware of his fascination. In fact, she shared it: In a series of online postings over a decade, Ms. Harper, a nurse, said she kept numerous firearms in her home and expressed pride in her knowledge about them, as well as in her son\u2019s expertise on the subject. She also opened up about her difficulties raising a son who used to bang his head against the wall, and said that both she and her son struggled with Asperger\u2019s syndrome, an autism spectrum disorder. She tried to counsel others whose children faced similar problems. All the while, she expressed hope that her son could lead a successful life in finance or as a filmmaker. Ms. Harper did not respond to messages seeking comment.", "answer": "Asperger\u2019s syndrome", "sentence": "She also opened up about her difficulties raising a son who used to bang his head against the wall, and said that both she and her son struggled with Asperger\u2019s syndrome , an autism spectrum disorder.", "paragraph_sentence": "But as she was leaving, the sheriff and his deputies intercepted her and broke the news that her son was the gunman. Ms. Harper, who divorced her husband a decade ago, appears to have been by far the most significant figure in her son\u2019s troubled life; neighbors say he rarely left their apartment. Unlike his father, who said on television that he had no idea Mr. Harper-Mercer cared so deeply about guns, his mother was well aware of his fascination. In fact, she shared it: In a series of online postings over a decade, Ms. Harper, a nurse, said she kept numerous firearms in her home and expressed pride in her knowledge about them, as well as in her son\u2019s expertise on the subject. She also opened up about her difficulties raising a son who used to bang his head against the wall, and said that both she and her son struggled with Asperger\u2019s syndrome , an autism spectrum disorder. She tried to counsel others whose children faced similar problems. All the while, she expressed hope that her son could lead a successful life in finance or as a filmmaker. Ms. Harper did not respond to messages seeking comment.", "paragraph_answer": "But as she was leaving, the sheriff and his deputies intercepted her and broke the news that her son was the gunman. Ms. Harper, who divorced her husband a decade ago, appears to have been by far the most significant figure in her son\u2019s troubled life; neighbors say he rarely left their apartment. Unlike his father, who said on television that he had no idea Mr. Harper-Mercer cared so deeply about guns, his mother was well aware of his fascination. In fact, she shared it: In a series of online postings over a decade, Ms. Harper, a nurse, said she kept numerous firearms in her home and expressed pride in her knowledge about them, as well as in her son\u2019s expertise on the subject. She also opened up about her difficulties raising a son who used to bang his head against the wall, and said that both she and her son struggled with Asperger\u2019s syndrome , an autism spectrum disorder. She tried to counsel others whose children faced similar problems. All the while, she expressed hope that her son could lead a successful life in finance or as a filmmaker. Ms. Harper did not respond to messages seeking comment.", "sentence_answer": "She also opened up about her difficulties raising a son who used to bang his head against the wall, and said that both she and her son struggled with Asperger\u2019s syndrome , an autism spectrum disorder.", "paragraph_id": "5d703aa4c8e4820a9b66e241"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d7007ecc8e4820a9b66aeef"} +{"question": "What is the English-language translation for the name of the Petrobras Investigation?", "paragraph": "If any good has come from the Petrobras debacle it is the flickering sense that this time could be different. Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro, who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato, or Operation Carwash. In Brazil, judges have wide latitude to define both the direction and scope of criminal inquiries, and Judge Moro\u2019s willingness to pursue even the eminent and influential has made him a folk hero. During a recent visit to the courthouse where he presides in Curitiba, ribbons of yellow and green, the national colors, were tied around trees, quiet expressions of solidarity and support. Another source of public optimism can be found on the eighth floor of an office building a few miles away, in rooms that could pass for a low-budget telemarketing operation. This is home to the team of nine prosecutors working on Lava Jato, as everyone here calls it.", "answer": "Operation Carwash", "sentence": "Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro, who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato, or Operation Carwash .", "paragraph_sentence": "If any good has come from the Petrobras debacle it is the flickering sense that this time could be different. Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro, who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato, or Operation Carwash . In Brazil, judges have wide latitude to define both the direction and scope of criminal inquiries, and Judge Moro\u2019s willingness to pursue even the eminent and influential has made him a folk hero. During a recent visit to the courthouse where he presides in Curitiba, ribbons of yellow and green, the national colors, were tied around trees, quiet expressions of solidarity and support. Another source of public optimism can be found on the eighth floor of an office building a few miles away, in rooms that could pass for a low-budget telemarketing operation. This is home to the team of nine prosecutors working on Lava Jato, as everyone here calls it.", "paragraph_answer": "If any good has come from the Petrobras debacle it is the flickering sense that this time could be different. Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro, who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato, or Operation Carwash . In Brazil, judges have wide latitude to define both the direction and scope of criminal inquiries, and Judge Moro\u2019s willingness to pursue even the eminent and influential has made him a folk hero. During a recent visit to the courthouse where he presides in Curitiba, ribbons of yellow and green, the national colors, were tied around trees, quiet expressions of solidarity and support. Another source of public optimism can be found on the eighth floor of an office building a few miles away, in rooms that could pass for a low-budget telemarketing operation. This is home to the team of nine prosecutors working on Lava Jato, as everyone here calls it.", "sentence_answer": "Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro, who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato, or Operation Carwash .", "paragraph_id": "5d70198dc8e4820a9b66c58d"} +{"question": "What has been a boon in Malta?", "paragraph": "The tax system, in particular, has been a boon. Some foreign companies can be structured to pay 5 percent in corporate taxes. Malta also has double taxation treaties with 65 countries, allowing individuals and businesses to avoid being taxed in two places. Significant tax advantages and a pro-business regulator have created a booming financial services industry. It now represents 12 to 15 percent of the country\u2019s G.D.P., up from 6.3 percent in 2004. Online gambling companies have flocked to the island, as have hedge funds. With a strong corporate base, Malta sailed through the economic crisis relatively unscathed. The economy grew 3.5 percent in 2014. Unemployment is 5.8 percent, the fourth-lowest in Europe. Malta was looking to expand that economic growth through the citizenship program. Under the initial plan in 2013, the newly installed Labor Party government proposed selling passports for \u20ac650,000, with few other requirements for citizenship. Almost immediately, it drew protests. The country, critics argued, was not an economic basket case like other European nations trying similar programs. They also worried that the program would damage its reputation as an attractive place to do business. \u201cWe do not want to form part of a law which prostitutes Malta\u2019s identity and its citizenship,\u201d Mario de Marco, a vocal member of the opposition, said during the debate. The opposition took the program to the European Parliament in an effort to block it. While the Parliament condemned the program, it could do little else, because citizenship is controlled by national governments. To placate the Parliament and the opposition, the government raised the bar for citizenship. Strict due diligence standards were set to weed out money launderers and criminals. It also raised the cost and adopted a residency requirement. In addition to the \u20ac650,000 fee to the government, applicants must now invest \u20ac150,000 in government bonds, buy property for at least \u20ac350,000 or rent a place for at least \u20ac16,000 a year \u2014 all of which must be held for at least five years. \u201cThis is not \u2018tick the box,\u2019\u201d said Mr. Cardona, the chief of the program. Mr. Hyzler, the lawyer, and others note that the newcomers are establishing real links to Malta. They are setting up bank accounts and buying health insurance, both of which are required. They are also joining country clubs and donating to local charities, which is encouraged. \u201cClients genuinely want to do more than just make the investment,\u201d said Mark Stannard, managing director of the Maltese office of Henley & Partners, a residence and citizenship planning firm. He said a Saudi national with a Lebanese passport who had applied for Maltese citizenship had recently returned with a delegation of 12 to consider setting up businesses in aviation, life sciences and real estate.", "answer": "tax system", "sentence": "The tax system , in particular, has been a boon.", "paragraph_sentence": " The tax system , in particular, has been a boon. Some foreign companies can be structured to pay 5 percent in corporate taxes. Malta also has double taxation treaties with 65 countries, allowing individuals and businesses to avoid being taxed in two places. Significant tax advantages and a pro-business regulator have created a booming financial services industry. It now represents 12 to 15 percent of the country\u2019s G.D.P., up from 6.3 percent in 2004. Online gambling companies have flocked to the island, as have hedge funds. With a strong corporate base, Malta sailed through the economic crisis relatively unscathed. The economy grew 3.5 percent in 2014. Unemployment is 5.8 percent, the fourth-lowest in Europe. Malta was looking to expand that economic growth through the citizenship program. Under the initial plan in 2013, the newly installed Labor Party government proposed selling passports for \u20ac650,000, with few other requirements for citizenship. Almost immediately, it drew protests. The country, critics argued, was not an economic basket case like other European nations trying similar programs. They also worried that the program would damage its reputation as an attractive place to do business. \u201cWe do not want to form part of a law which prostitutes Malta\u2019s identity and its citizenship,\u201d Mario de Marco, a vocal member of the opposition, said during the debate. The opposition took the program to the European Parliament in an effort to block it. While the Parliament condemned the program, it could do little else, because citizenship is controlled by national governments. To placate the Parliament and the opposition, the government raised the bar for citizenship. Strict due diligence standards were set to weed out money launderers and criminals. It also raised the cost and adopted a residency requirement. In addition to the \u20ac650,000 fee to the government, applicants must now invest \u20ac150,000 in government bonds, buy property for at least \u20ac350,000 or rent a place for at least \u20ac16,000 a year \u2014 all of which must be held for at least five years. \u201cThis is not \u2018tick the box,\u2019\u201d said Mr. Cardona, the chief of the program. Mr. Hyzler, the lawyer, and others note that the newcomers are establishing real links to Malta. They are setting up bank accounts and buying health insurance, both of which are required. They are also joining country clubs and donating to local charities, which is encouraged. \u201cClients genuinely want to do more than just make the investment,\u201d said Mark Stannard, managing director of the Maltese office of Henley & Partners, a residence and citizenship planning firm. He said a Saudi national with a Lebanese passport who had applied for Maltese citizenship had recently returned with a delegation of 12 to consider setting up businesses in aviation, life sciences and real estate.", "paragraph_answer": "The tax system , in particular, has been a boon. Some foreign companies can be structured to pay 5 percent in corporate taxes. Malta also has double taxation treaties with 65 countries, allowing individuals and businesses to avoid being taxed in two places. Significant tax advantages and a pro-business regulator have created a booming financial services industry. It now represents 12 to 15 percent of the country\u2019s G.D.P., up from 6.3 percent in 2004. Online gambling companies have flocked to the island, as have hedge funds. With a strong corporate base, Malta sailed through the economic crisis relatively unscathed. The economy grew 3.5 percent in 2014. Unemployment is 5.8 percent, the fourth-lowest in Europe. Malta was looking to expand that economic growth through the citizenship program. Under the initial plan in 2013, the newly installed Labor Party government proposed selling passports for \u20ac650,000, with few other requirements for citizenship. Almost immediately, it drew protests. The country, critics argued, was not an economic basket case like other European nations trying similar programs. They also worried that the program would damage its reputation as an attractive place to do business. \u201cWe do not want to form part of a law which prostitutes Malta\u2019s identity and its citizenship,\u201d Mario de Marco, a vocal member of the opposition, said during the debate. The opposition took the program to the European Parliament in an effort to block it. While the Parliament condemned the program, it could do little else, because citizenship is controlled by national governments. To placate the Parliament and the opposition, the government raised the bar for citizenship. Strict due diligence standards were set to weed out money launderers and criminals. It also raised the cost and adopted a residency requirement. In addition to the \u20ac650,000 fee to the government, applicants must now invest \u20ac150,000 in government bonds, buy property for at least \u20ac350,000 or rent a place for at least \u20ac16,000 a year \u2014 all of which must be held for at least five years. \u201cThis is not \u2018tick the box,\u2019\u201d said Mr. Cardona, the chief of the program. Mr. Hyzler, the lawyer, and others note that the newcomers are establishing real links to Malta. They are setting up bank accounts and buying health insurance, both of which are required. They are also joining country clubs and donating to local charities, which is encouraged. \u201cClients genuinely want to do more than just make the investment,\u201d said Mark Stannard, managing director of the Maltese office of Henley & Partners, a residence and citizenship planning firm. He said a Saudi national with a Lebanese passport who had applied for Maltese citizenship had recently returned with a delegation of 12 to consider setting up businesses in aviation, life sciences and real estate.", "sentence_answer": "The tax system , in particular, has been a boon.", "paragraph_id": "5d701524c8e4820a9b66c11d"} +{"question": "For what reasons is the area attractive to tourists?", "paragraph": "The villages\u2019 Chinese heritage has been played up in recent years as locals seek to cater to a small but growing number of tourists, mostly Thai, who come seeking cool weather, Chinese food and locally grown oolong tea. Huang Jiada, who joined the Kuomintang during the Cold War after his family had fled to Myanmar, has been leading the effort to preserve Ban Rak Thai\u2019s unique history. On a recent crisp afternoon, Mr. Huang, 53, hopped on his motorbike and sped up a bumpy dirt path to the top of a hill. At the peak was a sparse, one-room museum that he built with funds from the Thai government to commemorate the Kuomintang Army. Inside, recent photos of elderly veterans wearing oversize military fatigues were displayed alongside hand-drawn maps of battle routes and older photos that showed young, gun-wielding soldiers marching under the army\u2019s red, white and blue flag. Mr. Huang pointed to a portrait of a heavyset man wearing rumpled clothes and an orange beanie. \u201cThis is the man who conscripted me into the army in Myanmar when I was 11,\u201d Mr. Huang said, speaking in southern-inflected Mandarin. \u201cHe couldn\u2019t read or write, but he could certainly fight and kill.\u201d", "answer": "cool weather, Chinese food and locally grown oolong tea.", "sentence": "The villages\u2019 Chinese heritage has been played up in recent years as locals seek to cater to a small but growing number of tourists, mostly Thai, who come seeking cool weather, Chinese food and locally grown oolong tea. Huang Jiada, who joined the Kuomintang during the Cold War after his family had fled to Myanmar, has been leading the effort to preserve Ban Rak Thai\u2019s unique history.", "paragraph_sentence": " The villages\u2019 Chinese heritage has been played up in recent years as locals seek to cater to a small but growing number of tourists, mostly Thai, who come seeking cool weather, Chinese food and locally grown oolong tea. Huang Jiada, who joined the Kuomintang during the Cold War after his family had fled to Myanmar, has been leading the effort to preserve Ban Rak Thai\u2019s unique history. On a recent crisp afternoon, Mr. Huang, 53, hopped on his motorbike and sped up a bumpy dirt path to the top of a hill. At the peak was a sparse, one-room museum that he built with funds from the Thai government to commemorate the Kuomintang Army. Inside, recent photos of elderly veterans wearing oversize military fatigues were displayed alongside hand-drawn maps of battle routes and older photos that showed young, gun-wielding soldiers marching under the army\u2019s red, white and blue flag. Mr. Huang pointed to a portrait of a heavyset man wearing rumpled clothes and an orange beanie. \u201cThis is the man who conscripted me into the army in Myanmar when I was 11,\u201d Mr. Huang said, speaking in southern-inflected Mandarin. \u201cHe couldn\u2019t read or write, but he could certainly fight and kill.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The villages\u2019 Chinese heritage has been played up in recent years as locals seek to cater to a small but growing number of tourists, mostly Thai, who come seeking cool weather, Chinese food and locally grown oolong tea. Huang Jiada, who joined the Kuomintang during the Cold War after his family had fled to Myanmar, has been leading the effort to preserve Ban Rak Thai\u2019s unique history. On a recent crisp afternoon, Mr. Huang, 53, hopped on his motorbike and sped up a bumpy dirt path to the top of a hill. At the peak was a sparse, one-room museum that he built with funds from the Thai government to commemorate the Kuomintang Army. Inside, recent photos of elderly veterans wearing oversize military fatigues were displayed alongside hand-drawn maps of battle routes and older photos that showed young, gun-wielding soldiers marching under the army\u2019s red, white and blue flag. Mr. Huang pointed to a portrait of a heavyset man wearing rumpled clothes and an orange beanie. \u201cThis is the man who conscripted me into the army in Myanmar when I was 11,\u201d Mr. Huang said, speaking in southern-inflected Mandarin. \u201cHe couldn\u2019t read or write, but he could certainly fight and kill.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The villages\u2019 Chinese heritage has been played up in recent years as locals seek to cater to a small but growing number of tourists, mostly Thai, who come seeking cool weather, Chinese food and locally grown oolong tea. Huang Jiada, who joined the Kuomintang during the Cold War after his family had fled to Myanmar, has been leading the effort to preserve Ban Rak Thai\u2019s unique history.", "paragraph_id": "5d702e7bc8e4820a9b66dbc8"} +{"question": "What can sometimes happen when early spending on health matters?", "paragraph": "But what about prevention? In certain situations, early spending on someone\u2019s health will stop an expensive disease in its tracks, reducing future spending. Giving people health insurance often enables them to get just this sort of preventive care \u2014 and Obamacare requires insurers to offer most preventive services without charging any co-payments. You might expect health spending to jump initially, then slow in future years as people benefit from new prevention. But research shows that even preventive care rarely ends up saving money.", "answer": "will stop an expensive disease in its tracks", "sentence": "In certain situations, early spending on someone\u2019s health will stop an expensive disease in its tracks , reducing future spending.", "paragraph_sentence": "But what about prevention? In certain situations, early spending on someone\u2019s health will stop an expensive disease in its tracks , reducing future spending. Giving people health insurance often enables them to get just this sort of preventive care \u2014 and Obamacare requires insurers to offer most preventive services without charging any co-payments. You might expect health spending to jump initially, then slow in future years as people benefit from new prevention. But research shows that even preventive care rarely ends up saving money.", "paragraph_answer": "But what about prevention? In certain situations, early spending on someone\u2019s health will stop an expensive disease in its tracks , reducing future spending. Giving people health insurance often enables them to get just this sort of preventive care \u2014 and Obamacare requires insurers to offer most preventive services without charging any co-payments. You might expect health spending to jump initially, then slow in future years as people benefit from new prevention. But research shows that even preventive care rarely ends up saving money.", "sentence_answer": "In certain situations, early spending on someone\u2019s health will stop an expensive disease in its tracks , reducing future spending.", "paragraph_id": "5d705779c8e4820a9b66ed71"} +{"question": "How many years did Mr. Ghani live in Washington?", "paragraph": "Yet the shift in American plans is as much a result of the dire situation in Afghanistan as it is a broad lobbying effort by a powerful cross-section of the American foreign policy and national security establishment, including many of the dinner guests on Tuesday. In recent months, even as Mr. Obama has sought to draw an end to America\u2019s role in Afghanistan\u2019s war, a number of influential figures in Washington have pressed hard in public and in private to keep the United States involved. To help make their case, they repeatedly cited the election of Mr. Ghani, a Columbia graduate who lived in Washington for 15 years, as a central reason to stay in Afghanistan, despite the relative weakness of his government. Ahead of Tuesday\u2019s meeting at the White House, for instance, a group of 23 former American ambassadors and senior officials released an open letter urging the United States to keep troops in Afghanistan.", "answer": "15", "sentence": "To help make their case, they repeatedly cited the election of Mr. Ghani, a Columbia graduate who lived in Washington for 15 years, as a central reason to stay in Afghanistan, despite the relative weakness of his government.", "paragraph_sentence": "Yet the shift in American plans is as much a result of the dire situation in Afghanistan as it is a broad lobbying effort by a powerful cross-section of the American foreign policy and national security establishment, including many of the dinner guests on Tuesday. In recent months, even as Mr. Obama has sought to draw an end to America\u2019s role in Afghanistan\u2019s war, a number of influential figures in Washington have pressed hard in public and in private to keep the United States involved. To help make their case, they repeatedly cited the election of Mr. Ghani, a Columbia graduate who lived in Washington for 15 years, as a central reason to stay in Afghanistan, despite the relative weakness of his government. Ahead of Tuesday\u2019s meeting at the White House, for instance, a group of 23 former American ambassadors and senior officials released an open letter urging the United States to keep troops in Afghanistan.", "paragraph_answer": "Yet the shift in American plans is as much a result of the dire situation in Afghanistan as it is a broad lobbying effort by a powerful cross-section of the American foreign policy and national security establishment, including many of the dinner guests on Tuesday. In recent months, even as Mr. Obama has sought to draw an end to America\u2019s role in Afghanistan\u2019s war, a number of influential figures in Washington have pressed hard in public and in private to keep the United States involved. To help make their case, they repeatedly cited the election of Mr. Ghani, a Columbia graduate who lived in Washington for 15 years, as a central reason to stay in Afghanistan, despite the relative weakness of his government. Ahead of Tuesday\u2019s meeting at the White House, for instance, a group of 23 former American ambassadors and senior officials released an open letter urging the United States to keep troops in Afghanistan.", "sentence_answer": "To help make their case, they repeatedly cited the election of Mr. Ghani, a Columbia graduate who lived in Washington for 15 years, as a central reason to stay in Afghanistan, despite the relative weakness of his government.", "paragraph_id": "5d7025a3c8e4820a9b66d1e7"} +{"question": "Where is the spice blend made from?", "paragraph": "For the dressing, which Baumgart builds out of what he calls \u2018\u2018a deconstructed za\u2019atar,\u2019\u2019 the Middle Eastern spice blend, some confidence is required. What seems an enormous amount of dried spices \u2014 ground fennel, sumac and coriander \u2014 is combined with chopped parsley and cilantro. The result looks dry and grainy, as if something is wrong. But olive oil, lime juice and white-wine vinegar (best available, please!) begin to smooth things out, and the cheese, pistachios and vinegar-plumped currants finish the job. \u2018\u2018Let it sit for a while,\u2019\u2019 Baumgart advised. \u2018\u2018Let those flavors come together.\u2019\u2019", "answer": "Middle Eastern", "sentence": "For the dressing, which Baumgart builds out of what he calls \u2018\u2018a deconstructed za\u2019atar,\u2019\u2019 the Middle Eastern spice blend, some confidence is required.", "paragraph_sentence": " For the dressing, which Baumgart builds out of what he calls \u2018\u2018a deconstructed za\u2019atar,\u2019\u2019 the Middle Eastern spice blend, some confidence is required. What seems an enormous amount of dried spices \u2014 ground fennel, sumac and coriander \u2014 is combined with chopped parsley and cilantro. The result looks dry and grainy, as if something is wrong. But olive oil, lime juice and white-wine vinegar (best available, please!) begin to smooth things out, and the cheese, pistachios and vinegar-plumped currants finish the job. \u2018\u2018Let it sit for a while,\u2019\u2019 Baumgart advised. \u2018\u2018Let those flavors come together.\u2019\u2019", "paragraph_answer": "For the dressing, which Baumgart builds out of what he calls \u2018\u2018a deconstructed za\u2019atar,\u2019\u2019 the Middle Eastern spice blend, some confidence is required. What seems an enormous amount of dried spices \u2014 ground fennel, sumac and coriander \u2014 is combined with chopped parsley and cilantro. The result looks dry and grainy, as if something is wrong. But olive oil, lime juice and white-wine vinegar (best available, please!) begin to smooth things out, and the cheese, pistachios and vinegar-plumped currants finish the job. \u2018\u2018Let it sit for a while,\u2019\u2019 Baumgart advised. \u2018\u2018Let those flavors come together.\u2019\u2019", "sentence_answer": "For the dressing, which Baumgart builds out of what he calls \u2018\u2018a deconstructed za\u2019atar,\u2019\u2019 the Middle Eastern spice blend, some confidence is required.", "paragraph_id": "5d7005d7c8e4820a9b66a9c4"} +{"question": "What is the name of the painting that is strikingly American version of Modernism?", "paragraph": "Bernard Goldberg A strikingly American version of Modernism, Paul Cadmus\u2019s painting \u201cVenus and Adonis\u201d (1936) riffs on a Rubens canvas from the 1630s depicting the same subject. Exhibited in several museums, this is a relatively tame piece by Cadmus, whose work was removed from the Corcoran Gallery in Washington in the 1930s at the request of the United States Navy because of its salacious depiction of sailors. (Cadmus was one of the first publicly gay artists.) Mazzoleni The surge of interest in masters of Italian Modernism is reflected at Mazzoleni, which is showing works by Alberto Burri, Lucio Fontana and Michelangelo Pistoletto. A diminutive 1966 red plastic work by Burri, made by taking a blowtorch to plastic, is like a miniature version of what is on view in the Burri show at the Guggenheim Museum. Several canvases with Fontana\u2019s signature slashes are joined by a recent Pistoletto mirror work that includes a flat image of a man on a telephone.", "answer": "Venus and Adonis", "sentence": "Bernard Goldberg A strikingly American version of Modernism, Paul Cadmus\u2019s painting \u201c Venus and Adonis \u201d (1936) riffs on a Rubens canvas from the 1630s depicting the same subject.", "paragraph_sentence": " Bernard Goldberg A strikingly American version of Modernism, Paul Cadmus\u2019s painting \u201c Venus and Adonis \u201d (1936) riffs on a Rubens canvas from the 1630s depicting the same subject. Exhibited in several museums, this is a relatively tame piece by Cadmus, whose work was removed from the Corcoran Gallery in Washington in the 1930s at the request of the United States Navy because of its salacious depiction of sailors. (Cadmus was one of the first publicly gay artists.) Mazzoleni The surge of interest in masters of Italian Modernism is reflected at Mazzoleni, which is showing works by Alberto Burri, Lucio Fontana and Michelangelo Pistoletto. A diminutive 1966 red plastic work by Burri, made by taking a blowtorch to plastic, is like a miniature version of what is on view in the Burri show at the Guggenheim Museum. Several canvases with Fontana\u2019s signature slashes are joined by a recent Pistoletto mirror work that includes a flat image of a man on a telephone.", "paragraph_answer": "Bernard Goldberg A strikingly American version of Modernism, Paul Cadmus\u2019s painting \u201c Venus and Adonis \u201d (1936) riffs on a Rubens canvas from the 1630s depicting the same subject. Exhibited in several museums, this is a relatively tame piece by Cadmus, whose work was removed from the Corcoran Gallery in Washington in the 1930s at the request of the United States Navy because of its salacious depiction of sailors. (Cadmus was one of the first publicly gay artists.) Mazzoleni The surge of interest in masters of Italian Modernism is reflected at Mazzoleni, which is showing works by Alberto Burri, Lucio Fontana and Michelangelo Pistoletto. A diminutive 1966 red plastic work by Burri, made by taking a blowtorch to plastic, is like a miniature version of what is on view in the Burri show at the Guggenheim Museum. Several canvases with Fontana\u2019s signature slashes are joined by a recent Pistoletto mirror work that includes a flat image of a man on a telephone.", "sentence_answer": "Bernard Goldberg A strikingly American version of Modernism, Paul Cadmus\u2019s painting \u201c Venus and Adonis \u201d (1936) riffs on a Rubens canvas from the 1630s depicting the same subject.", "paragraph_id": "5d705735c8e4820a9b66ed61"} +{"question": "How many people did the airstrike killed?", "paragraph": "Syrian Army jets carried out at least 25 airstrikes on the city of Palmyra, held by the Islamic State, on Friday, a group monitoring the war said. It was the second intense bombardment of territory held by the militants in two days. The monitoring group, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said it was one of the most sustained government bombardments of Palmyra. The airstrikes killed at least 26 people, including 12 Islamic State fighters, said the group, based in Britain. On Thursday, Syrian jets carried out at least 12 airstrikes on Raqqa, the Islamic State\u2019s de facto capital in the north.", "answer": "26", "sentence": "The airstrikes killed at least 26 people, including 12 Islamic State fighters, said the group, based in Britain.", "paragraph_sentence": "Syrian Army jets carried out at least 25 airstrikes on the city of Palmyra, held by the Islamic State, on Friday, a group monitoring the war said. It was the second intense bombardment of territory held by the militants in two days. The monitoring group, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said it was one of the most sustained government bombardments of Palmyra. The airstrikes killed at least 26 people, including 12 Islamic State fighters, said the group, based in Britain. On Thursday, Syrian jets carried out at least 12 airstrikes on Raqqa, the Islamic State\u2019s de facto capital in the north.", "paragraph_answer": "Syrian Army jets carried out at least 25 airstrikes on the city of Palmyra, held by the Islamic State, on Friday, a group monitoring the war said. It was the second intense bombardment of territory held by the militants in two days. The monitoring group, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said it was one of the most sustained government bombardments of Palmyra. The airstrikes killed at least 26 people, including 12 Islamic State fighters, said the group, based in Britain. On Thursday, Syrian jets carried out at least 12 airstrikes on Raqqa, the Islamic State\u2019s de facto capital in the north.", "sentence_answer": "The airstrikes killed at least 26 people, including 12 Islamic State fighters, said the group, based in Britain.", "paragraph_id": "5d7024a0c8e4820a9b66d0e7"} +{"question": "When did the Taliban rise?", "paragraph": "Back in his home province of Jowzjan, Mr. Dostum turned his pink palace into a command center and announced that he was coordinating the war efforts there and in the neighboring provinces of Faryab and Sar-i-Pul. Local officials and militia commanders, many of them with fully armed forces despite a costly disarmament campaign, began rallying to his call. Mr. Dostum\u2019s actions have been publicized here as the bravery of a battle-hardened general. But in what is supposed to be a year that tests the ability of the Afghan security forces to fend off enemy threats on their own, his moves have also raised a serious question: Amid a territory-gobbling insurgent offensive, will the strongmen and former warlords prominent in the Afghan government honor the national security system, or will they remobilize militias that in the 1990s caused the chaos that gave rise to the Taliban in the first place?", "answer": "1990s", "sentence": "But in what is supposed to be a year that tests the ability of the Afghan security forces to fend off enemy threats on their own, his moves have also raised a serious question: Amid a territory-gobbling insurgent offensive, will the strongmen and former warlords prominent in the Afghan government honor the national security system, or will they remobilize militias that in the 1990s caused the chaos that gave rise to the Taliban in the first place?", "paragraph_sentence": "Back in his home province of Jowzjan, Mr. Dostum turned his pink palace into a command center and announced that he was coordinating the war efforts there and in the neighboring provinces of Faryab and Sar-i-Pul. Local officials and militia commanders, many of them with fully armed forces despite a costly disarmament campaign, began rallying to his call. Mr. Dostum\u2019s actions have been publicized here as the bravery of a battle-hardened general. But in what is supposed to be a year that tests the ability of the Afghan security forces to fend off enemy threats on their own, his moves have also raised a serious question: Amid a territory-gobbling insurgent offensive, will the strongmen and former warlords prominent in the Afghan government honor the national security system, or will they remobilize militias that in the 1990s caused the chaos that gave rise to the Taliban in the first place? ", "paragraph_answer": "Back in his home province of Jowzjan, Mr. Dostum turned his pink palace into a command center and announced that he was coordinating the war efforts there and in the neighboring provinces of Faryab and Sar-i-Pul. Local officials and militia commanders, many of them with fully armed forces despite a costly disarmament campaign, began rallying to his call. Mr. Dostum\u2019s actions have been publicized here as the bravery of a battle-hardened general. But in what is supposed to be a year that tests the ability of the Afghan security forces to fend off enemy threats on their own, his moves have also raised a serious question: Amid a territory-gobbling insurgent offensive, will the strongmen and former warlords prominent in the Afghan government honor the national security system, or will they remobilize militias that in the 1990s caused the chaos that gave rise to the Taliban in the first place?", "sentence_answer": "But in what is supposed to be a year that tests the ability of the Afghan security forces to fend off enemy threats on their own, his moves have also raised a serious question: Amid a territory-gobbling insurgent offensive, will the strongmen and former warlords prominent in the Afghan government honor the national security system, or will they remobilize militias that in the 1990s caused the chaos that gave rise to the Taliban in the first place?", "paragraph_id": "5d703561c8e4820a9b66df9c"} +{"question": "Since 2012, who was the first team to win in Ames, isntead of KC?", "paragraph": "KENTUCKY 74, MISSISSIPPI ST. 56 Top-ranked Kentucky fought off a slow start to cruise to a victory over host Mississippi State (12-16, 5-10 Southeastern Conference) and keep its undefeated season on track. Trey Lyles scored a career-high 18 points and Aaron Harrison added 16 for Kentucky (28-0, 15-0). BAYLOR 79, IOWA STATE 70 Taurean Prince scored 20 points and No. 19 Baylor upset No. 12 Iowa State (20-7, 10-5 Big 12) on the road for its third straight win. The Bears (21-7, 9-6) shot 14 of 26 from 3-point range and hit their last seven, becoming the first team other than Kansas to win in Ames since 2012.", "answer": "Bears", "sentence": "The Bears (21-7, 9-6) shot 14 of 26 from 3-point range and hit their last seven, becoming the first team other than Kansas to win in Ames since 2012.", "paragraph_sentence": "KENTUCKY 74, MISSISSIPPI ST. 56 Top-ranked Kentucky fought off a slow start to cruise to a victory over host Mississippi State (12-16, 5-10 Southeastern Conference) and keep its undefeated season on track. Trey Lyles scored a career-high 18 points and Aaron Harrison added 16 for Kentucky (28-0, 15-0). BAYLOR 79, IOWA STATE 70 Taurean Prince scored 20 points and No. 19 Baylor upset No. 12 Iowa State (20-7, 10-5 Big 12) on the road for its third straight win. The Bears (21-7, 9-6) shot 14 of 26 from 3-point range and hit their last seven, becoming the first team other than Kansas to win in Ames since 2012. ", "paragraph_answer": "KENTUCKY 74, MISSISSIPPI ST. 56 Top-ranked Kentucky fought off a slow start to cruise to a victory over host Mississippi State (12-16, 5-10 Southeastern Conference) and keep its undefeated season on track. Trey Lyles scored a career-high 18 points and Aaron Harrison added 16 for Kentucky (28-0, 15-0). BAYLOR 79, IOWA STATE 70 Taurean Prince scored 20 points and No. 19 Baylor upset No. 12 Iowa State (20-7, 10-5 Big 12) on the road for its third straight win. The Bears (21-7, 9-6) shot 14 of 26 from 3-point range and hit their last seven, becoming the first team other than Kansas to win in Ames since 2012.", "sentence_answer": "The Bears (21-7, 9-6) shot 14 of 26 from 3-point range and hit their last seven, becoming the first team other than Kansas to win in Ames since 2012.", "paragraph_id": "5d7004f0c8e4820a9b66a827"} +{"question": "How are Joe Swanberg's character investigations different from Woody Allen's character investigations?", "paragraph": "You might almost mistake this for a middle- or late-period Woody Allen movie, in other words. Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance, but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground. His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis. Their conversation is stripped of cultural references and instead of grappling with the meaning of existence they struggle with the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility. They want to be cool, fun, laid back and nonjudgmental, but they also want to behave decently.", "answer": "firmer moral and philosophical ground", "sentence": "Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance, but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground .", "paragraph_sentence": "You might almost mistake this for a middle- or late-period Woody Allen movie, in other words. Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance, but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground . His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis. Their conversation is stripped of cultural references and instead of grappling with the meaning of existence they struggle with the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility. They want to be cool, fun, laid back and nonjudgmental, but they also want to behave decently.", "paragraph_answer": "You might almost mistake this for a middle- or late-period Woody Allen movie, in other words. Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance, but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground . His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis. Their conversation is stripped of cultural references and instead of grappling with the meaning of existence they struggle with the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility. They want to be cool, fun, laid back and nonjudgmental, but they also want to behave decently.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance, but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground .", "paragraph_id": "5d708315c8e4820a9b66f418"} +{"question": "Who is Fran Fraschilla?", "paragraph": "Mills, who was seated alongside representatives of 13 other teams, watched as Mark Tatum, the league\u2019s deputy commissioner, opened 14 envelopes, one by one, each containing a team logo. The Knicks, who went 17-65, the second-worst record in the league, had a 19.9 percent chance of winning the lottery and a 55.8 percent chance of being among the top three. But they also had a 31.9 percent chance of dipping to No. 4. Fran Fraschilla, an analyst for ESPN, said it was not the worst place to be, given the quality at the top of the draft. \u201cAll of these players, in their own way, have skills that are going to translate well to the N.B.A.,\u201d Fraschilla said in a telephone interview.", "answer": "an analyst for ESPN", "sentence": "Fran Fraschilla, an analyst for ESPN , said it was not the worst place to be, given the quality at the top of the draft.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mills, who was seated alongside representatives of 13 other teams, watched as Mark Tatum, the league\u2019s deputy commissioner, opened 14 envelopes, one by one, each containing a team logo. The Knicks, who went 17-65, the second-worst record in the league, had a 19.9 percent chance of winning the lottery and a 55.8 percent chance of being among the top three. But they also had a 31.9 percent chance of dipping to No. 4. Fran Fraschilla, an analyst for ESPN , said it was not the worst place to be, given the quality at the top of the draft. \u201cAll of these players, in their own way, have skills that are going to translate well to the N.B.A.,\u201d Fraschilla said in a telephone interview.", "paragraph_answer": "Mills, who was seated alongside representatives of 13 other teams, watched as Mark Tatum, the league\u2019s deputy commissioner, opened 14 envelopes, one by one, each containing a team logo. The Knicks, who went 17-65, the second-worst record in the league, had a 19.9 percent chance of winning the lottery and a 55.8 percent chance of being among the top three. But they also had a 31.9 percent chance of dipping to No. 4. Fran Fraschilla, an analyst for ESPN , said it was not the worst place to be, given the quality at the top of the draft. \u201cAll of these players, in their own way, have skills that are going to translate well to the N.B.A.,\u201d Fraschilla said in a telephone interview.", "sentence_answer": "Fran Fraschilla, an analyst for ESPN , said it was not the worst place to be, given the quality at the top of the draft.", "paragraph_id": "5d7007e2c8e4820a9b66aed2"} +{"question": "What team did Barry Larkin play for in the 1990 World Series?", "paragraph": "Rose has permission to be on the field Tuesday as part of M.L.B.\u2019s fan-voted Franchise Four promotion. REDS FANS SAVOR TEAM HISTORY Cincinnati was home to the first professional baseball team, the 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings, who went unbeaten their inaugural season. There are tributes to the vintage players around the city, and former players will be in town from two other great Cincinnati teams \u2014 the 1975-76 world champions, including Rose, and the 1990 team, led by Barry Larkin, which swept the World Series over Oakland.", "answer": "Cincinnati", "sentence": "REDS FANS SAVOR TEAM HISTORY Cincinnati was home to the first professional baseball team, the 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings, who went unbeaten their inaugural season.", "paragraph_sentence": "Rose has permission to be on the field Tuesday as part of M.L.B.\u2019s fan-voted Franchise Four promotion. REDS FANS SAVOR TEAM HISTORY Cincinnati was home to the first professional baseball team, the 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings, who went unbeaten their inaugural season. There are tributes to the vintage players around the city, and former players will be in town from two other great Cincinnati teams \u2014 the 1975-76 world champions, including Rose, and the 1990 team, led by Barry Larkin, which swept the World Series over Oakland.", "paragraph_answer": "Rose has permission to be on the field Tuesday as part of M.L.B.\u2019s fan-voted Franchise Four promotion. REDS FANS SAVOR TEAM HISTORY Cincinnati was home to the first professional baseball team, the 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings, who went unbeaten their inaugural season. There are tributes to the vintage players around the city, and former players will be in town from two other great Cincinnati teams \u2014 the 1975-76 world champions, including Rose, and the 1990 team, led by Barry Larkin, which swept the World Series over Oakland.", "sentence_answer": "REDS FANS SAVOR TEAM HISTORY Cincinnati was home to the first professional baseball team, the 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings, who went unbeaten their inaugural season.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026ebc8e4820a9b66d447"} +{"question": "Whose reputation is it alleged that Dan Rather set out to tarnish?", "paragraph": "The title of \u201cTruth,\u201d a gripping, beautifully executed journalistic thriller about the events that ended Dan Rather\u2019s career as a CBS anchorman, should probably be appended with a question mark. More than most docudramas about fairly recent events, it is so well written and acted that it conveys a convincing illusion of veracity. Just as there are conspiracy theorists who will never be satisfied with the Warren Commission report on the Kennedy assassination, there are some who passionately believe that Mr. Rather and his producer Mary Mapes (Cate Blanchett) conspired to tarnish George W. Bush\u2019s reputation.", "answer": "George W. Bush", "sentence": "Just as there are conspiracy theorists who will never be satisfied with the Warren Commission report on the Kennedy assassination, there are some who passionately believe that Mr. Rather and his producer Mary Mapes (Cate Blanchett) conspired to tarnish George W. Bush \u2019s reputation.", "paragraph_sentence": "The title of \u201cTruth,\u201d a gripping, beautifully executed journalistic thriller about the events that ended Dan Rather\u2019s career as a CBS anchorman, should probably be appended with a question mark. More than most docudramas about fairly recent events, it is so well written and acted that it conveys a convincing illusion of veracity. Just as there are conspiracy theorists who will never be satisfied with the Warren Commission report on the Kennedy assassination, there are some who passionately believe that Mr. Rather and his producer Mary Mapes (Cate Blanchett) conspired to tarnish George W. Bush \u2019s reputation. ", "paragraph_answer": "The title of \u201cTruth,\u201d a gripping, beautifully executed journalistic thriller about the events that ended Dan Rather\u2019s career as a CBS anchorman, should probably be appended with a question mark. More than most docudramas about fairly recent events, it is so well written and acted that it conveys a convincing illusion of veracity. Just as there are conspiracy theorists who will never be satisfied with the Warren Commission report on the Kennedy assassination, there are some who passionately believe that Mr. Rather and his producer Mary Mapes (Cate Blanchett) conspired to tarnish George W. Bush \u2019s reputation.", "sentence_answer": "Just as there are conspiracy theorists who will never be satisfied with the Warren Commission report on the Kennedy assassination, there are some who passionately believe that Mr. Rather and his producer Mary Mapes (Cate Blanchett) conspired to tarnish George W. Bush \u2019s reputation.", "paragraph_id": "5d70068cc8e4820a9b66abab"} +{"question": "Who is the president of a union?", "paragraph": "Manuel Leite de Ara\u00fajo, the president of a union representing prison employees, said some guards oppose Mr. Silva Neto\u2019s \u201csentimental,\u201d friendly approach with inmates, noting that a committee of guards asked the union to support ousting him from his position. Although many Brazilian evangelicals support tough-on-crime political movements, Mr. Silva Neto\u2019s approach puts him closer to human rights activists on the left. He criticizes incarceration policies that he says target the poor for nonviolent drug charges.", "answer": "Manuel Leite de Ara\u00fajo", "sentence": "Manuel Leite de Ara\u00fajo , the president of a union representing prison employees, said some guards oppose Mr. Silva Neto\u2019s \u201csentimental,\u201d friendly approach with inmates, noting that a committee of guards asked the union to support ousting him from his position.", "paragraph_sentence": " Manuel Leite de Ara\u00fajo , the president of a union representing prison employees, said some guards oppose Mr. Silva Neto\u2019s \u201csentimental,\u201d friendly approach with inmates, noting that a committee of guards asked the union to support ousting him from his position. Although many Brazilian evangelicals support tough-on-crime political movements, Mr. Silva Neto\u2019s approach puts him closer to human rights activists on the left. He criticizes incarceration policies that he says target the poor for nonviolent drug charges.", "paragraph_answer": " Manuel Leite de Ara\u00fajo , the president of a union representing prison employees, said some guards oppose Mr. Silva Neto\u2019s \u201csentimental,\u201d friendly approach with inmates, noting that a committee of guards asked the union to support ousting him from his position. Although many Brazilian evangelicals support tough-on-crime political movements, Mr. Silva Neto\u2019s approach puts him closer to human rights activists on the left. He criticizes incarceration policies that he says target the poor for nonviolent drug charges.", "sentence_answer": " Manuel Leite de Ara\u00fajo , the president of a union representing prison employees, said some guards oppose Mr. Silva Neto\u2019s \u201csentimental,\u201d friendly approach with inmates, noting that a committee of guards asked the union to support ousting him from his position.", "paragraph_id": "5d7027a5c8e4820a9b66d56d"} +{"question": "Where did Cheung work in the 80's?", "paragraph": "ANTHONY CHEUNG, composer and pianist: I don\u2019t immediately prostrate myself at his altar. It\u2019s an ambivalent relationship. But as far as respect for him as a musician and what he\u2019s done, I have infinite respect. He\u2019s an enormous influence on how recent composers have dealt with instrumental groups. SALONEN I got to know him in the early \u201980s when I worked quite a bit at IRCAM [an avant-garde music institute founded by Mr. Boulez] and was conducting his Ensemble InterContemporain. And it was the closest to Louis XIV I ever saw in my life. It was impressive and scary for a young person, but mostly impressive. I still think, if someone had to have that kind of power, why not him? AS A PIANO MASTER PIERRE-LAURENT AIMARD, pianist: The piano was his instrument, so he could experiment directly on it. In the \u201cNotations,\u201d we see a young composer, still a student, who composed a set of miniatures. And in many of them, we recognize what will become landmark gestures of Boulez, the basis of his language: violent lightenings illuminating the whole space of the instrument, permanently varied arpeggi, short unexpected gestures going in any direction.", "answer": "IRCAM", "sentence": "SALONEN I got to know him in the early \u201980s when I worked quite a bit at IRCAM [an avant-garde music institute founded by Mr. Boulez] and was conducting his Ensemble InterContemporain.", "paragraph_sentence": "ANTHONY CHEUNG, composer and pianist: I don\u2019t immediately prostrate myself at his altar. It\u2019s an ambivalent relationship. But as far as respect for him as a musician and what he\u2019s done, I have infinite respect. He\u2019s an enormous influence on how recent composers have dealt with instrumental groups. SALONEN I got to know him in the early \u201980s when I worked quite a bit at IRCAM [an avant-garde music institute founded by Mr. Boulez] and was conducting his Ensemble InterContemporain. And it was the closest to Louis XIV I ever saw in my life. It was impressive and scary for a young person, but mostly impressive. I still think, if someone had to have that kind of power, why not him? AS A PIANO MASTER PIERRE-LAURENT AIMARD, pianist: The piano was his instrument, so he could experiment directly on it. In the \u201cNotations,\u201d we see a young composer, still a student, who composed a set of miniatures. And in many of them, we recognize what will become landmark gestures of Boulez, the basis of his language: violent lightenings illuminating the whole space of the instrument, permanently varied arpeggi, short unexpected gestures going in any direction.", "paragraph_answer": "ANTHONY CHEUNG, composer and pianist: I don\u2019t immediately prostrate myself at his altar. It\u2019s an ambivalent relationship. But as far as respect for him as a musician and what he\u2019s done, I have infinite respect. He\u2019s an enormous influence on how recent composers have dealt with instrumental groups. SALONEN I got to know him in the early \u201980s when I worked quite a bit at IRCAM [an avant-garde music institute founded by Mr. Boulez] and was conducting his Ensemble InterContemporain. And it was the closest to Louis XIV I ever saw in my life. It was impressive and scary for a young person, but mostly impressive. I still think, if someone had to have that kind of power, why not him? AS A PIANO MASTER PIERRE-LAURENT AIMARD, pianist: The piano was his instrument, so he could experiment directly on it. In the \u201cNotations,\u201d we see a young composer, still a student, who composed a set of miniatures. And in many of them, we recognize what will become landmark gestures of Boulez, the basis of his language: violent lightenings illuminating the whole space of the instrument, permanently varied arpeggi, short unexpected gestures going in any direction.", "sentence_answer": "SALONEN I got to know him in the early \u201980s when I worked quite a bit at IRCAM [an avant-garde music institute founded by Mr. Boulez] and was conducting his Ensemble InterContemporain.", "paragraph_id": "5d705c23c8e4820a9b66ef14"} +{"question": "Who denounced Mr. Carson because he is a member of the Seventh-day Adventist denomination?", "paragraph": "Each time Ben Carson prepared to cut into a human brain, the neurosurgeon, who was the first to separate twins conjoined at the head, said a prayer. He would scrub his hands, close his eyes and ask for God\u2019s help. \u201cLord, you be the neurosurgeon,\u201d he has described himself thinking. \u201cI\u2019ll be the hands.\u201d Since packing up his scalpel and becoming a Republican presidential candidate, Mr. Carson has not shied from talking about his Christian faith and sprinkling policy pronouncements with prayer as he travels the country talking to voters in his blunt but soft-spoken style. So far it has worked \u2014 he has overtaken Donald J. Trump in a new national poll of Republicans and is beating him in Iowa, the crucial caucus state. But Mr. Carson\u2019s religion has been cast in a harsher light in recent days, as Mr. Trump, whose support among evangelicals is falling, suggested that the doctor is not a mainstream Christian because he is a member of the Seventh-day Adventist denomination.", "answer": "Mr. Trump", "sentence": "But Mr. Carson\u2019s religion has been cast in a harsher light in recent days, as Mr. Trump , whose support among evangelicals is falling, suggested that the doctor is not a mainstream Christian because he is a member of the Seventh-day Adventist denomination.", "paragraph_sentence": "Each time Ben Carson prepared to cut into a human brain, the neurosurgeon, who was the first to separate twins conjoined at the head, said a prayer. He would scrub his hands, close his eyes and ask for God\u2019s help. \u201cLord, you be the neurosurgeon,\u201d he has described himself thinking. \u201cI\u2019ll be the hands.\u201d Since packing up his scalpel and becoming a Republican presidential candidate, Mr. Carson has not shied from talking about his Christian faith and sprinkling policy pronouncements with prayer as he travels the country talking to voters in his blunt but soft-spoken style. So far it has worked \u2014 he has overtaken Donald J. Trump in a new national poll of Republicans and is beating him in Iowa, the crucial caucus state. But Mr. Carson\u2019s religion has been cast in a harsher light in recent days, as Mr. Trump , whose support among evangelicals is falling, suggested that the doctor is not a mainstream Christian because he is a member of the Seventh-day Adventist denomination. ", "paragraph_answer": "Each time Ben Carson prepared to cut into a human brain, the neurosurgeon, who was the first to separate twins conjoined at the head, said a prayer. He would scrub his hands, close his eyes and ask for God\u2019s help. \u201cLord, you be the neurosurgeon,\u201d he has described himself thinking. \u201cI\u2019ll be the hands.\u201d Since packing up his scalpel and becoming a Republican presidential candidate, Mr. Carson has not shied from talking about his Christian faith and sprinkling policy pronouncements with prayer as he travels the country talking to voters in his blunt but soft-spoken style. So far it has worked \u2014 he has overtaken Donald J. Trump in a new national poll of Republicans and is beating him in Iowa, the crucial caucus state. But Mr. Carson\u2019s religion has been cast in a harsher light in recent days, as Mr. Trump , whose support among evangelicals is falling, suggested that the doctor is not a mainstream Christian because he is a member of the Seventh-day Adventist denomination.", "sentence_answer": "But Mr. Carson\u2019s religion has been cast in a harsher light in recent days, as Mr. Trump , whose support among evangelicals is falling, suggested that the doctor is not a mainstream Christian because he is a member of the Seventh-day Adventist denomination.", "paragraph_id": "5d702a34c8e4820a9b66d7cb"} +{"question": "Why did Ms. Harper need a scholarship?", "paragraph": "The young woman\u2019s mother, who immigrated from the Philippines, said that she had shared Filipino meals with Ms. Harper, and that Ms. Harper had taught her how to drive. She wrote a letter of support when Ms. Harper was applying for a $1,500 scholarship to continue her nursing studies. The family still has Ms. Harper\u2019s thank you card. \u201cOnce again, thank you so very much for helping me with my scholarship application,\u201d the note says. \u201cNow I can attend the nursing program without having to stress out about tuition!\u201d", "answer": "to continue her nursing studies", "sentence": "She wrote a letter of support when Ms. Harper was applying for a $1,500 scholarship to continue her nursing studies .", "paragraph_sentence": "The young woman\u2019s mother, who immigrated from the Philippines, said that she had shared Filipino meals with Ms. Harper, and that Ms. Harper had taught her how to drive. She wrote a letter of support when Ms. Harper was applying for a $1,500 scholarship to continue her nursing studies . The family still has Ms. Harper\u2019s thank you card. \u201cOnce again, thank you so very much for helping me with my scholarship application,\u201d the note says. \u201cNow I can attend the nursing program without having to stress out about tuition!\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The young woman\u2019s mother, who immigrated from the Philippines, said that she had shared Filipino meals with Ms. Harper, and that Ms. Harper had taught her how to drive. She wrote a letter of support when Ms. Harper was applying for a $1,500 scholarship to continue her nursing studies . The family still has Ms. Harper\u2019s thank you card. \u201cOnce again, thank you so very much for helping me with my scholarship application,\u201d the note says. \u201cNow I can attend the nursing program without having to stress out about tuition!\u201d", "sentence_answer": "She wrote a letter of support when Ms. Harper was applying for a $1,500 scholarship to continue her nursing studies .", "paragraph_id": "5d70449bc8e4820a9b66e790"} +{"question": "which party is considered a powerful Islamist party?", "paragraph": "Prime Minister Habib Essid presented his second government in two weeks on Monday, this time including more parties and a position for Islamists. The cabinet he proposed on Jan. 23 consisted of just two parties and did not survive a no-confidence vote. It has now been expanded to involve five parties, including one post \u2014 that of employment minister \u2014 for the powerful Islamist party, Ennahda. Mr. Essid\u2019s Nida Tunis party won the most seats in October\u2019s election but still needed to form a coalition. The government faces a confidence vote in Parliament on Wednesday, which it is expected to pass.", "answer": "Ennahda", "sentence": "It has now been expanded to involve five parties, including one post \u2014 that of employment minister \u2014 for the powerful Islamist party, Ennahda .", "paragraph_sentence": "Prime Minister Habib Essid presented his second government in two weeks on Monday, this time including more parties and a position for Islamists. The cabinet he proposed on Jan. 23 consisted of just two parties and did not survive a no-confidence vote. It has now been expanded to involve five parties, including one post \u2014 that of employment minister \u2014 for the powerful Islamist party, Ennahda . Mr. Essid\u2019s Nida Tunis party won the most seats in October\u2019s election but still needed to form a coalition. The government faces a confidence vote in Parliament on Wednesday, which it is expected to pass.", "paragraph_answer": "Prime Minister Habib Essid presented his second government in two weeks on Monday, this time including more parties and a position for Islamists. The cabinet he proposed on Jan. 23 consisted of just two parties and did not survive a no-confidence vote. It has now been expanded to involve five parties, including one post \u2014 that of employment minister \u2014 for the powerful Islamist party, Ennahda . Mr. Essid\u2019s Nida Tunis party won the most seats in October\u2019s election but still needed to form a coalition. The government faces a confidence vote in Parliament on Wednesday, which it is expected to pass.", "sentence_answer": "It has now been expanded to involve five parties, including one post \u2014 that of employment minister \u2014 for the powerful Islamist party, Ennahda .", "paragraph_id": "5d700558c8e4820a9b66a8af"} +{"question": "What mood does Joe Swanberg's narrative almost entirely unfold in?", "paragraph": "As things threaten to get out of hand for Tim, his wife is courting some disruption of her own, visiting some better-off friends whose relationship looks like a bad New Yorker short story from the \u201970s and then setting off alone into the night. Everywhere she goes she finds a copy of Dr. David Schnarch\u2019s \u201cPassionate Marriage,\u201d which feels like both an earnest, obvious metaphor and a sly running joke. Mr. Swanberg has made a tight, satisfying narrative that unfolds almost entirely in the subjunctive mood. This is a story about what almost happens, what might happen and what is happening under the banal surface of things. The modesty of \u201cDigging for Fire\u201d is among its virtues, and Mr. Swanberg has become an increasingly trustworthy filmmaker. He doesn\u2019t necessarily have a lot to say, but he always makes sure that he knows what he\u2019s talking about.", "answer": "subjunctive", "sentence": "Mr. Swanberg has made a tight, satisfying narrative that unfolds almost entirely in the subjunctive mood.", "paragraph_sentence": "As things threaten to get out of hand for Tim, his wife is courting some disruption of her own, visiting some better-off friends whose relationship looks like a bad New Yorker short story from the \u201970s and then setting off alone into the night. Everywhere she goes she finds a copy of Dr. David Schnarch\u2019s \u201cPassionate Marriage,\u201d which feels like both an earnest, obvious metaphor and a sly running joke. Mr. Swanberg has made a tight, satisfying narrative that unfolds almost entirely in the subjunctive mood. This is a story about what almost happens, what might happen and what is happening under the banal surface of things. The modesty of \u201cDigging for Fire\u201d is among its virtues, and Mr. Swanberg has become an increasingly trustworthy filmmaker. He doesn\u2019t necessarily have a lot to say, but he always makes sure that he knows what he\u2019s talking about.", "paragraph_answer": "As things threaten to get out of hand for Tim, his wife is courting some disruption of her own, visiting some better-off friends whose relationship looks like a bad New Yorker short story from the \u201970s and then setting off alone into the night. Everywhere she goes she finds a copy of Dr. David Schnarch\u2019s \u201cPassionate Marriage,\u201d which feels like both an earnest, obvious metaphor and a sly running joke. Mr. Swanberg has made a tight, satisfying narrative that unfolds almost entirely in the subjunctive mood. This is a story about what almost happens, what might happen and what is happening under the banal surface of things. The modesty of \u201cDigging for Fire\u201d is among its virtues, and Mr. Swanberg has become an increasingly trustworthy filmmaker. He doesn\u2019t necessarily have a lot to say, but he always makes sure that he knows what he\u2019s talking about.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Swanberg has made a tight, satisfying narrative that unfolds almost entirely in the subjunctive mood.", "paragraph_id": "5d70858dc8e4820a9b66f439"} +{"question": "What is the main topic of this passage?", "paragraph": "Mr. Cowan and others point to what happened to Target in 2013, when the retailer ignored an alert that ultimately could have stopped criminals from stealing 40 million customers\u2019 payment details from its network. A year earlier, iSight warned its clients that criminals were compiling and selling malware that was specifically designed to scrape payment data off cash registers. Had Target received that warning, the blip on its network might not have gone unnoticed. \u201cTarget faced the same problem every retailer does every day,\u201d Mr. Watters said. \u201cThey are awash in a sea of critical alerts every day. Without threat intelligence, they had roulette odds of picking the right one.\u201d Gartner, the research firm, estimates that the market for threat intelligence like iSight\u2019s could grow to $1 billion in two years from $255 million in 2013. Gartner predicts that by 2018, 60 percent of businesses will incorporate threat intelligence into their defensive security strategy.", "answer": "threat intelligence", "sentence": "Without threat intelligence , they had roulette odds of picking the right one.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Cowan and others point to what happened to Target in 2013, when the retailer ignored an alert that ultimately could have stopped criminals from stealing 40 million customers\u2019 payment details from its network. A year earlier, iSight warned its clients that criminals were compiling and selling malware that was specifically designed to scrape payment data off cash registers. Had Target received that warning, the blip on its network might not have gone unnoticed. \u201cTarget faced the same problem every retailer does every day,\u201d Mr. Watters said. \u201cThey are awash in a sea of critical alerts every day. Without threat intelligence , they had roulette odds of picking the right one.\u201d Gartner, the research firm, estimates that the market for threat intelligence like iSight\u2019s could grow to $1 billion in two years from $255 million in 2013. Gartner predicts that by 2018, 60 percent of businesses will incorporate threat intelligence into their defensive security strategy.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Cowan and others point to what happened to Target in 2013, when the retailer ignored an alert that ultimately could have stopped criminals from stealing 40 million customers\u2019 payment details from its network. A year earlier, iSight warned its clients that criminals were compiling and selling malware that was specifically designed to scrape payment data off cash registers. Had Target received that warning, the blip on its network might not have gone unnoticed. \u201cTarget faced the same problem every retailer does every day,\u201d Mr. Watters said. \u201cThey are awash in a sea of critical alerts every day. Without threat intelligence , they had roulette odds of picking the right one.\u201d Gartner, the research firm, estimates that the market for threat intelligence like iSight\u2019s could grow to $1 billion in two years from $255 million in 2013. Gartner predicts that by 2018, 60 percent of businesses will incorporate threat intelligence into their defensive security strategy.", "sentence_answer": "Without threat intelligence , they had roulette odds of picking the right one.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d70227ac8e4820a9b66cea3"} +{"question": "How many people did the terrorist attack injure?", "paragraph": "The N.D.S. arrested a number of men in the crowd, including the butcher believed to have stabbed the soldier, said Mr. Khan and other witnesses. That seemed to provoke further anger, with the crowd demanding that Afghan security forces on the scene release their countrymen who had stood up against the foreign soldiers. A spokesman for the American-led coalition, Col. Brian Tribus, said the episode was under investigation. He added that two service members in the convoy had minor injuries. The suicide bombing wounded at least 22 people and killed one, said a spokesman for the Interior Ministry, Sediq Sediqqi. But witnesses said the death toll was probably higher.", "answer": "22", "sentence": "The suicide bombing wounded at least 22 people and killed one, said a spokesman for the Interior Ministry, Sediq Sediqqi.", "paragraph_sentence": "The N.D.S. arrested a number of men in the crowd, including the butcher believed to have stabbed the soldier, said Mr. Khan and other witnesses. That seemed to provoke further anger, with the crowd demanding that Afghan security forces on the scene release their countrymen who had stood up against the foreign soldiers. A spokesman for the American-led coalition, Col. Brian Tribus, said the episode was under investigation. He added that two service members in the convoy had minor injuries. The suicide bombing wounded at least 22 people and killed one, said a spokesman for the Interior Ministry, Sediq Sediqqi. But witnesses said the death toll was probably higher.", "paragraph_answer": "The N.D.S. arrested a number of men in the crowd, including the butcher believed to have stabbed the soldier, said Mr. Khan and other witnesses. That seemed to provoke further anger, with the crowd demanding that Afghan security forces on the scene release their countrymen who had stood up against the foreign soldiers. A spokesman for the American-led coalition, Col. Brian Tribus, said the episode was under investigation. He added that two service members in the convoy had minor injuries. The suicide bombing wounded at least 22 people and killed one, said a spokesman for the Interior Ministry, Sediq Sediqqi. But witnesses said the death toll was probably higher.", "sentence_answer": "The suicide bombing wounded at least 22 people and killed one, said a spokesman for the Interior Ministry, Sediq Sediqqi.", "paragraph_id": "5d700e9cc8e4820a9b66ba74"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700803c8e4820a9b66af2a"} +{"question": "Who acted like a prosecutor?", "paragraph": "\u201cHe acted more like a prosecutor than a defense lawyer,\u201d Yevhen Sverstiuk, an essayist and author who knew Mr. Stus, said in an interview last year. Mr. Sverstiuk, who himself spent seven years as a political prisoner in Soviet labor camps and five years in exile in Siberia, died in December at 86. He had recently served as president of the Ukrainian PEN Center, a chapter of the international writers\u2019 association. \u201cA man with such a past cannot be a public figure,\u201d Mr. Sverstiuk said of Mr. Medvedchuk in the interview, adding: \u201cIn short, he is a sinister character. This is an evil name.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Stus", "sentence": "\u201cHe acted more like a prosecutor than a defense lawyer,\u201d Yevhen Sverstiuk, an essayist and author who knew Mr. Stus , said in an interview last year.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cHe acted more like a prosecutor than a defense lawyer,\u201d Yevhen Sverstiuk, an essayist and author who knew Mr. Stus , said in an interview last year. Mr. Sverstiuk, who himself spent seven years as a political prisoner in Soviet labor camps and five years in exile in Siberia, died in December at 86. He had recently served as president of the Ukrainian PEN Center, a chapter of the international writers\u2019 association. \u201cA man with such a past cannot be a public figure,\u201d Mr. Sverstiuk said of Mr. Medvedchuk in the interview, adding: \u201cIn short, he is a sinister character. This is an evil name.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cHe acted more like a prosecutor than a defense lawyer,\u201d Yevhen Sverstiuk, an essayist and author who knew Mr. Stus , said in an interview last year. Mr. Sverstiuk, who himself spent seven years as a political prisoner in Soviet labor camps and five years in exile in Siberia, died in December at 86. He had recently served as president of the Ukrainian PEN Center, a chapter of the international writers\u2019 association. \u201cA man with such a past cannot be a public figure,\u201d Mr. Sverstiuk said of Mr. Medvedchuk in the interview, adding: \u201cIn short, he is a sinister character. This is an evil name.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cHe acted more like a prosecutor than a defense lawyer,\u201d Yevhen Sverstiuk, an essayist and author who knew Mr. Stus , said in an interview last year.", "paragraph_id": "5d7044f1c8e4820a9b66e7c1"} +{"question": "What emotion do Cubs fans feel in early April?", "paragraph": "This belief is not born of the syrupy, early April optimism that is bred into Cubs fans. That was beaten out of me long ago, either by so many years as a sportswriter or by Larry Himes\u2019s stint as general manager. (For the uninitiated, he is the one who let Greg Maddux leave.) Instead, there are plenty of perfectly plausible, rational reasons this is really going to be the Cubs\u2019 year. The new manager, Joe Maddon, won\u2019t treat the 107-year wait for a championship as a 107-ton weight. Jon Lester is a war horse of a pitcher, Anthony Rizzo is a franchise cornerstone, and Kris Bryant looks like a star in waiting.", "answer": "optimism", "sentence": "This belief is not born of the syrupy, early April optimism that is bred into Cubs fans.", "paragraph_sentence": " This belief is not born of the syrupy, early April optimism that is bred into Cubs fans. That was beaten out of me long ago, either by so many years as a sportswriter or by Larry Himes\u2019s stint as general manager. (For the uninitiated, he is the one who let Greg Maddux leave.) Instead, there are plenty of perfectly plausible, rational reasons this is really going to be the Cubs\u2019 year. The new manager, Joe Maddon, won\u2019t treat the 107-year wait for a championship as a 107-ton weight. Jon Lester is a war horse of a pitcher, Anthony Rizzo is a franchise cornerstone, and Kris Bryant looks like a star in waiting.", "paragraph_answer": "This belief is not born of the syrupy, early April optimism that is bred into Cubs fans. That was beaten out of me long ago, either by so many years as a sportswriter or by Larry Himes\u2019s stint as general manager. (For the uninitiated, he is the one who let Greg Maddux leave.) Instead, there are plenty of perfectly plausible, rational reasons this is really going to be the Cubs\u2019 year. The new manager, Joe Maddon, won\u2019t treat the 107-year wait for a championship as a 107-ton weight. Jon Lester is a war horse of a pitcher, Anthony Rizzo is a franchise cornerstone, and Kris Bryant looks like a star in waiting.", "sentence_answer": "This belief is not born of the syrupy, early April optimism that is bred into Cubs fans.", "paragraph_id": "5d70059bc8e4820a9b66a951"} +{"question": "What kind of growth is expected for this industry?", "paragraph": "Mr. Cowan and others point to what happened to Target in 2013, when the retailer ignored an alert that ultimately could have stopped criminals from stealing 40 million customers\u2019 payment details from its network. A year earlier, iSight warned its clients that criminals were compiling and selling malware that was specifically designed to scrape payment data off cash registers. Had Target received that warning, the blip on its network might not have gone unnoticed. \u201cTarget faced the same problem every retailer does every day,\u201d Mr. Watters said. \u201cThey are awash in a sea of critical alerts every day. Without threat intelligence, they had roulette odds of picking the right one.\u201d Gartner, the research firm, estimates that the market for threat intelligence like iSight\u2019s could grow to $1 billion in two years from $255 million in 2013. Gartner predicts that by 2018, 60 percent of businesses will incorporate threat intelligence into their defensive security strategy.", "answer": "$1 billion in two years from $255 million", "sentence": "Gartner, the research firm, estimates that the market for threat intelligence like iSight\u2019s could grow to $1 billion in two years from $255 million in 2013.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Cowan and others point to what happened to Target in 2013, when the retailer ignored an alert that ultimately could have stopped criminals from stealing 40 million customers\u2019 payment details from its network. A year earlier, iSight warned its clients that criminals were compiling and selling malware that was specifically designed to scrape payment data off cash registers. Had Target received that warning, the blip on its network might not have gone unnoticed. \u201cTarget faced the same problem every retailer does every day,\u201d Mr. Watters said. \u201cThey are awash in a sea of critical alerts every day. Without threat intelligence, they had roulette odds of picking the right one.\u201d Gartner, the research firm, estimates that the market for threat intelligence like iSight\u2019s could grow to $1 billion in two years from $255 million in 2013. Gartner predicts that by 2018, 60 percent of businesses will incorporate threat intelligence into their defensive security strategy.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Cowan and others point to what happened to Target in 2013, when the retailer ignored an alert that ultimately could have stopped criminals from stealing 40 million customers\u2019 payment details from its network. A year earlier, iSight warned its clients that criminals were compiling and selling malware that was specifically designed to scrape payment data off cash registers. Had Target received that warning, the blip on its network might not have gone unnoticed. \u201cTarget faced the same problem every retailer does every day,\u201d Mr. Watters said. \u201cThey are awash in a sea of critical alerts every day. Without threat intelligence, they had roulette odds of picking the right one.\u201d Gartner, the research firm, estimates that the market for threat intelligence like iSight\u2019s could grow to $1 billion in two years from $255 million in 2013. Gartner predicts that by 2018, 60 percent of businesses will incorporate threat intelligence into their defensive security strategy.", "sentence_answer": "Gartner, the research firm, estimates that the market for threat intelligence like iSight\u2019s could grow to $1 billion in two years from $255 million in 2013.", "paragraph_id": "5d70227ac8e4820a9b66cea4"} +{"question": "While addressing a crown in Boise, Idaho, President Obama was compared to which infamous world leader?", "paragraph": "Consider Idaho, arguably the reddest state in the union, where Republicans control everything but a handful of latte stands. After much bluster and protest, Idaho politicians caved and set up a state health care exchange under Obamacare. To the surprise of the experts, Idahoans have embraced the private coverage available under the Affordable Care Act \u2014 \u201cone of the most successful enrollments of any state,\u201d as Kaiser Health News reported. Obama was in Boise on Wednesday, speaking to a crowd of more than 6,000 people at an event where all tickets were gone within an hour. \u201cNow there are 10 black people in Idaho,\u201d was one of the tweets from Boise. The president was fully energized, jocular, primed for a strong finish. A handful of protesters held up the usual hate posters, one comparing him to Hitler. But it did not escape notice that his motorcade passed a Shell station selling regular gasoline for $1.77 a gallon.", "answer": "Hitler", "sentence": "A handful of protesters held up the usual hate posters, one comparing him to Hitler .", "paragraph_sentence": "Consider Idaho, arguably the reddest state in the union, where Republicans control everything but a handful of latte stands. After much bluster and protest, Idaho politicians caved and set up a state health care exchange under Obamacare. To the surprise of the experts, Idahoans have embraced the private coverage available under the Affordable Care Act \u2014 \u201cone of the most successful enrollments of any state,\u201d as Kaiser Health News reported. Obama was in Boise on Wednesday, speaking to a crowd of more than 6,000 people at an event where all tickets were gone within an hour. \u201cNow there are 10 black people in Idaho,\u201d was one of the tweets from Boise. The president was fully energized, jocular, primed for a strong finish. A handful of protesters held up the usual hate posters, one comparing him to Hitler . But it did not escape notice that his motorcade passed a Shell station selling regular gasoline for $1.77 a gallon.", "paragraph_answer": "Consider Idaho, arguably the reddest state in the union, where Republicans control everything but a handful of latte stands. After much bluster and protest, Idaho politicians caved and set up a state health care exchange under Obamacare. To the surprise of the experts, Idahoans have embraced the private coverage available under the Affordable Care Act \u2014 \u201cone of the most successful enrollments of any state,\u201d as Kaiser Health News reported. Obama was in Boise on Wednesday, speaking to a crowd of more than 6,000 people at an event where all tickets were gone within an hour. \u201cNow there are 10 black people in Idaho,\u201d was one of the tweets from Boise. The president was fully energized, jocular, primed for a strong finish. A handful of protesters held up the usual hate posters, one comparing him to Hitler . But it did not escape notice that his motorcade passed a Shell station selling regular gasoline for $1.77 a gallon.", "sentence_answer": "A handful of protesters held up the usual hate posters, one comparing him to Hitler .", "paragraph_id": "5d703769c8e4820a9b66e0b1"} +{"question": "What did Justice Kagan ask?", "paragraph": "Justice Kagan said that false statements may be damage enough. \u201cWhy isn\u2019t the dissemination of false information about you in a credit report,\u201d she asked, \u201cperfectly sufficient if Congress says that\u2019s a concrete injury?\u201d Andrew J. Pincus, a lawyer for Spokeo, said suits should be allowed only if plaintiffs can show the concrete injury generally required to establish standing to sue. He gave two examples: harm to credit or a missed job opportunity. Justice Kagan responded that people almost never know why a bank or potential employer turned them down. \u201cI mean,\u201d she said, \u201cit\u2019s actually the quintessential kind of injury that you will never be able to detect and surely not to prove.\u201d", "answer": "\u201cWhy isn\u2019t the dissemination of false information about you in a credit report,\u201d", "sentence": "\u201cWhy isn\u2019t the dissemination of false information about you in a credit report,\u201d she asked, \u201cperfectly sufficient if Congress says that\u2019s a concrete injury?\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Justice Kagan said that false statements may be damage enough. \u201cWhy isn\u2019t the dissemination of false information about you in a credit report,\u201d she asked, \u201cperfectly sufficient if Congress says that\u2019s a concrete injury?\u201d Andrew J. Pincus, a lawyer for Spokeo, said suits should be allowed only if plaintiffs can show the concrete injury generally required to establish standing to sue. He gave two examples: harm to credit or a missed job opportunity. Justice Kagan responded that people almost never know why a bank or potential employer turned them down. \u201cI mean,\u201d she said, \u201cit\u2019s actually the quintessential kind of injury that you will never be able to detect and surely not to prove.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Justice Kagan said that false statements may be damage enough. \u201cWhy isn\u2019t the dissemination of false information about you in a credit report,\u201d she asked, \u201cperfectly sufficient if Congress says that\u2019s a concrete injury?\u201d Andrew J. Pincus, a lawyer for Spokeo, said suits should be allowed only if plaintiffs can show the concrete injury generally required to establish standing to sue. He gave two examples: harm to credit or a missed job opportunity. Justice Kagan responded that people almost never know why a bank or potential employer turned them down. \u201cI mean,\u201d she said, \u201cit\u2019s actually the quintessential kind of injury that you will never be able to detect and surely not to prove.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " \u201cWhy isn\u2019t the dissemination of false information about you in a credit report,\u201d she asked, \u201cperfectly sufficient if Congress says that\u2019s a concrete injury?\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d700eb3c8e4820a9b66baac"} +{"question": "What street is the Roxbury Library on?", "paragraph": "ROXBURY Minor Memorial Library \u201cStillscapes,\u201d paintings by Ann Getsinger. Through July 18. Mondays, noon to 7 p.m.; Wednesdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Thursdays, noon to 5 p.m.; Fridays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Minor Memorial Library, 23 South Street. minormemoriallibrary.org; 860-350-2181. STAMFORD Fernando Luis Alvarez Gallery \u201cJohn J. Bedoya: Small, Accessible Works.\u201d Through July 11. Tuesdays through Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.; and by appointment on Mondays. Fernando Luis Alvarez Gallery, 96 Bedford Street. 888-861-6791; flalvarezgallery.com. STAMFORD Loft Artists Association \u201cDeconstructing the Times,\u201d creations from The New York Times and other recent works, Karen Neems. Through July 26. Saturdays and Sundays, 1 to 4:30 p.m. Loft Artists Association, 575 Pacific Street. 203-247-2027; loftartists.com.", "answer": "575 Pacific Street", "sentence": "Saturdays and Sundays, 1 to 4:30 p.m. Loft Artists Association, 575 Pacific Street .", "paragraph_sentence": "ROXBURY Minor Memorial Library \u201cStillscapes,\u201d paintings by Ann Getsinger. Through July 18. Mondays, noon to 7 p.m.; Wednesdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Thursdays, noon to 5 p.m.; Fridays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Minor Memorial Library, 23 South Street. minormemoriallibrary.org; 860-350-2181. STAMFORD Fernando Luis Alvarez Gallery \u201cJohn J. Bedoya: Small, Accessible Works.\u201d Through July 11. Tuesdays through Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.; and by appointment on Mondays. Fernando Luis Alvarez Gallery, 96 Bedford Street. 888-861-6791; flalvarezgallery.com. STAMFORD Loft Artists Association \u201cDeconstructing the Times,\u201d creations from The New York Times and other recent works, Karen Neems. Through July 26. Saturdays and Sundays, 1 to 4:30 p.m. Loft Artists Association, 575 Pacific Street . 203-247-2027; loftartists.com.", "paragraph_answer": "ROXBURY Minor Memorial Library \u201cStillscapes,\u201d paintings by Ann Getsinger. Through July 18. Mondays, noon to 7 p.m.; Wednesdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Thursdays, noon to 5 p.m.; Fridays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Minor Memorial Library, 23 South Street. minormemoriallibrary.org; 860-350-2181. STAMFORD Fernando Luis Alvarez Gallery \u201cJohn J. Bedoya: Small, Accessible Works.\u201d Through July 11. Tuesdays through Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.; and by appointment on Mondays. Fernando Luis Alvarez Gallery, 96 Bedford Street. 888-861-6791; flalvarezgallery.com. STAMFORD Loft Artists Association \u201cDeconstructing the Times,\u201d creations from The New York Times and other recent works, Karen Neems. Through July 26. Saturdays and Sundays, 1 to 4:30 p.m. Loft Artists Association, 575 Pacific Street . 203-247-2027; loftartists.com.", "sentence_answer": "Saturdays and Sundays, 1 to 4:30 p.m. Loft Artists Association, 575 Pacific Street .", "paragraph_id": "5d7044abc8e4820a9b66e79a"} +{"question": "Who made a piece of art by taking a blowtorch to plastic?", "paragraph": "Bernard Goldberg A strikingly American version of Modernism, Paul Cadmus\u2019s painting \u201cVenus and Adonis\u201d (1936) riffs on a Rubens canvas from the 1630s depicting the same subject. Exhibited in several museums, this is a relatively tame piece by Cadmus, whose work was removed from the Corcoran Gallery in Washington in the 1930s at the request of the United States Navy because of its salacious depiction of sailors. (Cadmus was one of the first publicly gay artists.) Mazzoleni The surge of interest in masters of Italian Modernism is reflected at Mazzoleni, which is showing works by Alberto Burri, Lucio Fontana and Michelangelo Pistoletto. A diminutive 1966 red plastic work by Burri, made by taking a blowtorch to plastic, is like a miniature version of what is on view in the Burri show at the Guggenheim Museum. Several canvases with Fontana\u2019s signature slashes are joined by a recent Pistoletto mirror work that includes a flat image of a man on a telephone.", "answer": "Alberto Burri", "sentence": "Mazzoleni The surge of interest in masters of Italian Modernism is reflected at Mazzoleni, which is showing works by Alberto Burri , Lucio Fontana and Michelangelo Pistoletto.", "paragraph_sentence": "Bernard Goldberg A strikingly American version of Modernism, Paul Cadmus\u2019s painting \u201cVenus and Adonis\u201d (1936) riffs on a Rubens canvas from the 1630s depicting the same subject. Exhibited in several museums, this is a relatively tame piece by Cadmus, whose work was removed from the Corcoran Gallery in Washington in the 1930s at the request of the United States Navy because of its salacious depiction of sailors. (Cadmus was one of the first publicly gay artists.) Mazzoleni The surge of interest in masters of Italian Modernism is reflected at Mazzoleni, which is showing works by Alberto Burri , Lucio Fontana and Michelangelo Pistoletto. A diminutive 1966 red plastic work by Burri, made by taking a blowtorch to plastic, is like a miniature version of what is on view in the Burri show at the Guggenheim Museum. Several canvases with Fontana\u2019s signature slashes are joined by a recent Pistoletto mirror work that includes a flat image of a man on a telephone.", "paragraph_answer": "Bernard Goldberg A strikingly American version of Modernism, Paul Cadmus\u2019s painting \u201cVenus and Adonis\u201d (1936) riffs on a Rubens canvas from the 1630s depicting the same subject. Exhibited in several museums, this is a relatively tame piece by Cadmus, whose work was removed from the Corcoran Gallery in Washington in the 1930s at the request of the United States Navy because of its salacious depiction of sailors. (Cadmus was one of the first publicly gay artists.) Mazzoleni The surge of interest in masters of Italian Modernism is reflected at Mazzoleni, which is showing works by Alberto Burri , Lucio Fontana and Michelangelo Pistoletto. A diminutive 1966 red plastic work by Burri, made by taking a blowtorch to plastic, is like a miniature version of what is on view in the Burri show at the Guggenheim Museum. Several canvases with Fontana\u2019s signature slashes are joined by a recent Pistoletto mirror work that includes a flat image of a man on a telephone.", "sentence_answer": "Mazzoleni The surge of interest in masters of Italian Modernism is reflected at Mazzoleni, which is showing works by Alberto Burri , Lucio Fontana and Michelangelo Pistoletto.", "paragraph_id": "5d705735c8e4820a9b66ed65"} +{"question": "Why does Mr. Fox claim to be returning to the private sector?", "paragraph": "Instead, the statement said that Mr. Fox would \u201cmake his anticipated transition back to the private sector by the end of the month.\u201d Mr. Christie said that Joseph Bertoni, the department\u2019s deputy commissioner, would take over as acting commissioner. In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund. He said that serving as transportation commissioner twice had been \u201cthe best job I have ever had.\u201d He did not mention the federal investigation.", "answer": "his inability to secure funding", "sentence": "In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund.", "paragraph_sentence": "Instead, the statement said that Mr. Fox would \u201cmake his anticipated transition back to the private sector by the end of the month.\u201d Mr. Christie said that Joseph Bertoni, the department\u2019s deputy commissioner, would take over as acting commissioner. In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund. He said that serving as transportation commissioner twice had been \u201cthe best job I have ever had.\u201d He did not mention the federal investigation.", "paragraph_answer": "Instead, the statement said that Mr. Fox would \u201cmake his anticipated transition back to the private sector by the end of the month.\u201d Mr. Christie said that Joseph Bertoni, the department\u2019s deputy commissioner, would take over as acting commissioner. In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund. He said that serving as transportation commissioner twice had been \u201cthe best job I have ever had.\u201d He did not mention the federal investigation.", "sentence_answer": "In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund.", "paragraph_id": "5d701d8ec8e4820a9b66c901"} +{"question": "How much cholesterol does a guideline suggest Americans should eat?", "paragraph": "Did recommendations change when these studies were published? No, but they got closer to changing on Thursday, when a government committee urged repeal of the guideline that Americans limit their cholesterol intake to 300 milligrams a day, saying, \u201cCholesterol is not a nutrient of concern for overconsumption.\u201d I\u2019m sure this will come as a surprise to a vast majority of Americans, who for decades have been watching their cholesterol intake religiously. (The change won\u2019t be official until it is approved by the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Agriculture, but they usually closely follow the committee\u2019s recommendations.)", "answer": "300 milligrams a day", "sentence": "No, but they got closer to changing on Thursday, when a government committee urged repeal of the guideline that Americans limit their cholesterol intake to 300 milligrams a day , saying, \u201cCholesterol is not a nutrient of concern for overconsumption.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Did recommendations change when these studies were published? No, but they got closer to changing on Thursday, when a government committee urged repeal of the guideline that Americans limit their cholesterol intake to 300 milligrams a day , saying, \u201cCholesterol is not a nutrient of concern for overconsumption.\u201d I\u2019m sure this will come as a surprise to a vast majority of Americans, who for decades have been watching their cholesterol intake religiously. (The change won\u2019t be official until it is approved by the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Agriculture, but they usually closely follow the committee\u2019s recommendations.)", "paragraph_answer": "Did recommendations change when these studies were published? No, but they got closer to changing on Thursday, when a government committee urged repeal of the guideline that Americans limit their cholesterol intake to 300 milligrams a day , saying, \u201cCholesterol is not a nutrient of concern for overconsumption.\u201d I\u2019m sure this will come as a surprise to a vast majority of Americans, who for decades have been watching their cholesterol intake religiously. (The change won\u2019t be official until it is approved by the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Agriculture, but they usually closely follow the committee\u2019s recommendations.)", "sentence_answer": "No, but they got closer to changing on Thursday, when a government committee urged repeal of the guideline that Americans limit their cholesterol intake to 300 milligrams a day , saying, \u201cCholesterol is not a nutrient of concern for overconsumption.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d7017fdc8e4820a9b66c3ef"} +{"question": "When did Joseph P. Clancy take over as director?", "paragraph": "Democratic members were no less critical. Representative Nita M. Lowey of New York, the ranking Democrat on the committee, urged the agency\u2019s director, Joseph P. Clancy, who took over last month, to demand discipline. She repeatedly pressed him to fire the agents in question, saying their actions proved they were \u201cnot the kind of person\u201d that should be employed to protect the president. Under aggressive questioning, Mr. Clancy cautioned that some of the facts about the March 4 accident had not been verified. Contrary to initial reports of a dramatic crash into a White House barricade, Mr. Clancy said, a surveillance video showed the agents\u2019 car slowly nudging an orange construction barrel out of the way so it could move forward.", "answer": "last month", "sentence": "Representative Nita M. Lowey of New York, the ranking Democrat on the committee, urged the agency\u2019s director, Joseph P. Clancy, who took over last month , to demand discipline.", "paragraph_sentence": "Democratic members were no less critical. Representative Nita M. Lowey of New York, the ranking Democrat on the committee, urged the agency\u2019s director, Joseph P. Clancy, who took over last month , to demand discipline. She repeatedly pressed him to fire the agents in question, saying their actions proved they were \u201cnot the kind of person\u201d that should be employed to protect the president. Under aggressive questioning, Mr. Clancy cautioned that some of the facts about the March 4 accident had not been verified. Contrary to initial reports of a dramatic crash into a White House barricade, Mr. Clancy said, a surveillance video showed the agents\u2019 car slowly nudging an orange construction barrel out of the way so it could move forward.", "paragraph_answer": "Democratic members were no less critical. Representative Nita M. Lowey of New York, the ranking Democrat on the committee, urged the agency\u2019s director, Joseph P. Clancy, who took over last month , to demand discipline. She repeatedly pressed him to fire the agents in question, saying their actions proved they were \u201cnot the kind of person\u201d that should be employed to protect the president. Under aggressive questioning, Mr. Clancy cautioned that some of the facts about the March 4 accident had not been verified. Contrary to initial reports of a dramatic crash into a White House barricade, Mr. Clancy said, a surveillance video showed the agents\u2019 car slowly nudging an orange construction barrel out of the way so it could move forward.", "sentence_answer": "Representative Nita M. Lowey of New York, the ranking Democrat on the committee, urged the agency\u2019s director, Joseph P. Clancy, who took over last month , to demand discipline.", "paragraph_id": "5d701c74c8e4820a9b66c7c7"} +{"question": "Where is the Bogra district?", "paragraph": "The mosque\u2019s muezzin, Moazzem Hossain, was shot in the head and died later in a hospital. Three other men, including the mosque\u2019s 35-year-old imam, were wounded in the attack and were hospitalized, said Ahsan Habib, the officer in charge at Shibganj police station in Bogra district, about 120 miles north of the Bangladeshi capital. \u201cI have never heard, and never received any information, that there was rivalry or conflict between the Shiite community and anyone else,\u201d Mr. Habib said. \u201cThis attack just astonished me.\u201d A Shiite leader in the region, Mozaffor Hossen, 35, secretary general of the Bangladesh Imamia Welfare Foundation, said the gunmen brought a lock with them and used it to lock the compound\u2019s gate, then entered the mosque and opened fire.", "answer": "about 120 miles north of the Bangladeshi capital", "sentence": "Three other men, including the mosque\u2019s 35-year-old imam, were wounded in the attack and were hospitalized, said Ahsan Habib, the officer in charge at Shibganj police station in Bogra district, about 120 miles north of the Bangladeshi capital .", "paragraph_sentence": "The mosque\u2019s muezzin, Moazzem Hossain, was shot in the head and died later in a hospital. Three other men, including the mosque\u2019s 35-year-old imam, were wounded in the attack and were hospitalized, said Ahsan Habib, the officer in charge at Shibganj police station in Bogra district, about 120 miles north of the Bangladeshi capital . \u201cI have never heard, and never received any information, that there was rivalry or conflict between the Shiite community and anyone else,\u201d Mr. Habib said. \u201cThis attack just astonished me.\u201d A Shiite leader in the region, Mozaffor Hossen, 35, secretary general of the Bangladesh Imamia Welfare Foundation, said the gunmen brought a lock with them and used it to lock the compound\u2019s gate, then entered the mosque and opened fire.", "paragraph_answer": "The mosque\u2019s muezzin, Moazzem Hossain, was shot in the head and died later in a hospital. Three other men, including the mosque\u2019s 35-year-old imam, were wounded in the attack and were hospitalized, said Ahsan Habib, the officer in charge at Shibganj police station in Bogra district, about 120 miles north of the Bangladeshi capital . \u201cI have never heard, and never received any information, that there was rivalry or conflict between the Shiite community and anyone else,\u201d Mr. Habib said. \u201cThis attack just astonished me.\u201d A Shiite leader in the region, Mozaffor Hossen, 35, secretary general of the Bangladesh Imamia Welfare Foundation, said the gunmen brought a lock with them and used it to lock the compound\u2019s gate, then entered the mosque and opened fire.", "sentence_answer": "Three other men, including the mosque\u2019s 35-year-old imam, were wounded in the attack and were hospitalized, said Ahsan Habib, the officer in charge at Shibganj police station in Bogra district, about 120 miles north of the Bangladeshi capital .", "paragraph_id": "5d70074dc8e4820a9b66ad41"} +{"question": "What government ask the US for help?", "paragraph": "From the earliest days of the war, the government in Kiev had asked for military help from the United States. Its request for a sophisticated antitank missile went nowhere, as Washington feared it would just encourage Russia to send more weapons and men to Ukraine. What eventually arrived was basic training.", "answer": "Kiev", "sentence": "From the earliest days of the war, the government in Kiev had asked for military help from the United States.", "paragraph_sentence": " From the earliest days of the war, the government in Kiev had asked for military help from the United States. Its request for a sophisticated antitank missile went nowhere, as Washington feared it would just encourage Russia to send more weapons and men to Ukraine. What eventually arrived was basic training.", "paragraph_answer": "From the earliest days of the war, the government in Kiev had asked for military help from the United States. Its request for a sophisticated antitank missile went nowhere, as Washington feared it would just encourage Russia to send more weapons and men to Ukraine. What eventually arrived was basic training.", "sentence_answer": "From the earliest days of the war, the government in Kiev had asked for military help from the United States.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026e1c8e4820a9b66d39f"} +{"question": "In what city is the game on Oct. 19th played at", "paragraph": "Coughlin said: \u201cWe dedicated the game to him. We showed him the game ball that will be awarded to him. Everyone was able to cheer him on and try to make him feel better. He said he watched the game, and he was very proud of how we finished.\u201d EXTRA POINTS Wide receivers Odell Beckham Jr. and Rueben Randle have hamstring injuries that could jeopardize their readiness for the Giants\u2019 next game, at Philadelphia on Oct. 19. Tom Coughlin said he was hoping Beckham and Randle could practice this week in some capacity, even if they were limited. Coughlin offered no update on the availability of Victor Cruz, another receiver, for the Eagles game. ... Middle linebacker Jon Beason, who left Sunday\u2019s game against the San Francisco 49ers early in the first quarter with a concussion, was in \u201cpretty good shape\u201d on Monday morning, Coughlin said.", "answer": "Philadelphia", "sentence": "EXTRA POINTS Wide receivers Odell Beckham Jr. and Rueben Randle have hamstring injuries that could jeopardize their readiness for the Giants\u2019 next game, at Philadelphia on Oct. 19.", "paragraph_sentence": "Coughlin said: \u201cWe dedicated the game to him. We showed him the game ball that will be awarded to him. Everyone was able to cheer him on and try to make him feel better. He said he watched the game, and he was very proud of how we finished.\u201d EXTRA POINTS Wide receivers Odell Beckham Jr. and Rueben Randle have hamstring injuries that could jeopardize their readiness for the Giants\u2019 next game, at Philadelphia on Oct. 19. Tom Coughlin said he was hoping Beckham and Randle could practice this week in some capacity, even if they were limited. Coughlin offered no update on the availability of Victor Cruz, another receiver, for the Eagles game. ... Middle linebacker Jon Beason, who left Sunday\u2019s game against the San Francisco 49ers early in the first quarter with a concussion, was in \u201cpretty good shape\u201d on Monday morning, Coughlin said.", "paragraph_answer": "Coughlin said: \u201cWe dedicated the game to him. We showed him the game ball that will be awarded to him. Everyone was able to cheer him on and try to make him feel better. He said he watched the game, and he was very proud of how we finished.\u201d EXTRA POINTS Wide receivers Odell Beckham Jr. and Rueben Randle have hamstring injuries that could jeopardize their readiness for the Giants\u2019 next game, at Philadelphia on Oct. 19. Tom Coughlin said he was hoping Beckham and Randle could practice this week in some capacity, even if they were limited. Coughlin offered no update on the availability of Victor Cruz, another receiver, for the Eagles game. ... Middle linebacker Jon Beason, who left Sunday\u2019s game against the San Francisco 49ers early in the first quarter with a concussion, was in \u201cpretty good shape\u201d on Monday morning, Coughlin said.", "sentence_answer": "EXTRA POINTS Wide receivers Odell Beckham Jr. and Rueben Randle have hamstring injuries that could jeopardize their readiness for the Giants\u2019 next game, at Philadelphia on Oct. 19.", "paragraph_id": "5d703a66c8e4820a9b66e228"} +{"question": "How many percent of solar systems were install on Long island in New York?", "paragraph": "Long Island\u2019s high electric costs have made it an attractive market for solar. About 40 percent of all systems installed in New York are on Long Island, according to the state\u2019s Energy Research and Development Authority. Buyers are \u201ccertainly willing to pay more\u201d for a house with the electric bills to prove the savings attached to its solar system, Mr. O\u2019Connor said. But, he added, most lenders haven\u2019t yet recognized that market shift. Arthur Wilson, a builder developing five homes (all presold) with geothermal and solar panels in Middle Island on Long Island, has had his own issues with lenders. He said that an appraisal of $498,000 for the second house to be completed was recently \u201cshot down\u201d as too high by bank reviewers who he said were untrained in valuing green home features.", "answer": "40", "sentence": "About 40 percent of all systems installed in New York are on Long Island, according to the state\u2019s Energy Research and Development Authority.", "paragraph_sentence": "Long Island\u2019s high electric costs have made it an attractive market for solar. About 40 percent of all systems installed in New York are on Long Island, according to the state\u2019s Energy Research and Development Authority. Buyers are \u201ccertainly willing to pay more\u201d for a house with the electric bills to prove the savings attached to its solar system, Mr. O\u2019Connor said. But, he added, most lenders haven\u2019t yet recognized that market shift. Arthur Wilson, a builder developing five homes (all presold) with geothermal and solar panels in Middle Island on Long Island, has had his own issues with lenders. He said that an appraisal of $498,000 for the second house to be completed was recently \u201cshot down\u201d as too high by bank reviewers who he said were untrained in valuing green home features.", "paragraph_answer": "Long Island\u2019s high electric costs have made it an attractive market for solar. About 40 percent of all systems installed in New York are on Long Island, according to the state\u2019s Energy Research and Development Authority. Buyers are \u201ccertainly willing to pay more\u201d for a house with the electric bills to prove the savings attached to its solar system, Mr. O\u2019Connor said. But, he added, most lenders haven\u2019t yet recognized that market shift. Arthur Wilson, a builder developing five homes (all presold) with geothermal and solar panels in Middle Island on Long Island, has had his own issues with lenders. He said that an appraisal of $498,000 for the second house to be completed was recently \u201cshot down\u201d as too high by bank reviewers who he said were untrained in valuing green home features.", "sentence_answer": "About 40 percent of all systems installed in New York are on Long Island, according to the state\u2019s Energy Research and Development Authority.", "paragraph_id": "5d700e4fc8e4820a9b66ba31"} +{"question": "What does Ms. Sandberg say is the reason for doing nothing in minor arguments?", "paragraph": "After all, as Ms. Sandberg pointed out in her book, without mentioning Ms. Slaughter, \u201cthe very concept \u2026 flies in the face of the basic laws of economics and common sense.\u201d Toward the end of \u201cLean In,\u201d Ms. Sandberg reviewed the social psychology literature around the tendency of women themselves in certain environments to perpetuate gender bias and recommended some ways to avoid falling into this trap. The institutional tendency to use minor disagreements among women as an excuse to do nothing, she argues, requires women to choose their battles carefully. \u201cWe should resolve our differences quickly, and when we disagree, stay focused on our shared goals. This is not a plea for less debate, but for more constructive debate,\u201d Ms. Sandberg wrote. Based on Ms. Slaughter\u2019s book, it would seem that persuading other powerful women to respond positively to Ms. Sandberg\u2019s appeal is another piece of unfinished business.", "answer": "institutional tendency", "sentence": "The institutional tendency to use minor disagreements among women as an excuse to do nothing, she argues, requires women to choose their battles carefully.", "paragraph_sentence": "After all, as Ms. Sandberg pointed out in her book, without mentioning Ms. Slaughter, \u201cthe very concept \u2026 flies in the face of the basic laws of economics and common sense.\u201d Toward the end of \u201cLean In,\u201d Ms. Sandberg reviewed the social psychology literature around the tendency of women themselves in certain environments to perpetuate gender bias and recommended some ways to avoid falling into this trap. The institutional tendency to use minor disagreements among women as an excuse to do nothing, she argues, requires women to choose their battles carefully. \u201cWe should resolve our differences quickly, and when we disagree, stay focused on our shared goals. This is not a plea for less debate, but for more constructive debate,\u201d Ms. Sandberg wrote. Based on Ms. Slaughter\u2019s book, it would seem that persuading other powerful women to respond positively to Ms. Sandberg\u2019s appeal is another piece of unfinished business.", "paragraph_answer": "After all, as Ms. Sandberg pointed out in her book, without mentioning Ms. Slaughter, \u201cthe very concept \u2026 flies in the face of the basic laws of economics and common sense.\u201d Toward the end of \u201cLean In,\u201d Ms. Sandberg reviewed the social psychology literature around the tendency of women themselves in certain environments to perpetuate gender bias and recommended some ways to avoid falling into this trap. The institutional tendency to use minor disagreements among women as an excuse to do nothing, she argues, requires women to choose their battles carefully. \u201cWe should resolve our differences quickly, and when we disagree, stay focused on our shared goals. This is not a plea for less debate, but for more constructive debate,\u201d Ms. Sandberg wrote. Based on Ms. Slaughter\u2019s book, it would seem that persuading other powerful women to respond positively to Ms. Sandberg\u2019s appeal is another piece of unfinished business.", "sentence_answer": "The institutional tendency to use minor disagreements among women as an excuse to do nothing, she argues, requires women to choose their battles carefully.", "paragraph_id": "5d701bfac8e4820a9b66c780"} +{"question": "What is the name of the boat that arrived in the Northeast?", "paragraph": "The Pilgrims and their fellow travelers weren\u2019t terrorists, of course (despite an instance of putting the severed head of a perceived enemy on a pole), but they and those who followed certainly did effect a cultural conquest. Some versions of their story play that down, partly because a plague resulting from earlier contact with Westerners brought widespread death to coastal Indians in the Northeast just before the Mayflower arrived. God, it seemed to some, killed off the Indians to make way for the whites, a view this program corrects.", "answer": "Mayflower", "sentence": "the Mayflower arrived.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Pilgrims and their fellow travelers weren\u2019t terrorists, of course (despite an instance of putting the severed head of a perceived enemy on a pole), but they and those who followed certainly did effect a cultural conquest. Some versions of their story play that down, partly because a plague resulting from earlier contact with Westerners brought widespread death to coastal Indians in the Northeast just before the Mayflower arrived. God, it seemed to some, killed off the Indians to make way for the whites, a view this program corrects.", "paragraph_answer": "The Pilgrims and their fellow travelers weren\u2019t terrorists, of course (despite an instance of putting the severed head of a perceived enemy on a pole), but they and those who followed certainly did effect a cultural conquest. Some versions of their story play that down, partly because a plague resulting from earlier contact with Westerners brought widespread death to coastal Indians in the Northeast just before the Mayflower arrived. God, it seemed to some, killed off the Indians to make way for the whites, a view this program corrects.", "sentence_answer": "the Mayflower arrived.", "paragraph_id": "5d7021e1c8e4820a9b66cdf3"} +{"question": "What is Freescales market capitalization?", "paragraph": "NXP Semiconductors, a big chip manufacturer, is near a deal to acquire a smaller peer, Freescale Semiconductor, in a cash-and-stock transaction, people briefed on the matter said on Sunday. An agreement could be announced as soon as Sunday evening, one of these people said, while cautioning that the talks could still collapse. If completed, the combination would unite two big makers of chips for industries ranging from automobiles to networking to mobile payments. As of Friday evening, NXP had a market value of about $21 billion, while Freescale had a market capitalization of about $11 billion.", "answer": "$11 billion", "sentence": "As of Friday evening, NXP had a market value of about $21 billion, while Freescale had a market capitalization of about $11 billion .", "paragraph_sentence": "NXP Semiconductors, a big chip manufacturer, is near a deal to acquire a smaller peer, Freescale Semiconductor, in a cash-and-stock transaction, people briefed on the matter said on Sunday. An agreement could be announced as soon as Sunday evening, one of these people said, while cautioning that the talks could still collapse. If completed, the combination would unite two big makers of chips for industries ranging from automobiles to networking to mobile payments. As of Friday evening, NXP had a market value of about $21 billion, while Freescale had a market capitalization of about $11 billion . ", "paragraph_answer": "NXP Semiconductors, a big chip manufacturer, is near a deal to acquire a smaller peer, Freescale Semiconductor, in a cash-and-stock transaction, people briefed on the matter said on Sunday. An agreement could be announced as soon as Sunday evening, one of these people said, while cautioning that the talks could still collapse. If completed, the combination would unite two big makers of chips for industries ranging from automobiles to networking to mobile payments. As of Friday evening, NXP had a market value of about $21 billion, while Freescale had a market capitalization of about $11 billion .", "sentence_answer": "As of Friday evening, NXP had a market value of about $21 billion, while Freescale had a market capitalization of about $11 billion .", "paragraph_id": "5d700b4ac8e4820a9b66b5fe"} +{"question": "Thomas stated that he would appeal, did he ever do so?", "paragraph": "After the verdict, Dolan and Thomas made a show of suggesting that the jury was gullible and that they would appeal. \u201cI\u2019m very innocent,\u201d Thomas said immediately afterward, tapping his chest for emphasis. \u201cI will appeal.\u201d He did not. During the trial, Dolan took puffed-chest pride in testifying that he had decided to fire Browne all on his own, without talking to his corporate counsel. \u201cAll decisions at the Garden I make on my own,\u201d he said. Yes, well, that worked out, didn\u2019t it? The jury found that Dolan\u2019s decision constituted a retaliatory firing and violated federal law. Dolan\u2019s people vowed that the boss positively, absolutely would appeal. He did not. But he did assure New Yorkers that \u201cthe normal operations of M.S.G. and the New York Knicks will continue unabated.\u201d", "answer": "He did not", "sentence": "\u201cI will appeal.\u201d He did not .", "paragraph_sentence": "After the verdict, Dolan and Thomas made a show of suggesting that the jury was gullible and that they would appeal. \u201cI\u2019m very innocent,\u201d Thomas said immediately afterward, tapping his chest for emphasis. \u201cI will appeal.\u201d He did not . During the trial, Dolan took puffed-chest pride in testifying that he had decided to fire Browne all on his own, without talking to his corporate counsel. \u201cAll decisions at the Garden I make on my own,\u201d he said. Yes, well, that worked out, didn\u2019t it? The jury found that Dolan\u2019s decision constituted a retaliatory firing and violated federal law. Dolan\u2019s people vowed that the boss positively, absolutely would appeal. He did not. But he did assure New Yorkers that \u201cthe normal operations of M.S.G. and the New York Knicks will continue unabated.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "After the verdict, Dolan and Thomas made a show of suggesting that the jury was gullible and that they would appeal. \u201cI\u2019m very innocent,\u201d Thomas said immediately afterward, tapping his chest for emphasis. \u201cI will appeal.\u201d He did not . During the trial, Dolan took puffed-chest pride in testifying that he had decided to fire Browne all on his own, without talking to his corporate counsel. \u201cAll decisions at the Garden I make on my own,\u201d he said. Yes, well, that worked out, didn\u2019t it? The jury found that Dolan\u2019s decision constituted a retaliatory firing and violated federal law. Dolan\u2019s people vowed that the boss positively, absolutely would appeal. He did not. But he did assure New Yorkers that \u201cthe normal operations of M.S.G. and the New York Knicks will continue unabated.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI will appeal.\u201d He did not .", "paragraph_id": "5d7045aac8e4820a9b66e7f3"} +{"question": "Another woman that is listed as a proper candidate for U.N. Secretary General is Christine Lagarde, What organization does the head?", "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": "International Monetary Fund", "sentence": "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.", "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 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.", "sentence_answer": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d701a18c8e4820a9b66c601"} +{"question": "When did the Governor's office made the request?", "paragraph": "His company submitted three ads as part of its protection-themed campaign: the couple touching amid moving boxes, a father clad in industrial goggles changing a diaper, and a man pleading for help from the Mafia. He moved forward with the other two. The authority reviewed its standards after the request by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo\u2019s office last year. While it did not result in a formal policy change, officials have worked with advertisers to \u201ccome up with a compelling advertising message in a somewhat less explicit way,\u201d Adam Lisberg, a spokesman for the agency, said, adding a comment over the cleavage controversy The News brought about.", "answer": "last year", "sentence": "The authority reviewed its standards after the request by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo\u2019s office last year .", "paragraph_sentence": "His company submitted three ads as part of its protection-themed campaign: the couple touching amid moving boxes, a father clad in industrial goggles changing a diaper, and a man pleading for help from the Mafia. He moved forward with the other two. The authority reviewed its standards after the request by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo\u2019s office last year . While it did not result in a formal policy change, officials have worked with advertisers to \u201ccome up with a compelling advertising message in a somewhat less explicit way,\u201d Adam Lisberg, a spokesman for the agency, said, adding a comment over the cleavage controversy The News brought about.", "paragraph_answer": "His company submitted three ads as part of its protection-themed campaign: the couple touching amid moving boxes, a father clad in industrial goggles changing a diaper, and a man pleading for help from the Mafia. He moved forward with the other two. The authority reviewed its standards after the request by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo\u2019s office last year . While it did not result in a formal policy change, officials have worked with advertisers to \u201ccome up with a compelling advertising message in a somewhat less explicit way,\u201d Adam Lisberg, a spokesman for the agency, said, adding a comment over the cleavage controversy The News brought about.", "sentence_answer": "The authority reviewed its standards after the request by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo\u2019s office last year .", "paragraph_id": "5d701cebc8e4820a9b66c861"} +{"question": "How many Islamic State fighters were killed", "paragraph": "Syrian Army jets carried out at least 25 airstrikes on the city of Palmyra, held by the Islamic State, on Friday, a group monitoring the war said. It was the second intense bombardment of territory held by the militants in two days. The monitoring group, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said it was one of the most sustained government bombardments of Palmyra. The airstrikes killed at least 26 people, including 12 Islamic State fighters, said the group, based in Britain. On Thursday, Syrian jets carried out at least 12 airstrikes on Raqqa, the Islamic State\u2019s de facto capital in the north.", "answer": "12 Islamic State fighters", "sentence": "The airstrikes killed at least 26 people, including 12 Islamic State fighters , said the group, based in Britain.", "paragraph_sentence": "Syrian Army jets carried out at least 25 airstrikes on the city of Palmyra, held by the Islamic State, on Friday, a group monitoring the war said. It was the second intense bombardment of territory held by the militants in two days. The monitoring group, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said it was one of the most sustained government bombardments of Palmyra. The airstrikes killed at least 26 people, including 12 Islamic State fighters , said the group, based in Britain. On Thursday, Syrian jets carried out at least 12 airstrikes on Raqqa, the Islamic State\u2019s de facto capital in the north.", "paragraph_answer": "Syrian Army jets carried out at least 25 airstrikes on the city of Palmyra, held by the Islamic State, on Friday, a group monitoring the war said. It was the second intense bombardment of territory held by the militants in two days. The monitoring group, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said it was one of the most sustained government bombardments of Palmyra. The airstrikes killed at least 26 people, including 12 Islamic State fighters , said the group, based in Britain. On Thursday, Syrian jets carried out at least 12 airstrikes on Raqqa, the Islamic State\u2019s de facto capital in the north.", "sentence_answer": "The airstrikes killed at least 26 people, including 12 Islamic State fighters , said the group, based in Britain.", "paragraph_id": "5d7024a0c8e4820a9b66d0eb"} +{"question": "What was the House committee recommendation for Courser and Gamrat?", "paragraph": "Mr. Courser, 43, of Lapeer in the Thumb region of Michigan, admitted sending an \u201coutlandish\u201d phony email to Republican activists and others in May claiming he had been caught with a male prostitute. The email was intended to make his affair with Ms. Gamrat, 42, appear less believable if it was exposed by an anonymous blackmailer who Mr. Courser said had demanded his resignation. On Thursday, a special House committee recommended the expulsion of both the first-year Tea Party lawmakers, who had based legislation on their Christian beliefs and had clashed with Republican leadership even before the controversy broke. But the full chamber then deadlocked for hours, as more than two dozen Democrats refused to vote.", "answer": "expulsion", "sentence": "On Thursday, a special House committee recommended the expulsion of both the first-year Tea Party lawmakers, who had based legislation on their Christian beliefs and had clashed with Republican leadership even before the controversy broke.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Courser, 43, of Lapeer in the Thumb region of Michigan, admitted sending an \u201coutlandish\u201d phony email to Republican activists and others in May claiming he had been caught with a male prostitute. The email was intended to make his affair with Ms. Gamrat, 42, appear less believable if it was exposed by an anonymous blackmailer who Mr. Courser said had demanded his resignation. On Thursday, a special House committee recommended the expulsion of both the first-year Tea Party lawmakers, who had based legislation on their Christian beliefs and had clashed with Republican leadership even before the controversy broke. But the full chamber then deadlocked for hours, as more than two dozen Democrats refused to vote.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Courser, 43, of Lapeer in the Thumb region of Michigan, admitted sending an \u201coutlandish\u201d phony email to Republican activists and others in May claiming he had been caught with a male prostitute. The email was intended to make his affair with Ms. Gamrat, 42, appear less believable if it was exposed by an anonymous blackmailer who Mr. Courser said had demanded his resignation. On Thursday, a special House committee recommended the expulsion of both the first-year Tea Party lawmakers, who had based legislation on their Christian beliefs and had clashed with Republican leadership even before the controversy broke. But the full chamber then deadlocked for hours, as more than two dozen Democrats refused to vote.", "sentence_answer": "On Thursday, a special House committee recommended the expulsion of both the first-year Tea Party lawmakers, who had based legislation on their Christian beliefs and had clashed with Republican leadership even before the controversy broke.", "paragraph_id": "5d700766c8e4820a9b66ad7c"} +{"question": "Where is the town of Glover located?", "paragraph": "One was Representative Sam Young, Democrat of Glover, a town in northeastern Vermont near the Canadian border. His district, where many voters are unhappy about wind turbines favored by Mr. Shumlin, voted overwhelmingly for Mr. Milne, but on Thursday, Mr. Young voted for Mr. Shumlin. \u201cI think the person who gets the most votes should win,\u201d Mr. Young said. This is not academic for him; he won office in 2010 after a recount \u2014 by one vote. \u201cIf Milne had won the election statewide, I would have voted for him,\u201d Mr. Young said. \u201cI truly believe we should preserve the democratic process: one person, one vote.\u201d", "answer": "northeastern Vermont near the Canadian border", "sentence": "One was Representative Sam Young, Democrat of Glover, a town in northeastern Vermont near the Canadian border .", "paragraph_sentence": " One was Representative Sam Young, Democrat of Glover, a town in northeastern Vermont near the Canadian border . His district, where many voters are unhappy about wind turbines favored by Mr. Shumlin, voted overwhelmingly for Mr. Milne, but on Thursday, Mr. Young voted for Mr. Shumlin. \u201cI think the person who gets the most votes should win,\u201d Mr. Young said. This is not academic for him; he won office in 2010 after a recount \u2014 by one vote. \u201cIf Milne had won the election statewide, I would have voted for him,\u201d Mr. Young said. \u201cI truly believe we should preserve the democratic process: one person, one vote.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "One was Representative Sam Young, Democrat of Glover, a town in northeastern Vermont near the Canadian border . His district, where many voters are unhappy about wind turbines favored by Mr. Shumlin, voted overwhelmingly for Mr. Milne, but on Thursday, Mr. Young voted for Mr. Shumlin. \u201cI think the person who gets the most votes should win,\u201d Mr. Young said. This is not academic for him; he won office in 2010 after a recount \u2014 by one vote. \u201cIf Milne had won the election statewide, I would have voted for him,\u201d Mr. Young said. \u201cI truly believe we should preserve the democratic process: one person, one vote.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "One was Representative Sam Young, Democrat of Glover, a town in northeastern Vermont near the Canadian border .", "paragraph_id": "5d703a67c8e4820a9b66e230"} +{"question": "Who wrote an 88 page opinion arguing that the state recognizes an individual's right to engage in recreational use?", "paragraph": "Marijuana is just one of many sources of income for the cartels, which smuggle narcotics across the border to the United States and run kidnapping and extortion rings at home. The criminal infrastructure will persist whether or not marijuana use is legal. \u201cThe existing laws don\u2019t reduce violence, either,\u201d said Catalina P\u00e9rez Correa Gonz\u00e1lez, a law professor at CIDE, a university in Mexico City. The legal ruling on Wednesday barely referred to the bloody backdrop of the drug war. Instead, Justice Arturo Zald\u00edvar wrote an 88-page opinion based on principles of human rights, arguing that the state recognizes an individual\u2019s autonomy to engage in recreational activities that do not harm others.", "answer": "Justice Arturo Zald\u00edvar", "sentence": "Instead, Justice Arturo Zald\u00edvar wrote an 88-page opinion based on principles of human rights, arguing that the state recognizes an individual\u2019s autonomy to engage in recreational activities that do not harm others.", "paragraph_sentence": "Marijuana is just one of many sources of income for the cartels, which smuggle narcotics across the border to the United States and run kidnapping and extortion rings at home. The criminal infrastructure will persist whether or not marijuana use is legal. \u201cThe existing laws don\u2019t reduce violence, either,\u201d said Catalina P\u00e9rez Correa Gonz\u00e1lez, a law professor at CIDE, a university in Mexico City. The legal ruling on Wednesday barely referred to the bloody backdrop of the drug war. Instead, Justice Arturo Zald\u00edvar wrote an 88-page opinion based on principles of human rights, arguing that the state recognizes an individual\u2019s autonomy to engage in recreational activities that do not harm others. ", "paragraph_answer": "Marijuana is just one of many sources of income for the cartels, which smuggle narcotics across the border to the United States and run kidnapping and extortion rings at home. The criminal infrastructure will persist whether or not marijuana use is legal. \u201cThe existing laws don\u2019t reduce violence, either,\u201d said Catalina P\u00e9rez Correa Gonz\u00e1lez, a law professor at CIDE, a university in Mexico City. The legal ruling on Wednesday barely referred to the bloody backdrop of the drug war. Instead, Justice Arturo Zald\u00edvar wrote an 88-page opinion based on principles of human rights, arguing that the state recognizes an individual\u2019s autonomy to engage in recreational activities that do not harm others.", "sentence_answer": "Instead, Justice Arturo Zald\u00edvar wrote an 88-page opinion based on principles of human rights, arguing that the state recognizes an individual\u2019s autonomy to engage in recreational activities that do not harm others.", "paragraph_id": "5d706df1c8e4820a9b66f19f"} +{"question": "What was McConnell's main strategic decision?", "paragraph": "Democrats also say that Mr. McConnell benefited from the pent-up demand he helped create by bottling up so much legislation as the leader of the minority. Undaunted, he points to the list of bills and the much more frequent votes on amendments \u2014 more than 200 this year, compared with 15 in 2014 \u2014 as irrefutable evidence of his success. \u201cI stand on the facts,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on, rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found.", "answer": "to find issues that both sides could compromise on", "sentence": "\u201cI stand on the facts,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on , rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found.", "paragraph_sentence": "Democrats also say that Mr. McConnell benefited from the pent-up demand he helped create by bottling up so much legislation as the leader of the minority. Undaunted, he points to the list of bills and the much more frequent votes on amendments \u2014 more than 200 this year, compared with 15 in 2014 \u2014 as irrefutable evidence of his success. \u201cI stand on the facts,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on , rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found. ", "paragraph_answer": "Democrats also say that Mr. McConnell benefited from the pent-up demand he helped create by bottling up so much legislation as the leader of the minority. Undaunted, he points to the list of bills and the much more frequent votes on amendments \u2014 more than 200 this year, compared with 15 in 2014 \u2014 as irrefutable evidence of his success. \u201cI stand on the facts,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on , rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI stand on the facts,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on , rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found.", "paragraph_id": "5d70112bc8e4820a9b66bdb6"} +{"question": "Which political party does Harold Rogers belong to?", "paragraph": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Lawmakers from both parties lashed out at the newly appointed director of the Secret Service at a hearing Tuesday, accusing him of doing little to restore the public\u2019s faith in an agency jolted by embarrassing scandals and security breaches. Republican lawmakers seized on accusations that two drunken Secret Service agents crashed a government car into a White House barricade after a party this month. Representative Harold Rogers, Republican of Kentucky and the chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, called the incident \u201cunacceptable\u201d and said it represented a \u201cbreakdown, to put it mildly, of the discipline within the ranks of your agency.\u201d", "answer": "Republican", "sentence": "Republican lawmakers seized on accusations that two drunken Secret Service agents crashed a government car into a White House barricade after a party this month.", "paragraph_sentence": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Lawmakers from both parties lashed out at the newly appointed director of the Secret Service at a hearing Tuesday, accusing him of doing little to restore the public\u2019s faith in an agency jolted by embarrassing scandals and security breaches. Republican lawmakers seized on accusations that two drunken Secret Service agents crashed a government car into a White House barricade after a party this month. Representative Harold Rogers, Republican of Kentucky and the chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, called the incident \u201cunacceptable\u201d and said it represented a \u201cbreakdown, to put it mildly, of the discipline within the ranks of your agency.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Lawmakers from both parties lashed out at the newly appointed director of the Secret Service at a hearing Tuesday, accusing him of doing little to restore the public\u2019s faith in an agency jolted by embarrassing scandals and security breaches. Republican lawmakers seized on accusations that two drunken Secret Service agents crashed a government car into a White House barricade after a party this month. Representative Harold Rogers, Republican of Kentucky and the chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, called the incident \u201cunacceptable\u201d and said it represented a \u201cbreakdown, to put it mildly, of the discipline within the ranks of your agency.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Republican lawmakers seized on accusations that two drunken Secret Service agents crashed a government car into a White House barricade after a party this month.", "paragraph_id": "5d701bc5c8e4820a9b66c73b"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700a76c8e4820a9b66b43d"} +{"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", "paragraph_id": "5d7009a0c8e4820a9b66b28f"} +{"question": "Where was Ms MacKinnon speaking from before returning to rehearsal?", "paragraph": "She might have been talking about herself. Though conscious of her considerable gifts as an actor \u2014 she\u2019s so able to project emotion that her face can seem almost see-through \u2014 Ms. Moss still confesses to \u201cmajor moments\u201d where she thinks: \u201cI can\u2019t believe they asked me to do this, they\u2019re crazy. This is all a mistake.\u201d Pam MacKinnon, the play\u2019s director and a Tony winner for \u201cWho\u2019s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?,\u201d disagreed. Speaking backstage as she prepared to return to rehearsal, she said that Ms. Moss had both the vulnerability and the sharpness that the role demands. \u201cShe\u2019s incredibly intuitive, incredibly smart, and she is sort of an observer, even though she\u2019s at the center of this rehearsal process,\u201d Ms. MacKinnon said.", "answer": "backstage", "sentence": "Speaking backstage as she prepared to return to rehearsal, she said that Ms. Moss had both the vulnerability and the sharpness that the role demands.", "paragraph_sentence": "She might have been talking about herself. Though conscious of her considerable gifts as an actor \u2014 she\u2019s so able to project emotion that her face can seem almost see-through \u2014 Ms. Moss still confesses to \u201cmajor moments\u201d where she thinks: \u201cI can\u2019t believe they asked me to do this, they\u2019re crazy. This is all a mistake.\u201d Pam MacKinnon, the play\u2019s director and a Tony winner for \u201cWho\u2019s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?,\u201d disagreed. Speaking backstage as she prepared to return to rehearsal, she said that Ms. Moss had both the vulnerability and the sharpness that the role demands. \u201cShe\u2019s incredibly intuitive, incredibly smart, and she is sort of an observer, even though she\u2019s at the center of this rehearsal process,\u201d Ms. MacKinnon said.", "paragraph_answer": "She might have been talking about herself. Though conscious of her considerable gifts as an actor \u2014 she\u2019s so able to project emotion that her face can seem almost see-through \u2014 Ms. Moss still confesses to \u201cmajor moments\u201d where she thinks: \u201cI can\u2019t believe they asked me to do this, they\u2019re crazy. This is all a mistake.\u201d Pam MacKinnon, the play\u2019s director and a Tony winner for \u201cWho\u2019s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?,\u201d disagreed. Speaking backstage as she prepared to return to rehearsal, she said that Ms. Moss had both the vulnerability and the sharpness that the role demands. \u201cShe\u2019s incredibly intuitive, incredibly smart, and she is sort of an observer, even though she\u2019s at the center of this rehearsal process,\u201d Ms. MacKinnon said.", "sentence_answer": "Speaking backstage as she prepared to return to rehearsal, she said that Ms. Moss had both the vulnerability and the sharpness that the role demands.", "paragraph_id": "5d701c4cc8e4820a9b66c79f"} +{"question": "Where were the residents and for how long?", "paragraph": "The funeral, which lasted just under an hour, was the brisk culmination of a day and a half of heartbreak. Residents of Midwood cloistered in their homes and synagogues during the Sabbath, from nightfall on Friday to nightfall on Saturday, recalling a band of conscientious children they had seen rushing to synagogue and building snowmen in the yard. On Sunday the mourners emerged, following the voice of a father who was away at a religious retreat when the fire broke out. Given the Sabbath prohibition on electronic communication, he did not learn what had happened until several hours later, when Police Department detectives found him at a synagogue in Manhattan.", "answer": "cloistered in their homes and synagogues during the Sabbath, from nightfall on Friday to nightfall on Saturday", "sentence": "Residents of Midwood cloistered in their homes and synagogues during the Sabbath, from nightfall on Friday to nightfall on Saturday , recalling a band of conscientious children they had seen rushing to synagogue and building snowmen in the yard.", "paragraph_sentence": "The funeral, which lasted just under an hour, was the brisk culmination of a day and a half of heartbreak. Residents of Midwood cloistered in their homes and synagogues during the Sabbath, from nightfall on Friday to nightfall on Saturday , recalling a band of conscientious children they had seen rushing to synagogue and building snowmen in the yard. On Sunday the mourners emerged, following the voice of a father who was away at a religious retreat when the fire broke out. Given the Sabbath prohibition on electronic communication, he did not learn what had happened until several hours later, when Police Department detectives found him at a synagogue in Manhattan.", "paragraph_answer": "The funeral, which lasted just under an hour, was the brisk culmination of a day and a half of heartbreak. Residents of Midwood cloistered in their homes and synagogues during the Sabbath, from nightfall on Friday to nightfall on Saturday , recalling a band of conscientious children they had seen rushing to synagogue and building snowmen in the yard. On Sunday the mourners emerged, following the voice of a father who was away at a religious retreat when the fire broke out. Given the Sabbath prohibition on electronic communication, he did not learn what had happened until several hours later, when Police Department detectives found him at a synagogue in Manhattan.", "sentence_answer": "Residents of Midwood cloistered in their homes and synagogues during the Sabbath, from nightfall on Friday to nightfall on Saturday , recalling a band of conscientious children they had seen rushing to synagogue and building snowmen in the yard.", "paragraph_id": "5d7007c7c8e4820a9b66ae95"} +{"question": "Who wanted Mattingly punished for not getting a haircut?", "paragraph": "Mattingly\u2019s election to baseball\u2019s Hall of Fame in this, his last year of eligibility, is probably not forthcoming (this year\u2019s class of inductees will be announced Tuesday), a melancholy fact. But then, his playing days as a Yankee had something of a melancholy cast. He arrived for a cup of coffee in 1982, a year after the Yankees went to the World Series, and retired in 1995, a year before they returned. And in the last half of his career he was a diminished player, his skills attenuated by the persistent back problems that forced him to quit prematurely at 34, his spirit likely withered by the mortifying shenanigans of the Yankees\u2019 principal owner, George Steinbrenner, and his minions (who once ordered Mattingly fined and benched for not getting a haircut), not to mention the ignominy of a last-place finish in 1990.", "answer": "George Steinbrenner, and his minions", "sentence": "And in the last half of his career he was a diminished player, his skills attenuated by the persistent back problems that forced him to quit prematurely at 34, his spirit likely withered by the mortifying shenanigans of the Yankees\u2019 principal owner, George Steinbrenner, and his minions (who once ordered Mattingly fined and benched for not getting a haircut), not to mention the ignominy of a last-place finish in 1990.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mattingly\u2019s election to baseball\u2019s Hall of Fame in this, his last year of eligibility, is probably not forthcoming (this year\u2019s class of inductees will be announced Tuesday), a melancholy fact. But then, his playing days as a Yankee had something of a melancholy cast. He arrived for a cup of coffee in 1982, a year after the Yankees went to the World Series, and retired in 1995, a year before they returned. And in the last half of his career he was a diminished player, his skills attenuated by the persistent back problems that forced him to quit prematurely at 34, his spirit likely withered by the mortifying shenanigans of the Yankees\u2019 principal owner, George Steinbrenner, and his minions (who once ordered Mattingly fined and benched for not getting a haircut), not to mention the ignominy of a last-place finish in 1990. ", "paragraph_answer": "Mattingly\u2019s election to baseball\u2019s Hall of Fame in this, his last year of eligibility, is probably not forthcoming (this year\u2019s class of inductees will be announced Tuesday), a melancholy fact. But then, his playing days as a Yankee had something of a melancholy cast. He arrived for a cup of coffee in 1982, a year after the Yankees went to the World Series, and retired in 1995, a year before they returned. And in the last half of his career he was a diminished player, his skills attenuated by the persistent back problems that forced him to quit prematurely at 34, his spirit likely withered by the mortifying shenanigans of the Yankees\u2019 principal owner, George Steinbrenner, and his minions (who once ordered Mattingly fined and benched for not getting a haircut), not to mention the ignominy of a last-place finish in 1990.", "sentence_answer": "And in the last half of his career he was a diminished player, his skills attenuated by the persistent back problems that forced him to quit prematurely at 34, his spirit likely withered by the mortifying shenanigans of the Yankees\u2019 principal owner, George Steinbrenner, and his minions (who once ordered Mattingly fined and benched for not getting a haircut), not to mention the ignominy of a last-place finish in 1990.", "paragraph_id": "5d6f5ff6c8e4820a9b66a63f"} +{"question": "How did Mr. Neto begin turning his life around?", "paragraph": "Human rights groups often have trouble entering prisons, but the doors open more easily for churches. It was through this channel that Mr. Silva Neto\u2019s turnaround began. First, rumors began that he was on a prison hit list. His warden put him in solitary confinement.", "answer": "churches", "sentence": "Human rights groups often have trouble entering prisons, but the doors open more easily for churches .", "paragraph_sentence": " Human rights groups often have trouble entering prisons, but the doors open more easily for churches . It was through this channel that Mr. Silva Neto\u2019s turnaround began. First, rumors began that he was on a prison hit list. His warden put him in solitary confinement.", "paragraph_answer": "Human rights groups often have trouble entering prisons, but the doors open more easily for churches . It was through this channel that Mr. Silva Neto\u2019s turnaround began. First, rumors began that he was on a prison hit list. His warden put him in solitary confinement.", "sentence_answer": "Human rights groups often have trouble entering prisons, but the doors open more easily for churches .", "paragraph_id": "5d7026e8c8e4820a9b66d400"} +{"question": "Who benefited from Mr. Bush's faux pas?", "paragraph": "Though the phenomenon is real, Mr. Bush was blasted by Asian-American groups for repeating the slur. And, astoundingly, he handed Mr. Trump the opportunity to send out tweets like this: \u201cIn a clumsy move to get out of his \u2018anchor babies\u2019 dilemma, where he signed that he would not use the term and now uses it, he blamed ASIANS.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Trump", "sentence": "And, astoundingly, he handed Mr. Trump the opportunity to send out tweets like this: \u201cIn a clumsy move to get out of his \u2018anchor babies\u2019 dilemma, where he signed that he would not use the term and now uses it, he blamed ASIANS.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Though the phenomenon is real, Mr. Bush was blasted by Asian-American groups for repeating the slur. And, astoundingly, he handed Mr. Trump the opportunity to send out tweets like this: \u201cIn a clumsy move to get out of his \u2018anchor babies\u2019 dilemma, where he signed that he would not use the term and now uses it, he blamed ASIANS.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Though the phenomenon is real, Mr. Bush was blasted by Asian-American groups for repeating the slur. And, astoundingly, he handed Mr. Trump the opportunity to send out tweets like this: \u201cIn a clumsy move to get out of his \u2018anchor babies\u2019 dilemma, where he signed that he would not use the term and now uses it, he blamed ASIANS.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "And, astoundingly, he handed Mr. Trump the opportunity to send out tweets like this: \u201cIn a clumsy move to get out of his \u2018anchor babies\u2019 dilemma, where he signed that he would not use the term and now uses it, he blamed ASIANS.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d7037c3c8e4820a9b66e0eb"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700840c8e4820a9b66afae"} +{"question": "What makes it easy to follow sitcoms?", "paragraph": "Plot has always mattered in comedy, of course, but not as much as jokes. In his influential screenwriting guide \u201cStory,\u201d Robert McKee argues that comedy, unlike drama, \u201callows the writer to halt narrative drive\u201d with scenes that serve no purpose other than getting laughs. In television, sitcoms have traditionally relied on thin narratives stretched over seasons (Will Sam and Diane get together on \u201cCheers\u201d? Will Jim and Pam on \u201cThe Office\u201d?) that make it easy to follow the story from week to week.", "answer": "thin narratives stretched over seasons", "sentence": "In television, sitcoms have traditionally relied on thin narratives stretched over seasons (Will Sam and Diane get together on \u201cCheers\u201d?", "paragraph_sentence": "Plot has always mattered in comedy, of course, but not as much as jokes. In his influential screenwriting guide \u201cStory,\u201d Robert McKee argues that comedy, unlike drama, \u201callows the writer to halt narrative drive\u201d with scenes that serve no purpose other than getting laughs. In television, sitcoms have traditionally relied on thin narratives stretched over seasons (Will Sam and Diane get together on \u201cCheers\u201d? Will Jim and Pam on \u201cThe Office\u201d?) that make it easy to follow the story from week to week.", "paragraph_answer": "Plot has always mattered in comedy, of course, but not as much as jokes. In his influential screenwriting guide \u201cStory,\u201d Robert McKee argues that comedy, unlike drama, \u201callows the writer to halt narrative drive\u201d with scenes that serve no purpose other than getting laughs. In television, sitcoms have traditionally relied on thin narratives stretched over seasons (Will Sam and Diane get together on \u201cCheers\u201d? Will Jim and Pam on \u201cThe Office\u201d?) that make it easy to follow the story from week to week.", "sentence_answer": "In television, sitcoms have traditionally relied on thin narratives stretched over seasons (Will Sam and Diane get together on \u201cCheers\u201d?", "paragraph_id": "5d701d46c8e4820a9b66c8bb"} +{"question": "What was the final score between Brazil and Venezuela?", "paragraph": "\u201cThis is a mythology that Venezuela is not good at soccer,\u201d said Omar Pironel, a 27-year-old Colombia fan visiting Chile for the tournament. \u201cWe often struggle with them.\u201d Before this year, Venezuela had only four wins in 55 games at the Copa Am\u00e9rica, and it is the only member of the South American confederation that has never qualified for a World Cup. In the 1975 Copa, it lost by 11-0 to a merciless Argentina side. In 1999 and 2000, it lost to Brazil by a combined score of 13-0 in a Copa Am\u00e9rica match and a subsequent World Cup qualifier.", "answer": "13-0", "sentence": "In 1999 and 2000, it lost to Brazil by a combined score of 13-0 in a Copa Am\u00e9rica match and a subsequent World Cup qualifier.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThis is a mythology that Venezuela is not good at soccer,\u201d said Omar Pironel, a 27-year-old Colombia fan visiting Chile for the tournament. \u201cWe often struggle with them.\u201d Before this year, Venezuela had only four wins in 55 games at the Copa Am\u00e9rica, and it is the only member of the South American confederation that has never qualified for a World Cup. In the 1975 Copa, it lost by 11-0 to a merciless Argentina side. In 1999 and 2000, it lost to Brazil by a combined score of 13-0 in a Copa Am\u00e9rica match and a subsequent World Cup qualifier. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThis is a mythology that Venezuela is not good at soccer,\u201d said Omar Pironel, a 27-year-old Colombia fan visiting Chile for the tournament. \u201cWe often struggle with them.\u201d Before this year, Venezuela had only four wins in 55 games at the Copa Am\u00e9rica, and it is the only member of the South American confederation that has never qualified for a World Cup. In the 1975 Copa, it lost by 11-0 to a merciless Argentina side. In 1999 and 2000, it lost to Brazil by a combined score of 13-0 in a Copa Am\u00e9rica match and a subsequent World Cup qualifier.", "sentence_answer": "In 1999 and 2000, it lost to Brazil by a combined score of 13-0 in a Copa Am\u00e9rica match and a subsequent World Cup qualifier.", "paragraph_id": "5d700d5fc8e4820a9b66b8f8"} +{"question": "How are prosecutors reducing the number of cases that go to trail?", "paragraph": "Studies of imprisonment rates have shown that violent crimes are prosecuted much more severely today than they were 30 years ago. Nationwide, prosecutors are now far more likely to charge violent criminals as felons, rather than bring a misdemeanor charge. This could account for the reason the jails remain full even as crime declines. More: \u25a0 In 2011, Richard A. Oppel Jr. of The New York Times wrote about the effect of a shift in sentencing guidelines: \u201cAfter decades of new laws to toughen sentencing for criminals, prosecutors have gained greater leverage to extract guilty pleas from defendants and reduce the number of cases that go to trial, often by using the threat of more serious charges with mandatory sentences or other harsher penalties.\u201d", "answer": "by using the threat of more serious charges with mandatory sentences or other harsher penalties.", "sentence": "More: \u25a0 In 2011, Richard A. Oppel Jr. of The New York Times wrote about the effect of a shift in sentencing guidelines: \u201cAfter decades of new laws to toughen sentencing for criminals, prosecutors have gained greater leverage to extract guilty pleas from defendants and reduce the number of cases that go to trial, often by using the threat of more serious charges with mandatory sentences or other harsher penalties. \u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Studies of imprisonment rates have shown that violent crimes are prosecuted much more severely today than they were 30 years ago. Nationwide, prosecutors are now far more likely to charge violent criminals as felons, rather than bring a misdemeanor charge. This could account for the reason the jails remain full even as crime declines. More: \u25a0 In 2011, Richard A. Oppel Jr. of The New York Times wrote about the effect of a shift in sentencing guidelines: \u201cAfter decades of new laws to toughen sentencing for criminals, prosecutors have gained greater leverage to extract guilty pleas from defendants and reduce the number of cases that go to trial, often by using the threat of more serious charges with mandatory sentences or other harsher penalties. \u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Studies of imprisonment rates have shown that violent crimes are prosecuted much more severely today than they were 30 years ago. Nationwide, prosecutors are now far more likely to charge violent criminals as felons, rather than bring a misdemeanor charge. This could account for the reason the jails remain full even as crime declines. More: \u25a0 In 2011, Richard A. Oppel Jr. of The New York Times wrote about the effect of a shift in sentencing guidelines: \u201cAfter decades of new laws to toughen sentencing for criminals, prosecutors have gained greater leverage to extract guilty pleas from defendants and reduce the number of cases that go to trial, often by using the threat of more serious charges with mandatory sentences or other harsher penalties. \u201d", "sentence_answer": "More: \u25a0 In 2011, Richard A. Oppel Jr. of The New York Times wrote about the effect of a shift in sentencing guidelines: \u201cAfter decades of new laws to toughen sentencing for criminals, prosecutors have gained greater leverage to extract guilty pleas from defendants and reduce the number of cases that go to trial, often by using the threat of more serious charges with mandatory sentences or other harsher penalties. \u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d7005a5c8e4820a9b66a95b"} +{"question": "how old is Mr. Boire?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe didn\u2019t have any money, and my mother was a voracious reader,\u201d he said. \u201cI remember telling a friend, when I grow up, I want to be able to afford hardcover books.\u201d Mr. Boire, who took the helm as chief executive of Barnes & Noble in September, still seems to have a soft spot for physical books. Walking through the first floor of a Barnes & Noble store in Union Square in Manhattan recently, Mr. Boire couldn\u2019t help himself from reflexively straightening the jagged piles of books on the display tables so that the spines lined up neatly. Now Mr. Boire, 54, the former chief executive of Sears Canada and a retail veteran who has worked at Brookstone, Best Buy and Toys \u201cR\u201d Us, is under pressure to reverse the fortunes of the beleaguered bookstore chain, which has been stung in recent years by the rise of Amazon, steep losses from its Nook e-reader division and a string of store closings. To that end, Mr. Boire is leading a push to rebrand Barnes & Noble as more than just a bookstore by expanding its offerings of toys, games, gadgets and other gifts and reshaping the nation\u2019s largest bookstore chain into a \u201clifestyle brand.\u201d \u201cEverything we do around learning, personal growth and development fits our brand,\u201d Mr. Boire said. \u201cThere\u2019s a lot of opportunity.\u201d", "answer": "54", "sentence": "Now Mr. Boire, 54 , the former chief executive of Sears Canada and a retail veteran who has worked at Brookstone, Best Buy and Toys \u201cR\u201d Us, is under pressure to reverse the fortunes of the beleaguered bookstore chain, which has been stung in recent years by the rise of Amazon, steep losses from its Nook e-reader division and a string of store closings.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe didn\u2019t have any money, and my mother was a voracious reader,\u201d he said. \u201cI remember telling a friend, when I grow up, I want to be able to afford hardcover books.\u201d Mr. Boire, who took the helm as chief executive of Barnes & Noble in September, still seems to have a soft spot for physical books. Walking through the first floor of a Barnes & Noble store in Union Square in Manhattan recently, Mr. Boire couldn\u2019t help himself from reflexively straightening the jagged piles of books on the display tables so that the spines lined up neatly. Now Mr. Boire, 54 , the former chief executive of Sears Canada and a retail veteran who has worked at Brookstone, Best Buy and Toys \u201cR\u201d Us, is under pressure to reverse the fortunes of the beleaguered bookstore chain, which has been stung in recent years by the rise of Amazon, steep losses from its Nook e-reader division and a string of store closings. To that end, Mr. Boire is leading a push to rebrand Barnes & Noble as more than just a bookstore by expanding its offerings of toys, games, gadgets and other gifts and reshaping the nation\u2019s largest bookstore chain into a \u201clifestyle brand.\u201d \u201cEverything we do around learning, personal growth and development fits our brand,\u201d Mr. Boire said. \u201cThere\u2019s a lot of opportunity.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe didn\u2019t have any money, and my mother was a voracious reader,\u201d he said. \u201cI remember telling a friend, when I grow up, I want to be able to afford hardcover books.\u201d Mr. Boire, who took the helm as chief executive of Barnes & Noble in September, still seems to have a soft spot for physical books. Walking through the first floor of a Barnes & Noble store in Union Square in Manhattan recently, Mr. Boire couldn\u2019t help himself from reflexively straightening the jagged piles of books on the display tables so that the spines lined up neatly. Now Mr. Boire, 54 , the former chief executive of Sears Canada and a retail veteran who has worked at Brookstone, Best Buy and Toys \u201cR\u201d Us, is under pressure to reverse the fortunes of the beleaguered bookstore chain, which has been stung in recent years by the rise of Amazon, steep losses from its Nook e-reader division and a string of store closings. To that end, Mr. Boire is leading a push to rebrand Barnes & Noble as more than just a bookstore by expanding its offerings of toys, games, gadgets and other gifts and reshaping the nation\u2019s largest bookstore chain into a \u201clifestyle brand.\u201d \u201cEverything we do around learning, personal growth and development fits our brand,\u201d Mr. Boire said. \u201cThere\u2019s a lot of opportunity.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Now Mr. Boire, 54 , the former chief executive of Sears Canada and a retail veteran who has worked at Brookstone, Best Buy and Toys \u201cR\u201d Us, is under pressure to reverse the fortunes of the beleaguered bookstore chain, which has been stung in recent years by the rise of Amazon, steep losses from its Nook e-reader division and a string of store closings.", "paragraph_id": "5d702036c8e4820a9b66cbf5"} +{"question": "How many members of Turnbull's own party did not vote for him?", "paragraph": "But Mr. Turnbull will have to lead not only the lawmakers in his own party \u2014 44 of whom did not vote for him on Monday night, against 54 who did \u2014 but also a country where policy in recent years often seems to have been made on the run, and often in response to flagging opinion polls. Australia\u2019s current political turmoil dates from the Labor Party government of Kevin Rudd, who became prime minister in 2007.", "answer": "44", "sentence": "But Mr. Turnbull will have to lead not only the lawmakers in his own party \u2014 44 of whom did not vote for him on Monday night, against 54 who did \u2014 but also a country where policy in recent years often seems to have been made on the run, and often in response to flagging opinion polls.", "paragraph_sentence": " But Mr. Turnbull will have to lead not only the lawmakers in his own party \u2014 44 of whom did not vote for him on Monday night, against 54 who did \u2014 but also a country where policy in recent years often seems to have been made on the run, and often in response to flagging opinion polls. Australia\u2019s current political turmoil dates from the Labor Party government of Kevin Rudd, who became prime minister in 2007.", "paragraph_answer": "But Mr. Turnbull will have to lead not only the lawmakers in his own party \u2014 44 of whom did not vote for him on Monday night, against 54 who did \u2014 but also a country where policy in recent years often seems to have been made on the run, and often in response to flagging opinion polls. Australia\u2019s current political turmoil dates from the Labor Party government of Kevin Rudd, who became prime minister in 2007.", "sentence_answer": "But Mr. Turnbull will have to lead not only the lawmakers in his own party \u2014 44 of whom did not vote for him on Monday night, against 54 who did \u2014 but also a country where policy in recent years often seems to have been made on the run, and often in response to flagging opinion polls.", "paragraph_id": "5d700cf7c8e4820a9b66b86c"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700a06c8e4820a9b66b35b"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700830c8e4820a9b66af76"} +{"question": "Who was the former prime minister of Poland?", "paragraph": "President Obama did not come to Gdansk. Prime Minister David Cameron of Britain is in the thick of his re-election campaign. Fran\u00e7ois Hollande, the French president, planned his own commemoration at the Arc de Triomphe in Paris. And Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany skipped Gdansk and will arrive in Moscow for talks with Mr. Putin, but not until the day after his mega-event on Saturday. Still, Poles announced the participation of the presidents of Lithuania, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Romania and Ukraine, as well as Slovakia\u2019s prime minister and the head of the European Council, Donald Tusk, the former Polish prime minister.", "answer": "Donald Tusk", "sentence": "Still, Poles announced the participation of the presidents of Lithuania, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Romania and Ukraine, as well as Slovakia\u2019s prime minister and the head of the European Council, Donald Tusk , the former Polish prime minister.", "paragraph_sentence": "President Obama did not come to Gdansk. Prime Minister David Cameron of Britain is in the thick of his re-election campaign. Fran\u00e7ois Hollande, the French president, planned his own commemoration at the Arc de Triomphe in Paris. And Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany skipped Gdansk and will arrive in Moscow for talks with Mr. Putin, but not until the day after his mega-event on Saturday. Still, Poles announced the participation of the presidents of Lithuania, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Romania and Ukraine, as well as Slovakia\u2019s prime minister and the head of the European Council, Donald Tusk , the former Polish prime minister. ", "paragraph_answer": "President Obama did not come to Gdansk. Prime Minister David Cameron of Britain is in the thick of his re-election campaign. Fran\u00e7ois Hollande, the French president, planned his own commemoration at the Arc de Triomphe in Paris. And Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany skipped Gdansk and will arrive in Moscow for talks with Mr. Putin, but not until the day after his mega-event on Saturday. Still, Poles announced the participation of the presidents of Lithuania, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Romania and Ukraine, as well as Slovakia\u2019s prime minister and the head of the European Council, Donald Tusk , the former Polish prime minister.", "sentence_answer": "Still, Poles announced the participation of the presidents of Lithuania, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Romania and Ukraine, as well as Slovakia\u2019s prime minister and the head of the European Council, Donald Tusk , the former Polish prime minister.", "paragraph_id": "5d701fb2c8e4820a9b66cb53"} +{"question": "Where did Ms Moss star in the play \"The Children's hour\"?", "paragraph": "Does this also apply to Ms. Moss, whose marriage to the comedian Fred Armisen ended quickly and with acrimony? She wouldn\u2019t speak with much specificity, but said that if she knew why women make appalling choices in their personal lives: \u201cI would be a billionaire. I would write it down, and I would sell it.\u201d Ms. Moss, who began acting at the age of 6, was an eager theatergoer even as a child, but it was a performance of \u201cThe Heiress,\u201d starring Cherry Jones, which she saw in her early teens, that sold her on the stage \u2014 its power, its risk, its immediacy. \u201cOnce the lights go up, it\u2019s on you,\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s a huge amount of responsibility, that\u2019s the frightening part of it.\u201d And the \u201cexciting and thrilling\u201d part, too. Of course, this isn\u2019t Ms. Moss\u2019s first time onstage. She starred in a revival of Lillian Hellman\u2019s \u201cThe Children\u2019s Hour\u201d in London, opposite Keira Knightley, and as the scheming secretary in a Broadway revival of David Mamet\u2019s \u201cSpeed-the-Plow,\u201d perhaps best remembered for Jeremy Piven\u2019s abrupt departure, which he blamed on mercury poisoning from a sushi-heavy diet.", "answer": "London", "sentence": "She starred in a revival of Lillian Hellman\u2019s \u201cThe Children\u2019s Hour\u201d in London , opposite Keira Knightley, and as the scheming secretary in a Broadway revival of David Mamet\u2019s \u201cSpeed-the-Plow,\u201d perhaps best remembered for Jeremy Piven\u2019s abrupt departure, which he blamed on mercury poisoning from a sushi-heavy diet.", "paragraph_sentence": "Does this also apply to Ms. Moss, whose marriage to the comedian Fred Armisen ended quickly and with acrimony? She wouldn\u2019t speak with much specificity, but said that if she knew why women make appalling choices in their personal lives: \u201cI would be a billionaire. I would write it down, and I would sell it.\u201d Ms. Moss, who began acting at the age of 6, was an eager theatergoer even as a child, but it was a performance of \u201cThe Heiress,\u201d starring Cherry Jones, which she saw in her early teens, that sold her on the stage \u2014 its power, its risk, its immediacy. \u201cOnce the lights go up, it\u2019s on you,\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s a huge amount of responsibility, that\u2019s the frightening part of it.\u201d And the \u201cexciting and thrilling\u201d part, too. Of course, this isn\u2019t Ms. Moss\u2019s first time onstage. She starred in a revival of Lillian Hellman\u2019s \u201cThe Children\u2019s Hour\u201d in London , opposite Keira Knightley, and as the scheming secretary in a Broadway revival of David Mamet\u2019s \u201cSpeed-the-Plow,\u201d perhaps best remembered for Jeremy Piven\u2019s abrupt departure, which he blamed on mercury poisoning from a sushi-heavy diet. ", "paragraph_answer": "Does this also apply to Ms. Moss, whose marriage to the comedian Fred Armisen ended quickly and with acrimony? She wouldn\u2019t speak with much specificity, but said that if she knew why women make appalling choices in their personal lives: \u201cI would be a billionaire. I would write it down, and I would sell it.\u201d Ms. Moss, who began acting at the age of 6, was an eager theatergoer even as a child, but it was a performance of \u201cThe Heiress,\u201d starring Cherry Jones, which she saw in her early teens, that sold her on the stage \u2014 its power, its risk, its immediacy. \u201cOnce the lights go up, it\u2019s on you,\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s a huge amount of responsibility, that\u2019s the frightening part of it.\u201d And the \u201cexciting and thrilling\u201d part, too. Of course, this isn\u2019t Ms. Moss\u2019s first time onstage. She starred in a revival of Lillian Hellman\u2019s \u201cThe Children\u2019s Hour\u201d in London , opposite Keira Knightley, and as the scheming secretary in a Broadway revival of David Mamet\u2019s \u201cSpeed-the-Plow,\u201d perhaps best remembered for Jeremy Piven\u2019s abrupt departure, which he blamed on mercury poisoning from a sushi-heavy diet.", "sentence_answer": "She starred in a revival of Lillian Hellman\u2019s \u201cThe Children\u2019s Hour\u201d in London , opposite Keira Knightley, and as the scheming secretary in a Broadway revival of David Mamet\u2019s \u201cSpeed-the-Plow,\u201d perhaps best remembered for Jeremy Piven\u2019s abrupt departure, which he blamed on mercury poisoning from a sushi-heavy diet.", "paragraph_id": "5d701dc2c8e4820a9b66c931"} +{"question": "What is the name of the Law Practice that argued the Same-Sex Marriage Benefits case?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt is perverse,\u201d the Chadbourne & Parke brief said, \u201cfor the government to grant leave to enable a same-sex couple to travel to a state where they can legally marry, for the government to recognize that marriage as valid for however many more years the service member continues to serve, and then suddenly ignore that marriage as soon as the service member retires and obtains veteran\u2019s status.\u201d A federal appeals court in Washington is considering a challenge to that interpretation, but the Supreme Court\u2019s decision in the four same-sex marriage cases to be argued next week, among them Obergefell v. Hodges, No. 14-556, may make the challenge moot.", "answer": "Chadbourne & Parke", "sentence": "\u201cIt is perverse,\u201d the Chadbourne & Parke brief said, \u201cfor the government to grant leave to enable a same-sex couple to travel to a state where they can legally marry, for the government to recognize that marriage as valid for however many more years the service member continues to serve, and then suddenly ignore that marriage as soon as the service member retires and obtains veteran\u2019s status.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cIt is perverse,\u201d the Chadbourne & Parke brief said, \u201cfor the government to grant leave to enable a same-sex couple to travel to a state where they can legally marry, for the government to recognize that marriage as valid for however many more years the service member continues to serve, and then suddenly ignore that marriage as soon as the service member retires and obtains veteran\u2019s status.\u201d A federal appeals court in Washington is considering a challenge to that interpretation, but the Supreme Court\u2019s decision in the four same-sex marriage cases to be argued next week, among them Obergefell v. Hodges, No. 14-556, may make the challenge moot.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt is perverse,\u201d the Chadbourne & Parke brief said, \u201cfor the government to grant leave to enable a same-sex couple to travel to a state where they can legally marry, for the government to recognize that marriage as valid for however many more years the service member continues to serve, and then suddenly ignore that marriage as soon as the service member retires and obtains veteran\u2019s status.\u201d A federal appeals court in Washington is considering a challenge to that interpretation, but the Supreme Court\u2019s decision in the four same-sex marriage cases to be argued next week, among them Obergefell v. Hodges, No. 14-556, may make the challenge moot.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt is perverse,\u201d the Chadbourne & Parke brief said, \u201cfor the government to grant leave to enable a same-sex couple to travel to a state where they can legally marry, for the government to recognize that marriage as valid for however many more years the service member continues to serve, and then suddenly ignore that marriage as soon as the service member retires and obtains veteran\u2019s status.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d70109ec8e4820a9b66bd07"} +{"question": "What kind of power or capability does Iran want, as briefly as possible?", "paragraph": "Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu\u2019s speech was a fascinating demonstration of political savvy \u2014 Israeli political savvy. Here he was in the center of the democratic universe with the guts to tell the United States that it was making a bad deal. To his political base at home, this must have looked heroic. At the same time he made the Republican side of the aisle react like a bunch of sixth graders cheering for Justin Bieber, since the net effect of the speech was to diminish the efforts by the administration to suppress Iran\u2019s hunger for nuclear capacity and make President Obama look weak.", "answer": "nuclear", "sentence": "At the same time he made the Republican side of the aisle react like a bunch of sixth graders cheering for Justin Bieber, since the net effect of the speech was to diminish the efforts by the administration to suppress Iran\u2019s hunger for nuclear capacity and make President Obama look weak.", "paragraph_sentence": "Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu\u2019s speech was a fascinating demonstration of political savvy \u2014 Israeli political savvy. Here he was in the center of the democratic universe with the guts to tell the United States that it was making a bad deal. To his political base at home, this must have looked heroic. At the same time he made the Republican side of the aisle react like a bunch of sixth graders cheering for Justin Bieber, since the net effect of the speech was to diminish the efforts by the administration to suppress Iran\u2019s hunger for nuclear capacity and make President Obama look weak. ", "paragraph_answer": "Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu\u2019s speech was a fascinating demonstration of political savvy \u2014 Israeli political savvy. Here he was in the center of the democratic universe with the guts to tell the United States that it was making a bad deal. To his political base at home, this must have looked heroic. At the same time he made the Republican side of the aisle react like a bunch of sixth graders cheering for Justin Bieber, since the net effect of the speech was to diminish the efforts by the administration to suppress Iran\u2019s hunger for nuclear capacity and make President Obama look weak.", "sentence_answer": "At the same time he made the Republican side of the aisle react like a bunch of sixth graders cheering for Justin Bieber, since the net effect of the speech was to diminish the efforts by the administration to suppress Iran\u2019s hunger for nuclear capacity and make President Obama look weak.", "paragraph_id": "5d704024c8e4820a9b66e4e1"} +{"question": "What did Don deliberately do to the grapes and pistachio", "paragraph": "For Don Cameron, a farmer south of Fresno, a wet winter 33 years ago led to an idea about how to take advantage of the vast natural water storage system underground. He noticed that some grapevines along the San Joaquin River were flooded for months in the winter, but that those same vines produced a lush crop of grapes in the summer. He had to wait until 2011, the last wet year before the current drought, to act on his idea. With a small government grant and help from scientists and an environmental group, Mr. Cameron diverted water to a thousand acres of the farm he manages, Terranova Ranch, deliberately flooding fields of grapes, pistachio trees and hay.", "answer": "flooding", "sentence": "With a small government grant and help from scientists and an environmental group, Mr. Cameron diverted water to a thousand acres of the farm he manages, Terranova Ranch, deliberately flooding fields of grapes, pistachio trees and hay.", "paragraph_sentence": "For Don Cameron, a farmer south of Fresno, a wet winter 33 years ago led to an idea about how to take advantage of the vast natural water storage system underground. He noticed that some grapevines along the San Joaquin River were flooded for months in the winter, but that those same vines produced a lush crop of grapes in the summer. He had to wait until 2011, the last wet year before the current drought, to act on his idea. With a small government grant and help from scientists and an environmental group, Mr. Cameron diverted water to a thousand acres of the farm he manages, Terranova Ranch, deliberately flooding fields of grapes, pistachio trees and hay. ", "paragraph_answer": "For Don Cameron, a farmer south of Fresno, a wet winter 33 years ago led to an idea about how to take advantage of the vast natural water storage system underground. He noticed that some grapevines along the San Joaquin River were flooded for months in the winter, but that those same vines produced a lush crop of grapes in the summer. He had to wait until 2011, the last wet year before the current drought, to act on his idea. With a small government grant and help from scientists and an environmental group, Mr. Cameron diverted water to a thousand acres of the farm he manages, Terranova Ranch, deliberately flooding fields of grapes, pistachio trees and hay.", "sentence_answer": "With a small government grant and help from scientists and an environmental group, Mr. Cameron diverted water to a thousand acres of the farm he manages, Terranova Ranch, deliberately flooding fields of grapes, pistachio trees and hay.", "paragraph_id": "5d700d4cc8e4820a9b66b8d1"} +{"question": "What year does the movie \"The Dreamers\" take place in?", "paragraph": "8:05 P.M. (Starz Cinema) THE DREAMERS (2004) Louis Garrel (top), Eva Green (center) and Michael Pitt (above) portray the points of a photogenic triangle in this drama from Bernardo Bertolucci (\u201cLast Tango in Paris\u201d) about an American who befriends French twins in Paris during the 1968 student riots. This adaptation of Gilbert Adair\u2019s novel \u201cThe Holy Innocents\u201d is \u201cdisarmingly sweet and completely enchanting,\u201d A. O. Scott wrote in The New York Times. \u201cThe sex in this movie is, as measured by the display of body parts and the amount of time the actors spend out of their clothes, more explicit than even the most notorious scenes in \u2018Last Tango,\u2019 \u201d he said. \u201cBut it is hard to imagine a voyeur more benevolent than Mr. Bertolucci, whose eager scrutiny of the eros of the young is, like Jeremy Irons\u2019s in \u2018Stealing Beauty,\u2019 less a matter of prurience than of an honest, nostalgic appreciation of natural human vitality.\u201d 8:30 P.M. (TV5Monde) ELLES \u00c9TAIENT EN GUERRE (1914-18) Nathalie Baye narrates this 2014 French documentary, which examines World War I from the perspective of Marie Curie, Edith Wharton, Mata Hari, Rosa Luxemburg and Louise Bodin.", "answer": "1968", "sentence": "THE DREAMERS (2004) Louis Garrel (top), Eva Green (center) and Michael Pitt (above) portray the points of a photogenic triangle in this drama from Bernardo Bertolucci (\u201cLast Tango in Paris\u201d) about an American who befriends French twins in Paris during the 1968 student riots.", "paragraph_sentence": "8:05 P.M. (Starz Cinema) THE DREAMERS (2004) Louis Garrel (top), Eva Green (center) and Michael Pitt (above) portray the points of a photogenic triangle in this drama from Bernardo Bertolucci (\u201cLast Tango in Paris\u201d) about an American who befriends French twins in Paris during the 1968 student riots. This adaptation of Gilbert Adair\u2019s novel \u201cThe Holy Innocents\u201d is \u201cdisarmingly sweet and completely enchanting,\u201d A. O. Scott wrote in The New York Times. \u201cThe sex in this movie is, as measured by the display of body parts and the amount of time the actors spend out of their clothes, more explicit than even the most notorious scenes in \u2018Last Tango,\u2019 \u201d he said. \u201cBut it is hard to imagine a voyeur more benevolent than Mr. Bertolucci, whose eager scrutiny of the eros of the young is, like Jeremy Irons\u2019s in \u2018Stealing Beauty,\u2019 less a matter of prurience than of an honest, nostalgic appreciation of natural human vitality.\u201d 8:30 P.M. (TV5Monde) ELLES \u00c9TAIENT EN GUERRE (1914-18) Nathalie Baye narrates this 2014 French documentary, which examines World War I from the perspective of Marie Curie, Edith Wharton, Mata Hari, Rosa Luxemburg and Louise Bodin.", "paragraph_answer": "8:05 P.M. (Starz Cinema) THE DREAMERS (2004) Louis Garrel (top), Eva Green (center) and Michael Pitt (above) portray the points of a photogenic triangle in this drama from Bernardo Bertolucci (\u201cLast Tango in Paris\u201d) about an American who befriends French twins in Paris during the 1968 student riots. This adaptation of Gilbert Adair\u2019s novel \u201cThe Holy Innocents\u201d is \u201cdisarmingly sweet and completely enchanting,\u201d A. O. Scott wrote in The New York Times. \u201cThe sex in this movie is, as measured by the display of body parts and the amount of time the actors spend out of their clothes, more explicit than even the most notorious scenes in \u2018Last Tango,\u2019 \u201d he said. \u201cBut it is hard to imagine a voyeur more benevolent than Mr. Bertolucci, whose eager scrutiny of the eros of the young is, like Jeremy Irons\u2019s in \u2018Stealing Beauty,\u2019 less a matter of prurience than of an honest, nostalgic appreciation of natural human vitality.\u201d 8:30 P.M. (TV5Monde) ELLES \u00c9TAIENT EN GUERRE (1914-18) Nathalie Baye narrates this 2014 French documentary, which examines World War I from the perspective of Marie Curie, Edith Wharton, Mata Hari, Rosa Luxemburg and Louise Bodin.", "sentence_answer": "THE DREAMERS (2004) Louis Garrel (top), Eva Green (center) and Michael Pitt (above) portray the points of a photogenic triangle in this drama from Bernardo Bertolucci (\u201cLast Tango in Paris\u201d) about an American who befriends French twins in Paris during the 1968 student riots.", "paragraph_id": "5d7050dec8e4820a9b66eb64"} +{"question": "Who was making rounds?", "paragraph": "Partly because of pressures from President Ashraf Ghani, government officials said, Mr. Dostum\u2019s offensive has been downgraded to a morale-building tour of the national forces in Faryab, with the vice president and his two sons in uniform making the rounds. Some areas that Mr. Dostum passed through and declared clear of Taliban, like Mir Shadi in Almar district, fell only days later to the militants, who set dozens of homes on fire, local officials said. However, for days the vice president\u2019s antics brought new attention to just how mixed up and troubled northern Afghanistan is this year. Even without Mr. Dostum in the vanguard, militiamen have been flowing in to fight the Taliban \u2014 and increasingly, local officials say, one another. \u201cThere were up to 9,000 people gathered here,\u201d Mr. Dostum said in his palace in Jowzjan after meetings with militia commanders. \u201cThey wanted to go to Faryab and fight the Taliban. But what can I do? The president does not allow it.\u201d", "answer": "vice president and his two sons", "sentence": "Partly because of pressures from President Ashraf Ghani, government officials said, Mr. Dostum\u2019s offensive has been downgraded to a morale-building tour of the national forces in Faryab, with the vice president and his two sons in uniform making the rounds.", "paragraph_sentence": " Partly because of pressures from President Ashraf Ghani, government officials said, Mr. Dostum\u2019s offensive has been downgraded to a morale-building tour of the national forces in Faryab, with the vice president and his two sons in uniform making the rounds. Some areas that Mr. Dostum passed through and declared clear of Taliban, like Mir Shadi in Almar district, fell only days later to the militants, who set dozens of homes on fire, local officials said. However, for days the vice president\u2019s antics brought new attention to just how mixed up and troubled northern Afghanistan is this year. Even without Mr. Dostum in the vanguard, militiamen have been flowing in to fight the Taliban \u2014 and increasingly, local officials say, one another. \u201cThere were up to 9,000 people gathered here,\u201d Mr. Dostum said in his palace in Jowzjan after meetings with militia commanders. \u201cThey wanted to go to Faryab and fight the Taliban. But what can I do? The president does not allow it.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Partly because of pressures from President Ashraf Ghani, government officials said, Mr. Dostum\u2019s offensive has been downgraded to a morale-building tour of the national forces in Faryab, with the vice president and his two sons in uniform making the rounds. Some areas that Mr. Dostum passed through and declared clear of Taliban, like Mir Shadi in Almar district, fell only days later to the militants, who set dozens of homes on fire, local officials said. However, for days the vice president\u2019s antics brought new attention to just how mixed up and troubled northern Afghanistan is this year. Even without Mr. Dostum in the vanguard, militiamen have been flowing in to fight the Taliban \u2014 and increasingly, local officials say, one another. \u201cThere were up to 9,000 people gathered here,\u201d Mr. Dostum said in his palace in Jowzjan after meetings with militia commanders. \u201cThey wanted to go to Faryab and fight the Taliban. But what can I do? The president does not allow it.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Partly because of pressures from President Ashraf Ghani, government officials said, Mr. Dostum\u2019s offensive has been downgraded to a morale-building tour of the national forces in Faryab, with the vice president and his two sons in uniform making the rounds.", "paragraph_id": "5d7035d6c8e4820a9b66dfc0"} +{"question": "What did Obama pledge in a speech two years ago?", "paragraph": "It was two years ago that Mr. Obama gave a speech pledging to pull the targeted killing program from the shadows, and White House officials said they wanted to shift the bulk of drone operations from the C.I.A. to the Pentagon, with the stated intent of making the program somewhat more transparent. But the intelligence committees have resisted the plan, in part because Mr. D\u2019Andrea and other top agency officials have convinced lawmakers that the C.I.A. strikes are more precise than those conducted by the Pentagon\u2019s Joint Special Operations Command.", "answer": "to pull the targeted killing program from the shadows", "sentence": "It was two years ago that Mr. Obama gave a speech pledging to pull the targeted killing program from the shadows , and White House officials said they wanted to shift the bulk of drone operations from the C.I.A. to the Pentagon, with the stated intent of making the program somewhat more transparent.", "paragraph_sentence": " It was two years ago that Mr. Obama gave a speech pledging to pull the targeted killing program from the shadows , and White House officials said they wanted to shift the bulk of drone operations from the C.I.A. to the Pentagon, with the stated intent of making the program somewhat more transparent. But the intelligence committees have resisted the plan, in part because Mr. D\u2019Andrea and other top agency officials have convinced lawmakers that the C.I.A. strikes are more precise than those conducted by the Pentagon\u2019s Joint Special Operations Command.", "paragraph_answer": "It was two years ago that Mr. Obama gave a speech pledging to pull the targeted killing program from the shadows , and White House officials said they wanted to shift the bulk of drone operations from the C.I.A. to the Pentagon, with the stated intent of making the program somewhat more transparent. But the intelligence committees have resisted the plan, in part because Mr. D\u2019Andrea and other top agency officials have convinced lawmakers that the C.I.A. strikes are more precise than those conducted by the Pentagon\u2019s Joint Special Operations Command.", "sentence_answer": "It was two years ago that Mr. Obama gave a speech pledging to pull the targeted killing program from the shadows , and White House officials said they wanted to shift the bulk of drone operations from the C.I.A. to the Pentagon, with the stated intent of making the program somewhat more transparent.", "paragraph_id": "5d703494c8e4820a9b66df15"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d7009b6c8e4820a9b66b2bf"} +{"question": "When did state rugulators vote?", "paragraph": "The federal government has warned farmers for the second year in a row that it would not be providing any water from its Central Valley Project reservoir system. Any hope climatologists had that California would be rescued again by a wet El Ni\u00f1o winter weather system is fading with the arrival of spring. State regulators voted Tuesday to impose a new round of water conservation rules, including sharp restrictions on landscape watering and orders to restaurants not to serve water to customers unless asked. Farmers said they anticipated leaving as much as one million acres fallow, nearly twice the area that went unplanted last year.", "answer": "Tuesday", "sentence": "State regulators voted Tuesday to impose a new round of water conservation rules, including sharp restrictions on landscape watering and orders to restaurants not to serve water to customers unless asked.", "paragraph_sentence": "The federal government has warned farmers for the second year in a row that it would not be providing any water from its Central Valley Project reservoir system. Any hope climatologists had that California would be rescued again by a wet El Ni\u00f1o winter weather system is fading with the arrival of spring. State regulators voted Tuesday to impose a new round of water conservation rules, including sharp restrictions on landscape watering and orders to restaurants not to serve water to customers unless asked. Farmers said they anticipated leaving as much as one million acres fallow, nearly twice the area that went unplanted last year.", "paragraph_answer": "The federal government has warned farmers for the second year in a row that it would not be providing any water from its Central Valley Project reservoir system. Any hope climatologists had that California would be rescued again by a wet El Ni\u00f1o winter weather system is fading with the arrival of spring. State regulators voted Tuesday to impose a new round of water conservation rules, including sharp restrictions on landscape watering and orders to restaurants not to serve water to customers unless asked. Farmers said they anticipated leaving as much as one million acres fallow, nearly twice the area that went unplanted last year.", "sentence_answer": "State regulators voted Tuesday to impose a new round of water conservation rules, including sharp restrictions on landscape watering and orders to restaurants not to serve water to customers unless asked.", "paragraph_id": "5d700c76c8e4820a9b66b7be"} +{"question": "What would complaining that Google is lifting its own vertical search engine over other vertical search engines be like?", "paragraph": "Some observers agree. \u201cThe analogy I like to use is, complaining that Google is lifting its own vertical search engine over other vertical search engines would be like complaining that The New York Times is not carrying The Los Angeles Times\u2019s sports section,\u201d said Danny Sullivan, founder of Search Engine Land, an online publication that tracks the search industry. \u201cYou don\u2019t expect The New York Times to carry a rival sports section. But you do expect it to have a sports section. When people go to a search engine, they\u2019re looking to search across everything.\u201d As Google pointed out in its response to the European filing, linking to its own services has not destroyed its rivals. Google Travel, for instance, is still far less popular than competitors.", "answer": "like complaining that The New York Times is not carrying The Los Angeles Times\u2019s sports section", "sentence": "\u201cThe analogy I like to use is, complaining that Google is lifting its own vertical search engine over other vertical search engines would be like complaining that The New York Times is not carrying The Los Angeles Times\u2019s sports section ,\u201d said Danny Sullivan, founder of Search Engine Land, an online publication that tracks the search industry.", "paragraph_sentence": "Some observers agree. \u201cThe analogy I like to use is, complaining that Google is lifting its own vertical search engine over other vertical search engines would be like complaining that The New York Times is not carrying The Los Angeles Times\u2019s sports section ,\u201d said Danny Sullivan, founder of Search Engine Land, an online publication that tracks the search industry. \u201cYou don\u2019t expect The New York Times to carry a rival sports section. But you do expect it to have a sports section. When people go to a search engine, they\u2019re looking to search across everything.\u201d As Google pointed out in its response to the European filing, linking to its own services has not destroyed its rivals. Google Travel, for instance, is still far less popular than competitors.", "paragraph_answer": "Some observers agree. \u201cThe analogy I like to use is, complaining that Google is lifting its own vertical search engine over other vertical search engines would be like complaining that The New York Times is not carrying The Los Angeles Times\u2019s sports section ,\u201d said Danny Sullivan, founder of Search Engine Land, an online publication that tracks the search industry. \u201cYou don\u2019t expect The New York Times to carry a rival sports section. But you do expect it to have a sports section. When people go to a search engine, they\u2019re looking to search across everything.\u201d As Google pointed out in its response to the European filing, linking to its own services has not destroyed its rivals. Google Travel, for instance, is still far less popular than competitors.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe analogy I like to use is, complaining that Google is lifting its own vertical search engine over other vertical search engines would be like complaining that The New York Times is not carrying The Los Angeles Times\u2019s sports section ,\u201d said Danny Sullivan, founder of Search Engine Land, an online publication that tracks the search industry.", "paragraph_id": "5d704027c8e4820a9b66e4e7"} +{"question": "What is more easily understood now that an era of multidisciplinary collaboration has been entered?", "paragraph": "Am I the only psychoanalyst who is tired of being told by others what I think and how I practice? Richard A. Friedman\u2019s fascinating article begins with a casual dismissal of psychoanalysts as closed to new developments in science. Nothing could be further from the truth. The New York Psychoanalytic Society and Institute many years ago developed a neuropsychoanalysis center to foster discussion between neuroscientists and psychoanalysts. Most of the practicing analysts I know are eager to learn about the newest developments in biological psychiatry, neuroscience, developmental and experimental psychology, special education, sociology and occupational therapy. We have already entered a new era of multidisciplinary collaboration, so that we can understand and integrate the mutual influences of biology, environment and the development of the inner life with greater complexity and apply the new understanding to help our patients. The old, easy clich\u00e9s about Freudian analysts stop us from moving forward. Can we stop throwing rocks and talk to one another?", "answer": "mutual influences of biology, environment and the development of the inner life", "sentence": "We have already entered a new era of multidisciplinary collaboration, so that we can understand and integrate the mutual influences of biology, environment and the development of the inner life with greater complexity and apply the new understanding to help our patients.", "paragraph_sentence": "Am I the only psychoanalyst who is tired of being told by others what I think and how I practice? Richard A. Friedman\u2019s fascinating article begins with a casual dismissal of psychoanalysts as closed to new developments in science. Nothing could be further from the truth. The New York Psychoanalytic Society and Institute many years ago developed a neuropsychoanalysis center to foster discussion between neuroscientists and psychoanalysts. Most of the practicing analysts I know are eager to learn about the newest developments in biological psychiatry, neuroscience, developmental and experimental psychology, special education, sociology and occupational therapy. We have already entered a new era of multidisciplinary collaboration, so that we can understand and integrate the mutual influences of biology, environment and the development of the inner life with greater complexity and apply the new understanding to help our patients. The old, easy clich\u00e9s about Freudian analysts stop us from moving forward. Can we stop throwing rocks and talk to one another?", "paragraph_answer": "Am I the only psychoanalyst who is tired of being told by others what I think and how I practice? Richard A. Friedman\u2019s fascinating article begins with a casual dismissal of psychoanalysts as closed to new developments in science. Nothing could be further from the truth. The New York Psychoanalytic Society and Institute many years ago developed a neuropsychoanalysis center to foster discussion between neuroscientists and psychoanalysts. Most of the practicing analysts I know are eager to learn about the newest developments in biological psychiatry, neuroscience, developmental and experimental psychology, special education, sociology and occupational therapy. We have already entered a new era of multidisciplinary collaboration, so that we can understand and integrate the mutual influences of biology, environment and the development of the inner life with greater complexity and apply the new understanding to help our patients. The old, easy clich\u00e9s about Freudian analysts stop us from moving forward. Can we stop throwing rocks and talk to one another?", "sentence_answer": "We have already entered a new era of multidisciplinary collaboration, so that we can understand and integrate the mutual influences of biology, environment and the development of the inner life with greater complexity and apply the new understanding to help our patients.", "paragraph_id": "5d703832c8e4820a9b66e101"} +{"question": "What is Didier Reynders' title?", "paragraph": "\u201cI see no reason to delay,\u201d said Linas Linkevicius, the foreign minister of Lithuania. He noted that a cease-fire, known as the Minsk agreement, between the Ukrainian government and Russian-backed separatist rebels had not yet been fully carried out. \u201cIf we don\u2019t see real progress in the implementation of the Minsk agreement, then we need to go further,\u201d said Didier Reynders, the Belgian foreign minister. \u201cWithout that, we need to prolong the sanctions.\u201d Federica Mogherini, the high representative of the European Union for foreign affairs and security policy, told reporters at a news conference on Monday that the union could reach a political decision as soon as Thursday at the summit meeting here. \u201cThe general assessment today was clearly going in the direction of the rollover of sanctions,\u201d she said.", "answer": "Belgian foreign minister", "sentence": "\u201cIf we don\u2019t see real progress in the implementation of the Minsk agreement, then we need to go further,\u201d said Didier Reynders, the Belgian foreign minister .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI see no reason to delay,\u201d said Linas Linkevicius, the foreign minister of Lithuania. He noted that a cease-fire, known as the Minsk agreement, between the Ukrainian government and Russian-backed separatist rebels had not yet been fully carried out. \u201cIf we don\u2019t see real progress in the implementation of the Minsk agreement, then we need to go further,\u201d said Didier Reynders, the Belgian foreign minister . \u201cWithout that, we need to prolong the sanctions.\u201d Federica Mogherini, the high representative of the European Union for foreign affairs and security policy, told reporters at a news conference on Monday that the union could reach a political decision as soon as Thursday at the summit meeting here. \u201cThe general assessment today was clearly going in the direction of the rollover of sanctions,\u201d she said.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI see no reason to delay,\u201d said Linas Linkevicius, the foreign minister of Lithuania. He noted that a cease-fire, known as the Minsk agreement, between the Ukrainian government and Russian-backed separatist rebels had not yet been fully carried out. \u201cIf we don\u2019t see real progress in the implementation of the Minsk agreement, then we need to go further,\u201d said Didier Reynders, the Belgian foreign minister . \u201cWithout that, we need to prolong the sanctions.\u201d Federica Mogherini, the high representative of the European Union for foreign affairs and security policy, told reporters at a news conference on Monday that the union could reach a political decision as soon as Thursday at the summit meeting here. \u201cThe general assessment today was clearly going in the direction of the rollover of sanctions,\u201d she said.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIf we don\u2019t see real progress in the implementation of the Minsk agreement, then we need to go further,\u201d said Didier Reynders, the Belgian foreign minister .", "paragraph_id": "5d70299dc8e4820a9b66d741"} +{"question": "What did Dolan testify in court about firing Browne?", "paragraph": "After the verdict, Dolan and Thomas made a show of suggesting that the jury was gullible and that they would appeal. \u201cI\u2019m very innocent,\u201d Thomas said immediately afterward, tapping his chest for emphasis. \u201cI will appeal.\u201d He did not. During the trial, Dolan took puffed-chest pride in testifying that he had decided to fire Browne all on his own, without talking to his corporate counsel. \u201cAll decisions at the Garden I make on my own,\u201d he said. Yes, well, that worked out, didn\u2019t it? The jury found that Dolan\u2019s decision constituted a retaliatory firing and violated federal law. Dolan\u2019s people vowed that the boss positively, absolutely would appeal. He did not. But he did assure New Yorkers that \u201cthe normal operations of M.S.G. and the New York Knicks will continue unabated.\u201d", "answer": "that he had decided to fire Browne all on his own, without talking to his corporate counsel.", "sentence": "During the trial, Dolan took puffed-chest pride in testifying that he had decided to fire Browne all on his own, without talking to his corporate counsel. \u201cAll decisions at the Garden I make on my own,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_sentence": "After the verdict, Dolan and Thomas made a show of suggesting that the jury was gullible and that they would appeal. \u201cI\u2019m very innocent,\u201d Thomas said immediately afterward, tapping his chest for emphasis. \u201cI will appeal.\u201d He did not. During the trial, Dolan took puffed-chest pride in testifying that he had decided to fire Browne all on his own, without talking to his corporate counsel. \u201cAll decisions at the Garden I make on my own,\u201d he said. Yes, well, that worked out, didn\u2019t it? The jury found that Dolan\u2019s decision constituted a retaliatory firing and violated federal law. Dolan\u2019s people vowed that the boss positively, absolutely would appeal. He did not. But he did assure New Yorkers that \u201cthe normal operations of M.S.G. and the New York Knicks will continue unabated.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "After the verdict, Dolan and Thomas made a show of suggesting that the jury was gullible and that they would appeal. \u201cI\u2019m very innocent,\u201d Thomas said immediately afterward, tapping his chest for emphasis. \u201cI will appeal.\u201d He did not. During the trial, Dolan took puffed-chest pride in testifying that he had decided to fire Browne all on his own, without talking to his corporate counsel. \u201cAll decisions at the Garden I make on my own,\u201d he said. Yes, well, that worked out, didn\u2019t it? The jury found that Dolan\u2019s decision constituted a retaliatory firing and violated federal law. Dolan\u2019s people vowed that the boss positively, absolutely would appeal. He did not. But he did assure New Yorkers that \u201cthe normal operations of M.S.G. and the New York Knicks will continue unabated.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "During the trial, Dolan took puffed-chest pride in testifying that he had decided to fire Browne all on his own, without talking to his corporate counsel. \u201cAll decisions at the Garden I make on my own,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_id": "5d7045aac8e4820a9b66e7f4"} +{"question": "What is the name of the company mentioned int he passage?", "paragraph": "That proliferation of start-ups has led to a new complaint from computer security chiefs: overlapping information \u2014 sometimes as much as 40 percent \u2014 in the reports they receive, none of which is cheap. ISight charges customers based on size, and while it does not disclose pricing, some customers say they pay $500,000 or more annually for the company\u2019s services, as much as five times what low-end services charge. ISight makes 90 percent of its revenue from subscriptions to its six intelligence streams, each focused on a particular threat, including cyberespionage and cybercrime.", "answer": "ISight", "sentence": "ISight charges customers based on size, and while it does not disclose pricing, some customers say they pay $500,000 or more annually for the company\u2019s services, as much as five times what low-end services charge.", "paragraph_sentence": "That proliferation of start-ups has led to a new complaint from computer security chiefs: overlapping information \u2014 sometimes as much as 40 percent \u2014 in the reports they receive, none of which is cheap. ISight charges customers based on size, and while it does not disclose pricing, some customers say they pay $500,000 or more annually for the company\u2019s services, as much as five times what low-end services charge. ISight makes 90 percent of its revenue from subscriptions to its six intelligence streams, each focused on a particular threat, including cyberespionage and cybercrime.", "paragraph_answer": "That proliferation of start-ups has led to a new complaint from computer security chiefs: overlapping information \u2014 sometimes as much as 40 percent \u2014 in the reports they receive, none of which is cheap. ISight charges customers based on size, and while it does not disclose pricing, some customers say they pay $500,000 or more annually for the company\u2019s services, as much as five times what low-end services charge. ISight makes 90 percent of its revenue from subscriptions to its six intelligence streams, each focused on a particular threat, including cyberespionage and cybercrime.", "sentence_answer": " ISight charges customers based on size, and while it does not disclose pricing, some customers say they pay $500,000 or more annually for the company\u2019s services, as much as five times what low-end services charge.", "paragraph_id": "5d70244dc8e4820a9b66d093"} +{"question": "What is the name for sideways jumps with each foot circling?", "paragraph": "The dancing is equally layered. When the six fairy godmothers arrive, there are passages in which they, their eight attendants and four of their cavaliers are all dancing at once, like three orchestral groups in harmony. (Two of the cavaliers don\u2019t dance, so we also see how Petipa the classicist played number games with these choreographic groups of eight, six, four and two.) In Act I, when Princess Aurora\u2019s maids of honor are dancing center stage, the eight violin pages, on the sides of the stage, are doing gargouillades \u2014 twinkling sideways jumps in which each foot writes a circle in the air.", "answer": "gargouillades", "sentence": "In Act I, when Princess Aurora\u2019s maids of honor are dancing center stage, the eight violin pages, on the sides of the stage, are doing gargouillades \u2014 twinkling sideways jumps in which each foot writes a circle in the air.", "paragraph_sentence": "The dancing is equally layered. When the six fairy godmothers arrive, there are passages in which they, their eight attendants and four of their cavaliers are all dancing at once, like three orchestral groups in harmony. (Two of the cavaliers don\u2019t dance, so we also see how Petipa the classicist played number games with these choreographic groups of eight, six, four and two.) In Act I, when Princess Aurora\u2019s maids of honor are dancing center stage, the eight violin pages, on the sides of the stage, are doing gargouillades \u2014 twinkling sideways jumps in which each foot writes a circle in the air. ", "paragraph_answer": "The dancing is equally layered. When the six fairy godmothers arrive, there are passages in which they, their eight attendants and four of their cavaliers are all dancing at once, like three orchestral groups in harmony. (Two of the cavaliers don\u2019t dance, so we also see how Petipa the classicist played number games with these choreographic groups of eight, six, four and two.) In Act I, when Princess Aurora\u2019s maids of honor are dancing center stage, the eight violin pages, on the sides of the stage, are doing gargouillades \u2014 twinkling sideways jumps in which each foot writes a circle in the air.", "sentence_answer": "In Act I, when Princess Aurora\u2019s maids of honor are dancing center stage, the eight violin pages, on the sides of the stage, are doing gargouillades \u2014 twinkling sideways jumps in which each foot writes a circle in the air.", "paragraph_id": "5d70204dc8e4820a9b66cc07"} +{"question": "In what state does Hemlock Grove take place?", "paragraph": "What\u2019s Streaming Now THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY PART 1 (2014) Katniss Everdeen, now squirreled away in District 13, once thought destroyed, leads the charge against the Capitol. This is essentially a war movie and the first time in the series that the filmmakers treat Jennifer Lawrence\u2019s \u201cbutch goddess of dystopian cinema,\u201d Manohla Dargis wrote in The New York Times, \u201cjust like, well, the girl.\u201d (hulu.com) (Image: Ms. Lawrence) HEMLOCK GROVE Evildoers run rampant in a dingy Pennsylvania industrial town as the friendship between a werewolf and a rich guy who likes the taste of his own blood comes to a disturbing end. (netflix.com)", "answer": "Pennsylvania", "sentence": "(hulu.com) (Image: Ms. Lawrence) HEMLOCK GROVE Evildoers run rampant in a dingy Pennsylvania industrial town as the friendship between a werewolf and a rich guy who likes the taste of his own blood comes to a disturbing end.", "paragraph_sentence": "What\u2019s Streaming Now THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY PART 1 (2014) Katniss Everdeen, now squirreled away in District 13, once thought destroyed, leads the charge against the Capitol. This is essentially a war movie and the first time in the series that the filmmakers treat Jennifer Lawrence\u2019s \u201cbutch goddess of dystopian cinema,\u201d Manohla Dargis wrote in The New York Times, \u201cjust like, well, the girl.\u201d (hulu.com) (Image: Ms. Lawrence) HEMLOCK GROVE Evildoers run rampant in a dingy Pennsylvania industrial town as the friendship between a werewolf and a rich guy who likes the taste of his own blood comes to a disturbing end. (netflix.com)", "paragraph_answer": "What\u2019s Streaming Now THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY PART 1 (2014) Katniss Everdeen, now squirreled away in District 13, once thought destroyed, leads the charge against the Capitol. This is essentially a war movie and the first time in the series that the filmmakers treat Jennifer Lawrence\u2019s \u201cbutch goddess of dystopian cinema,\u201d Manohla Dargis wrote in The New York Times, \u201cjust like, well, the girl.\u201d (hulu.com) (Image: Ms. Lawrence) HEMLOCK GROVE Evildoers run rampant in a dingy Pennsylvania industrial town as the friendship between a werewolf and a rich guy who likes the taste of his own blood comes to a disturbing end. (netflix.com)", "sentence_answer": "(hulu.com) (Image: Ms. Lawrence) HEMLOCK GROVE Evildoers run rampant in a dingy Pennsylvania industrial town as the friendship between a werewolf and a rich guy who likes the taste of his own blood comes to a disturbing end.", "paragraph_id": "5d700c4ec8e4820a9b66b752"} +{"question": "How was Frank's diary written?", "paragraph": "But everything they say is drawn from works produced two decades apart: \u201cThe Diary of a Young Girl: The Definitive Edition,\u201d the unexpurgated version of Frank\u2019s Holocaust journal, and \u201cLetter From a Birmingham Jail,\u201d a rebuke to Southern white clergymen that Dr. King wrote while imprisoned for civil disobedience in Alabama in 1963. \u201cI tried to match passages,\u201d Ms. Vaughn said. She added that when reading Frank\u2019s diary, which is in epistolary form, she would think, \u201cWhat does she say that might spark a response from him?\u201d", "answer": "epistolary form", "sentence": "She added that when reading Frank\u2019s diary, which is in epistolary form , she would think, \u201cWhat does she say that might spark a response from him?\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "But everything they say is drawn from works produced two decades apart: \u201cThe Diary of a Young Girl: The Definitive Edition,\u201d the unexpurgated version of Frank\u2019s Holocaust journal, and \u201cLetter From a Birmingham Jail,\u201d a rebuke to Southern white clergymen that Dr. King wrote while imprisoned for civil disobedience in Alabama in 1963. \u201cI tried to match passages,\u201d Ms. Vaughn said. She added that when reading Frank\u2019s diary, which is in epistolary form , she would think, \u201cWhat does she say that might spark a response from him?\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "But everything they say is drawn from works produced two decades apart: \u201cThe Diary of a Young Girl: The Definitive Edition,\u201d the unexpurgated version of Frank\u2019s Holocaust journal, and \u201cLetter From a Birmingham Jail,\u201d a rebuke to Southern white clergymen that Dr. King wrote while imprisoned for civil disobedience in Alabama in 1963. \u201cI tried to match passages,\u201d Ms. Vaughn said. She added that when reading Frank\u2019s diary, which is in epistolary form , she would think, \u201cWhat does she say that might spark a response from him?\u201d", "sentence_answer": "She added that when reading Frank\u2019s diary, which is in epistolary form , she would think, \u201cWhat does she say that might spark a response from him?\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d709f81c8e4820a9b66f658"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700caac8e4820a9b66b804"} +{"question": "What group complained that they have been bypassed in previous talks with the Taliban?", "paragraph": "The Afghan government side included a diverse array of representatives, among them former members of the Taliban who have reconciled with the government; Tajik, Pashtun and Uzbek leaders; and President Ashraf Ghani\u2019s uncle, Abdul Qayoum Kochai, according to Nazar Mohammad Mutmaeen. Mr. Mutmaeen is an Afghan writer and journalist who previously served as an official in the Taliban government but now lives in Kabul openly. He is known to have good contacts among Taliban officials in Qatar and elsewhere. Mr. Mutmaeen said that the Taliban had agreed on the list of those attending the Pugwash Conference, but overruled some, such as the High Peace Council\u2019s secretary general, Masoom Stanikzai, if they seemed too obviously representative of the government. It also insisted that members of the government delegation come as individuals in personal capacities. Mr. Mutmaeen said that at least two and possibly three women were among the government delegation. Afghan women\u2019s groups have long complained that they had been bypassed in previous attempts to open talks with the Taliban, and noted that they would have the most to lose if repressive Taliban-era restrictions on women\u2019s public roles were to return.", "answer": "Afghan women\u2019s groups", "sentence": "Afghan women\u2019s groups have long complained that they had been bypassed in previous attempts to open talks with the Taliban, and noted that they would have the most to lose if repressive Taliban-era restrictions on women\u2019s public roles were to return.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Afghan government side included a diverse array of representatives, among them former members of the Taliban who have reconciled with the government; Tajik, Pashtun and Uzbek leaders; and President Ashraf Ghani\u2019s uncle, Abdul Qayoum Kochai, according to Nazar Mohammad Mutmaeen. Mr. Mutmaeen is an Afghan writer and journalist who previously served as an official in the Taliban government but now lives in Kabul openly. He is known to have good contacts among Taliban officials in Qatar and elsewhere. Mr. Mutmaeen said that the Taliban had agreed on the list of those attending the Pugwash Conference, but overruled some, such as the High Peace Council\u2019s secretary general, Masoom Stanikzai, if they seemed too obviously representative of the government. It also insisted that members of the government delegation come as individuals in personal capacities. Mr. Mutmaeen said that at least two and possibly three women were among the government delegation. Afghan women\u2019s groups have long complained that they had been bypassed in previous attempts to open talks with the Taliban, and noted that they would have the most to lose if repressive Taliban-era restrictions on women\u2019s public roles were to return. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Afghan government side included a diverse array of representatives, among them former members of the Taliban who have reconciled with the government; Tajik, Pashtun and Uzbek leaders; and President Ashraf Ghani\u2019s uncle, Abdul Qayoum Kochai, according to Nazar Mohammad Mutmaeen. Mr. Mutmaeen is an Afghan writer and journalist who previously served as an official in the Taliban government but now lives in Kabul openly. He is known to have good contacts among Taliban officials in Qatar and elsewhere. Mr. Mutmaeen said that the Taliban had agreed on the list of those attending the Pugwash Conference, but overruled some, such as the High Peace Council\u2019s secretary general, Masoom Stanikzai, if they seemed too obviously representative of the government. It also insisted that members of the government delegation come as individuals in personal capacities. Mr. Mutmaeen said that at least two and possibly three women were among the government delegation. Afghan women\u2019s groups have long complained that they had been bypassed in previous attempts to open talks with the Taliban, and noted that they would have the most to lose if repressive Taliban-era restrictions on women\u2019s public roles were to return.", "sentence_answer": " Afghan women\u2019s groups have long complained that they had been bypassed in previous attempts to open talks with the Taliban, and noted that they would have the most to lose if repressive Taliban-era restrictions on women\u2019s public roles were to return.", "paragraph_id": "5d700632c8e4820a9b66aab5"} +{"question": "Who is the actress that plays Diane?", "paragraph": "Charlie speaks in double talk. Announcing the end of her marriage to Will, she says she loves him. \u201cThe problem is I don\u2019t love my life,\u201d she explains. A whiny, high-strung control freak and compulsive scold, she is such a pill that you wonder what the brokenhearted Will, who moves to Astoria, Queens, could possibly have seen in her. The story jumps ahead a year. After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane (Regina Hall), a teacher of American literature at Columbia. When they meet, it is obvious that they are compatible. At the very moment when \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d has a chance to soar, it turns prissy, indecisive and picayune. The story meanders along with too-cute scenes of Will bonding with his daughters. Meanwhile, Charlie, now pregnant, plans to get married. As the movie fizzles, Mr. Clement\u2019s endearing performance breathes what little life is left into a movie that, much like the insufferable Charlie, can\u2019t make up its mind about where to go or how to get there. \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). Language, mild sexual situations and brief nudity.", "answer": "Regina Hall", "sentence": "After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane ( Regina Hall ), a teacher of American literature at Columbia.", "paragraph_sentence": "Charlie speaks in double talk. Announcing the end of her marriage to Will, she says she loves him. \u201cThe problem is I don\u2019t love my life,\u201d she explains. A whiny, high-strung control freak and compulsive scold, she is such a pill that you wonder what the brokenhearted Will, who moves to Astoria, Queens, could possibly have seen in her. The story jumps ahead a year. After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane ( Regina Hall ), a teacher of American literature at Columbia. When they meet, it is obvious that they are compatible. At the very moment when \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d has a chance to soar, it turns prissy, indecisive and picayune. The story meanders along with too-cute scenes of Will bonding with his daughters. Meanwhile, Charlie, now pregnant, plans to get married. As the movie fizzles, Mr. Clement\u2019s endearing performance breathes what little life is left into a movie that, much like the insufferable Charlie, can\u2019t make up its mind about where to go or how to get there. \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). Language, mild sexual situations and brief nudity.", "paragraph_answer": "Charlie speaks in double talk. Announcing the end of her marriage to Will, she says she loves him. \u201cThe problem is I don\u2019t love my life,\u201d she explains. A whiny, high-strung control freak and compulsive scold, she is such a pill that you wonder what the brokenhearted Will, who moves to Astoria, Queens, could possibly have seen in her. The story jumps ahead a year. After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane ( Regina Hall ), a teacher of American literature at Columbia. When they meet, it is obvious that they are compatible. At the very moment when \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d has a chance to soar, it turns prissy, indecisive and picayune. The story meanders along with too-cute scenes of Will bonding with his daughters. Meanwhile, Charlie, now pregnant, plans to get married. As the movie fizzles, Mr. Clement\u2019s endearing performance breathes what little life is left into a movie that, much like the insufferable Charlie, can\u2019t make up its mind about where to go or how to get there. \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). Language, mild sexual situations and brief nudity.", "sentence_answer": "After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane ( Regina Hall ), a teacher of American literature at Columbia.", "paragraph_id": "5d707b60c8e4820a9b66f32d"} +{"question": "How many elections are being held for open seats?", "paragraph": "Updated 8:27 a.m. Good morning on this bright Tuesday. As Election Days in New York go, this year\u2019s is pretty quiet: nothing statewide, no federal elections and several uncontested seats. But there are a few interesting races, and three seats in the State Legislature are open because their prior occupants left under a criminal cloud. \u2022 Thomas W. Libous, a Republican state senator, was convicted of lying to F.B.I. agents about his son\u2019s hiring at a law firm. In today\u2019s race for his Binghamton seat, the Republican candidate, Fred Ashkar, an undersheriff, leads the Democrat, Barbara Fiala, a former county executive, by 52 points. \u2022 State Senator John L. Sampson, Democrat of Brooklyn, was convicted of trying to thwart a federal investigation. Roxanne Persaud, a Democratic assemblywoman, and Jeffrey Ferretti, a Republican real estate executive, are vying to replace him.", "answer": "three", "sentence": "But there are a few interesting races, and three seats in the State Legislature are open because their prior occupants left under a criminal cloud.", "paragraph_sentence": "Updated 8:27 a.m. Good morning on this bright Tuesday. As Election Days in New York go, this year\u2019s is pretty quiet: nothing statewide, no federal elections and several uncontested seats. But there are a few interesting races, and three seats in the State Legislature are open because their prior occupants left under a criminal cloud. \u2022 Thomas W. Libous, a Republican state senator, was convicted of lying to F.B.I. agents about his son\u2019s hiring at a law firm. In today\u2019s race for his Binghamton seat, the Republican candidate, Fred Ashkar, an undersheriff, leads the Democrat, Barbara Fiala, a former county executive, by 52 points. \u2022 State Senator John L. Sampson, Democrat of Brooklyn, was convicted of trying to thwart a federal investigation. Roxanne Persaud, a Democratic assemblywoman, and Jeffrey Ferretti, a Republican real estate executive, are vying to replace him.", "paragraph_answer": "Updated 8:27 a.m. Good morning on this bright Tuesday. As Election Days in New York go, this year\u2019s is pretty quiet: nothing statewide, no federal elections and several uncontested seats. But there are a few interesting races, and three seats in the State Legislature are open because their prior occupants left under a criminal cloud. \u2022 Thomas W. Libous, a Republican state senator, was convicted of lying to F.B.I. agents about his son\u2019s hiring at a law firm. In today\u2019s race for his Binghamton seat, the Republican candidate, Fred Ashkar, an undersheriff, leads the Democrat, Barbara Fiala, a former county executive, by 52 points. \u2022 State Senator John L. Sampson, Democrat of Brooklyn, was convicted of trying to thwart a federal investigation. Roxanne Persaud, a Democratic assemblywoman, and Jeffrey Ferretti, a Republican real estate executive, are vying to replace him.", "sentence_answer": "But there are a few interesting races, and three seats in the State Legislature are open because their prior occupants left under a criminal cloud.", "paragraph_id": "5d700ba8c8e4820a9b66b675"} +{"question": "Which organization claimed the video was stock footage used for dramatization?", "paragraph": "But more importantly during Wednesday\u2019s debate, Fiorina unleashed a scurrilous attack in her pitch to defund Planned Parenthood, saying of the attack videos released about the group: \u201cI dare Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama to watch these tapes. Watch a fully formed fetus on the table, its heart beating, its legs kicking, while someone says, \u2018We have to keep it alive to harvest its brain.\u2019 \u201c In fact, the footage of the fetus was \u201cstock footage\u201d that \u201cwas added to the video to dramatize its content,\u201d according to PolitiFact, which rated Fiorina\u2019s comments as \u201cmostly false.\u201d FactCheck.org also said: \u201cWe are aware of no video showing such a scene.\u201d As Talking Points Memo\u2019s Josh Marshall put it Friday: \u201cFiorina has a habit of simply making things up.\u201d", "answer": "PolitiFact", "sentence": "\u201c In fact, the footage of the fetus was \u201cstock footage\u201d that \u201cwas added to the video to dramatize its content,\u201d according to PolitiFact , which rated Fiorina\u2019s comments as \u201cmostly false.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "But more importantly during Wednesday\u2019s debate, Fiorina unleashed a scurrilous attack in her pitch to defund Planned Parenthood, saying of the attack videos released about the group: \u201cI dare Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama to watch these tapes. Watch a fully formed fetus on the table, its heart beating, its legs kicking, while someone says, \u2018We have to keep it alive to harvest its brain.\u2019 \u201c In fact, the footage of the fetus was \u201cstock footage\u201d that \u201cwas added to the video to dramatize its content,\u201d according to PolitiFact , which rated Fiorina\u2019s comments as \u201cmostly false.\u201d FactCheck.org also said: \u201cWe are aware of no video showing such a scene.\u201d As Talking Points Memo\u2019s Josh Marshall put it Friday: \u201cFiorina has a habit of simply making things up.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "But more importantly during Wednesday\u2019s debate, Fiorina unleashed a scurrilous attack in her pitch to defund Planned Parenthood, saying of the attack videos released about the group: \u201cI dare Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama to watch these tapes. Watch a fully formed fetus on the table, its heart beating, its legs kicking, while someone says, \u2018We have to keep it alive to harvest its brain.\u2019 \u201c In fact, the footage of the fetus was \u201cstock footage\u201d that \u201cwas added to the video to dramatize its content,\u201d according to PolitiFact , which rated Fiorina\u2019s comments as \u201cmostly false.\u201d FactCheck.org also said: \u201cWe are aware of no video showing such a scene.\u201d As Talking Points Memo\u2019s Josh Marshall put it Friday: \u201cFiorina has a habit of simply making things up.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201c In fact, the footage of the fetus was \u201cstock footage\u201d that \u201cwas added to the video to dramatize its content,\u201d according to PolitiFact , which rated Fiorina\u2019s comments as \u201cmostly false.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d702b99c8e4820a9b66d937"} +{"question": "What does Leive say the rich would keep to themselves if it was that great?", "paragraph": "I think everybody does better if they really like some aspect of what they\u2019re doing, but work is work. We can\u2019t all work in jobs where we feel like our heart is singing every day. There\u2019s that old expression, \u201cIf work was that great, the rich would keep it for themselves.\u201d The idea that your job is going to make your heart sing on a daily basis is just not true. If that\u2019s the expectation of a 25-year-old today, they\u2019re going to be sorely disappointed. But you can aim for a pretty good heart-singing-to-bummed-out ratio.", "answer": "work", "sentence": "I think everybody does better if they really like some aspect of what they\u2019re doing, but work is work.", "paragraph_sentence": " I think everybody does better if they really like some aspect of what they\u2019re doing, but work is work. We can\u2019t all work in jobs where we feel like our heart is singing every day. There\u2019s that old expression, \u201cIf work was that great, the rich would keep it for themselves.\u201d The idea that your job is going to make your heart sing on a daily basis is just not true. If that\u2019s the expectation of a 25-year-old today, they\u2019re going to be sorely disappointed. But you can aim for a pretty good heart-singing-to-bummed-out ratio.", "paragraph_answer": "I think everybody does better if they really like some aspect of what they\u2019re doing, but work is work. We can\u2019t all work in jobs where we feel like our heart is singing every day. There\u2019s that old expression, \u201cIf work was that great, the rich would keep it for themselves.\u201d The idea that your job is going to make your heart sing on a daily basis is just not true. If that\u2019s the expectation of a 25-year-old today, they\u2019re going to be sorely disappointed. But you can aim for a pretty good heart-singing-to-bummed-out ratio.", "sentence_answer": "I think everybody does better if they really like some aspect of what they\u2019re doing, but work is work.", "paragraph_id": "5d701841c8e4820a9b66c44b"} +{"question": "Who scored the winning run in the 13th inning?", "paragraph": "Torres\u2019s elongated preparation apparently worked: De Jesus grounded out, and the Mets went on to win, 2-1, in 13 innings on Sunday afternoon. The Mets\u2019 bullpen threw seven scoreless innings, and Bobby Parnell picked up his first victory since June 16, 2013. \u201cWe won the game,\u201d Manager Terry Collins said. \u201cThat\u2019s the only good thing that happened besides the pitching today.\u201d The teams combined to use 11 pitchers during the final seven innings, and a 12th, the Reds\u2019 Mike Leake, made an appearance as a pinch-hitter. The Mets left runners on base in the eighth through the 12th innings before loading the bases with no outs in the bottom of the 13th. The Reds brought outfielder Skip Schumaker into the infield to try to prevent the winning run, but Lucas Duda hit a high chopper that first baseman Joey Votto failed to field cleanly. Votto\u2019s bobble allowed Dilson Herrera to sprint home from third with the winning run.", "answer": "Dilson Herrera", "sentence": "Votto\u2019s bobble allowed Dilson Herrera to sprint home from third with the winning run.", "paragraph_sentence": "Torres\u2019s elongated preparation apparently worked: De Jesus grounded out, and the Mets went on to win, 2-1, in 13 innings on Sunday afternoon. The Mets\u2019 bullpen threw seven scoreless innings, and Bobby Parnell picked up his first victory since June 16, 2013. \u201cWe won the game,\u201d Manager Terry Collins said. \u201cThat\u2019s the only good thing that happened besides the pitching today.\u201d The teams combined to use 11 pitchers during the final seven innings, and a 12th, the Reds\u2019 Mike Leake, made an appearance as a pinch-hitter. The Mets left runners on base in the eighth through the 12th innings before loading the bases with no outs in the bottom of the 13th. The Reds brought outfielder Skip Schumaker into the infield to try to prevent the winning run, but Lucas Duda hit a high chopper that first baseman Joey Votto failed to field cleanly. Votto\u2019s bobble allowed Dilson Herrera to sprint home from third with the winning run. ", "paragraph_answer": "Torres\u2019s elongated preparation apparently worked: De Jesus grounded out, and the Mets went on to win, 2-1, in 13 innings on Sunday afternoon. The Mets\u2019 bullpen threw seven scoreless innings, and Bobby Parnell picked up his first victory since June 16, 2013. \u201cWe won the game,\u201d Manager Terry Collins said. \u201cThat\u2019s the only good thing that happened besides the pitching today.\u201d The teams combined to use 11 pitchers during the final seven innings, and a 12th, the Reds\u2019 Mike Leake, made an appearance as a pinch-hitter. The Mets left runners on base in the eighth through the 12th innings before loading the bases with no outs in the bottom of the 13th. The Reds brought outfielder Skip Schumaker into the infield to try to prevent the winning run, but Lucas Duda hit a high chopper that first baseman Joey Votto failed to field cleanly. Votto\u2019s bobble allowed Dilson Herrera to sprint home from third with the winning run.", "sentence_answer": "Votto\u2019s bobble allowed Dilson Herrera to sprint home from third with the winning run.", "paragraph_id": "5d702498c8e4820a9b66d0c7"} +{"question": "Whose work is on display until October 3 at the Wilton Historical Society?", "paragraph": "STORRS William Benton Museum of Art, University of Connecticut \u201cRemembering the Vietnam War.\u201d Through Aug. 9. \u201cSpeak Up! Speak Out! Bread and Puppet Theater.\u201d Through Oct. 11. Tuesdays through Fridays, 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays, 1 to 4:30 p.m. William Benton Museum of Art, University of Connecticut, 245 Glenbrook Road. benton.uconn.edu; 860-486-4520. WATERBURY Mattatuck Museum \u201cThe Coast and the Sea: Marine and Maritime Art in America.\u201d Through July 12. \u201cThe Serious and the Smirk: Portraits From the Permanent Collection.\u201d \u201cFred Otnes: Collage Paintings.\u201d Through July 12. \u201cSignature Moments: Historic Letters and Documents.\u201d Through Nov. 15. $6 and $7; members and children under 16, free. Tuesdays through Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sundays, noon to 5 p.m. Mattatuck Museum, 144 West Main Street. 203-753-0381; mattatuckmuseum.org. WESTPORT Westport Arts Center \u201cSolos 2015,\u201d group show. Through June 27. \u201cEast Meets Westport: Marton Nemes.\u201d Through June 27. Mondays through Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Westport Arts Center, 51 Riverside Avenue. 203-222-7070; westportartscenter.org. WILTON Wilton Historical Society \u201cIn the Making: Historic Inspirations/New Quilts,\u201d Denyse Schmidt. \u201cOne Loop at a Time: June Myles\u2019s Hooked Rugs.\u201d Through Oct. 3. Suggested donation, $5. Tuesdays through Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wilton Historical Society, 224 Danbury Road. wiltonhistorical.org; 203-762-7257.", "answer": "June Myles", "sentence": "\u201cOne Loop at a Time: June Myles \u2019s Hooked Rugs.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "STORRS William Benton Museum of Art, University of Connecticut \u201cRemembering the Vietnam War.\u201d Through Aug. 9. \u201cSpeak Up! Speak Out! Bread and Puppet Theater.\u201d Through Oct. 11. Tuesdays through Fridays, 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays, 1 to 4:30 p.m. William Benton Museum of Art, University of Connecticut, 245 Glenbrook Road. benton.uconn.edu; 860-486-4520. WATERBURY Mattatuck Museum \u201cThe Coast and the Sea: Marine and Maritime Art in America.\u201d Through July 12. \u201cThe Serious and the Smirk: Portraits From the Permanent Collection.\u201d \u201cFred Otnes: Collage Paintings.\u201d Through July 12. \u201cSignature Moments: Historic Letters and Documents.\u201d Through Nov. 15. $6 and $7; members and children under 16, free. Tuesdays through Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sundays, noon to 5 p.m. Mattatuck Museum, 144 West Main Street. 203-753-0381; mattatuckmuseum.org. WESTPORT Westport Arts Center \u201cSolos 2015,\u201d group show. Through June 27. \u201cEast Meets Westport: Marton Nemes.\u201d Through June 27. Mondays through Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Westport Arts Center, 51 Riverside Avenue. 203-222-7070; westportartscenter.org. WILTON Wilton Historical Society \u201cIn the Making: Historic Inspirations/New Quilts,\u201d Denyse Schmidt. \u201cOne Loop at a Time: June Myles \u2019s Hooked Rugs.\u201d Through Oct. 3. Suggested donation, $5. Tuesdays through Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wilton Historical Society, 224 Danbury Road. wiltonhistorical.org; 203-762-7257.", "paragraph_answer": "STORRS William Benton Museum of Art, University of Connecticut \u201cRemembering the Vietnam War.\u201d Through Aug. 9. \u201cSpeak Up! Speak Out! Bread and Puppet Theater.\u201d Through Oct. 11. Tuesdays through Fridays, 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays, 1 to 4:30 p.m. William Benton Museum of Art, University of Connecticut, 245 Glenbrook Road. benton.uconn.edu; 860-486-4520. WATERBURY Mattatuck Museum \u201cThe Coast and the Sea: Marine and Maritime Art in America.\u201d Through July 12. \u201cThe Serious and the Smirk: Portraits From the Permanent Collection.\u201d \u201cFred Otnes: Collage Paintings.\u201d Through July 12. \u201cSignature Moments: Historic Letters and Documents.\u201d Through Nov. 15. $6 and $7; members and children under 16, free. Tuesdays through Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sundays, noon to 5 p.m. Mattatuck Museum, 144 West Main Street. 203-753-0381; mattatuckmuseum.org. WESTPORT Westport Arts Center \u201cSolos 2015,\u201d group show. Through June 27. \u201cEast Meets Westport: Marton Nemes.\u201d Through June 27. Mondays through Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Westport Arts Center, 51 Riverside Avenue. 203-222-7070; westportartscenter.org. WILTON Wilton Historical Society \u201cIn the Making: Historic Inspirations/New Quilts,\u201d Denyse Schmidt. \u201cOne Loop at a Time: June Myles \u2019s Hooked Rugs.\u201d Through Oct. 3. Suggested donation, $5. Tuesdays through Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wilton Historical Society, 224 Danbury Road. wiltonhistorical.org; 203-762-7257.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cOne Loop at a Time: June Myles \u2019s Hooked Rugs.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d70475ac8e4820a9b66e881"} +{"question": "What did Cindi Leive love when she was Young?", "paragraph": "A. I loved reading and writing, and I had what I guess you would describe as a \u201cmagazine brain\u201d from Day 1. When I was 8, I decided to publish a literary magazine, and I would solicit contributions from all the kids on my street. They were a little less interested in the project than I was, so I ended up having to fill most of the magazine myself. Tell me about your parents. I was lucky to have two great mother figures in my life. My mom was a biochemist \u2014 she was one of just a few women in leadership roles at the National Institutes of Health \u2014 and really loved her work. She would come home and be talking about lipopolysaccharides and cell membranes at the dinner table. What I took away from that was that it\u2019s an amazing gift to have a job that you love. I also have an incredible stepmother who gave up her career to move to the United States to marry my dad, and I saw in her a woman who was completely happy and fulfilled in her life and not working full time outside the home. That made me more open-minded about all the different choices you can make in your life. So the whole \u201cmommy wars\u201d thing really sets my teeth on edge. Were there any expressions they would repeat often around the dinner table?", "answer": "reading and writing", "sentence": "A. I loved reading and writing , and I had what I guess you would describe as a \u201cmagazine brain\u201d from Day 1.", "paragraph_sentence": " A. I loved reading and writing , and I had what I guess you would describe as a \u201cmagazine brain\u201d from Day 1. When I was 8, I decided to publish a literary magazine, and I would solicit contributions from all the kids on my street. They were a little less interested in the project than I was, so I ended up having to fill most of the magazine myself. Tell me about your parents. I was lucky to have two great mother figures in my life. My mom was a biochemist \u2014 she was one of just a few women in leadership roles at the National Institutes of Health \u2014 and really loved her work. She would come home and be talking about lipopolysaccharides and cell membranes at the dinner table. What I took away from that was that it\u2019s an amazing gift to have a job that you love. I also have an incredible stepmother who gave up her career to move to the United States to marry my dad, and I saw in her a woman who was completely happy and fulfilled in her life and not working full time outside the home. That made me more open-minded about all the different choices you can make in your life. So the whole \u201cmommy wars\u201d thing really sets my teeth on edge. Were there any expressions they would repeat often around the dinner table?", "paragraph_answer": "A. I loved reading and writing , and I had what I guess you would describe as a \u201cmagazine brain\u201d from Day 1. When I was 8, I decided to publish a literary magazine, and I would solicit contributions from all the kids on my street. They were a little less interested in the project than I was, so I ended up having to fill most of the magazine myself. Tell me about your parents. I was lucky to have two great mother figures in my life. My mom was a biochemist \u2014 she was one of just a few women in leadership roles at the National Institutes of Health \u2014 and really loved her work. She would come home and be talking about lipopolysaccharides and cell membranes at the dinner table. What I took away from that was that it\u2019s an amazing gift to have a job that you love. I also have an incredible stepmother who gave up her career to move to the United States to marry my dad, and I saw in her a woman who was completely happy and fulfilled in her life and not working full time outside the home. That made me more open-minded about all the different choices you can make in your life. So the whole \u201cmommy wars\u201d thing really sets my teeth on edge. Were there any expressions they would repeat often around the dinner table?", "sentence_answer": "A. I loved reading and writing , and I had what I guess you would describe as a \u201cmagazine brain\u201d from Day 1.", "paragraph_id": "5d701499c8e4820a9b66c0b7"} +{"question": "What cities was Boston picked over in January?", "paragraph": "Boston 2024 has been in a race against time. For its initial bid, the group had not talked with many of the landlords involved before it identified their properties as the sites of Olympic venues. It obscured financial details. It made several other missteps and was not transparent. That initial plan won the support of just 36 percent of Boston residents in March. And so Boston 2024 underwent an overhaul, including a leadership change. Governor Baker, who has remained neutral but skeptical toward the proposal, told the group to produce a new plan by the end of June. Boston 2024 officials unveiled it Monday so they could fly to California that night and meet with United States Olympic Committee officials, who are conducting a board meeting there. Monday\u2019s plan, called Bid 2.0, was seen as Boston\u2019s major chance to convince the U.S.O.C. to stick with Boston, which it picked over Los Angeles, San Francisco and Washington in January. The U.S.O.C. must enter its American competitor into the international competition by Sept. 15. If Bid 2.0 fails to generate more enthusiasm than the first iteration, the U.S.O.C. could either drop Boston and mount a last-minute alternative bid with Los Angeles or drop out of the 2024 competition altogether.", "answer": "Los Angeles, San Francisco and Washington", "sentence": "Monday\u2019s plan, called Bid 2.0, was seen as Boston\u2019s major chance to convince the U.S.O.C. to stick with Boston, which it picked over Los Angeles, San Francisco and Washington in January.", "paragraph_sentence": "Boston 2024 has been in a race against time. For its initial bid, the group had not talked with many of the landlords involved before it identified their properties as the sites of Olympic venues. It obscured financial details. It made several other missteps and was not transparent. That initial plan won the support of just 36 percent of Boston residents in March. And so Boston 2024 underwent an overhaul, including a leadership change. Governor Baker, who has remained neutral but skeptical toward the proposal, told the group to produce a new plan by the end of June. Boston 2024 officials unveiled it Monday so they could fly to California that night and meet with United States Olympic Committee officials, who are conducting a board meeting there. Monday\u2019s plan, called Bid 2.0, was seen as Boston\u2019s major chance to convince the U.S.O.C. to stick with Boston, which it picked over Los Angeles, San Francisco and Washington in January. The U.S.O.C. must enter its American competitor into the international competition by Sept. 15. If Bid 2.0 fails to generate more enthusiasm than the first iteration, the U.S.O.C. could either drop Boston and mount a last-minute alternative bid with Los Angeles or drop out of the 2024 competition altogether.", "paragraph_answer": "Boston 2024 has been in a race against time. For its initial bid, the group had not talked with many of the landlords involved before it identified their properties as the sites of Olympic venues. It obscured financial details. It made several other missteps and was not transparent. That initial plan won the support of just 36 percent of Boston residents in March. And so Boston 2024 underwent an overhaul, including a leadership change. Governor Baker, who has remained neutral but skeptical toward the proposal, told the group to produce a new plan by the end of June. Boston 2024 officials unveiled it Monday so they could fly to California that night and meet with United States Olympic Committee officials, who are conducting a board meeting there. Monday\u2019s plan, called Bid 2.0, was seen as Boston\u2019s major chance to convince the U.S.O.C. to stick with Boston, which it picked over Los Angeles, San Francisco and Washington in January. The U.S.O.C. must enter its American competitor into the international competition by Sept. 15. If Bid 2.0 fails to generate more enthusiasm than the first iteration, the U.S.O.C. could either drop Boston and mount a last-minute alternative bid with Los Angeles or drop out of the 2024 competition altogether.", "sentence_answer": "Monday\u2019s plan, called Bid 2.0, was seen as Boston\u2019s major chance to convince the U.S.O.C. to stick with Boston, which it picked over Los Angeles, San Francisco and Washington in January.", "paragraph_id": "5d7061f7c8e4820a9b66f043"} +{"question": "Who was the editorial director that lost their life in the attack?", "paragraph": "The editors, journalists and cartoonists of Charlie Hebdo reveled in controversy and relished hitting nerves. The magazine\u2019s editorial director, St\u00e9phane Charbonnier, who was killed in the attack, had scoffed at any suggestion that the magazine should tone down its trademark satire to appease anyone. For him, free expression was nothing without the right to offend. And Charlie Hebdo has been an equal-opportunity offender: Muslims, Jews and Christians \u2014 not to mention politicians of all stripes \u2014 have been targets of buffoonish, vulgar caricatures and cartoons that push every hot button with glee.", "answer": "St\u00e9phane Charbonnier", "sentence": "The magazine\u2019s editorial director, St\u00e9phane Charbonnier , who was killed in the attack, had scoffed at any suggestion that the magazine should tone down its trademark satire to appease anyone.", "paragraph_sentence": "The editors, journalists and cartoonists of Charlie Hebdo reveled in controversy and relished hitting nerves. The magazine\u2019s editorial director, St\u00e9phane Charbonnier , who was killed in the attack, had scoffed at any suggestion that the magazine should tone down its trademark satire to appease anyone. For him, free expression was nothing without the right to offend. And Charlie Hebdo has been an equal-opportunity offender: Muslims, Jews and Christians \u2014 not to mention politicians of all stripes \u2014 have been targets of buffoonish, vulgar caricatures and cartoons that push every hot button with glee.", "paragraph_answer": "The editors, journalists and cartoonists of Charlie Hebdo reveled in controversy and relished hitting nerves. The magazine\u2019s editorial director, St\u00e9phane Charbonnier , who was killed in the attack, had scoffed at any suggestion that the magazine should tone down its trademark satire to appease anyone. For him, free expression was nothing without the right to offend. And Charlie Hebdo has been an equal-opportunity offender: Muslims, Jews and Christians \u2014 not to mention politicians of all stripes \u2014 have been targets of buffoonish, vulgar caricatures and cartoons that push every hot button with glee.", "sentence_answer": "The magazine\u2019s editorial director, St\u00e9phane Charbonnier , who was killed in the attack, had scoffed at any suggestion that the magazine should tone down its trademark satire to appease anyone.", "paragraph_id": "5d701fe7c8e4820a9b66cb91"} +{"question": "What is Jeb Bush's wife's first name?", "paragraph": "Ron Kaufman, who served in the first President Bush\u2019s administration and is a longtime friend of the family, said Jeb Bush in particular was more of a serious-minded policy aficionado than a political fighter. \u201cHe\u2019d much rather talk policy, and he\u2019s just not a guy who\u2019s ever been one who likes to be on the attack,\u201d Mr. Kaufman said. In addition to his ill-fated assault on Mr. Rubio, Mr. Bush failed to fully deliver a debate salvo against Donald J. Trump that his campaign had similarly ordered up. Standing onstage in Simi Valley, Calif., Mr. Bush called on Mr. Trump to apologize for inserting Mr. Bush\u2019s wife, Columba, who was born in Mexico, in the immigration debate. Mr. Trump called her \u201ca lovely woman,\u201d but refused to apologize. Nonetheless, the Bushes \u2014 a clan as competitive as it is genteel \u2014 have also proved willing to go negative when necessary, if not directly then at least by letting those in their orbit play rough. Mr. Bush\u2019s father relied on Lee Atwater, who in a memoir nicknamed himself the \u201cbad boy\u201d of American politics, and his brother often delegated his unsavory tasks to Karl Rove.", "answer": "Columba", "sentence": "Standing onstage in Simi Valley, Calif., Mr. Bush called on Mr. Trump to apologize for inserting Mr. Bush\u2019s wife, Columba , who was born in Mexico, in the immigration debate.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ron Kaufman, who served in the first President Bush\u2019s administration and is a longtime friend of the family, said Jeb Bush in particular was more of a serious-minded policy aficionado than a political fighter. \u201cHe\u2019d much rather talk policy, and he\u2019s just not a guy who\u2019s ever been one who likes to be on the attack,\u201d Mr. Kaufman said. In addition to his ill-fated assault on Mr. Rubio, Mr. Bush failed to fully deliver a debate salvo against Donald J. Trump that his campaign had similarly ordered up. Standing onstage in Simi Valley, Calif., Mr. Bush called on Mr. Trump to apologize for inserting Mr. Bush\u2019s wife, Columba , who was born in Mexico, in the immigration debate. Mr. Trump called her \u201ca lovely woman,\u201d but refused to apologize. Nonetheless, the Bushes \u2014 a clan as competitive as it is genteel \u2014 have also proved willing to go negative when necessary, if not directly then at least by letting those in their orbit play rough. Mr. Bush\u2019s father relied on Lee Atwater, who in a memoir nicknamed himself the \u201cbad boy\u201d of American politics, and his brother often delegated his unsavory tasks to Karl Rove.", "paragraph_answer": "Ron Kaufman, who served in the first President Bush\u2019s administration and is a longtime friend of the family, said Jeb Bush in particular was more of a serious-minded policy aficionado than a political fighter. \u201cHe\u2019d much rather talk policy, and he\u2019s just not a guy who\u2019s ever been one who likes to be on the attack,\u201d Mr. Kaufman said. In addition to his ill-fated assault on Mr. Rubio, Mr. Bush failed to fully deliver a debate salvo against Donald J. Trump that his campaign had similarly ordered up. Standing onstage in Simi Valley, Calif., Mr. Bush called on Mr. Trump to apologize for inserting Mr. Bush\u2019s wife, Columba , who was born in Mexico, in the immigration debate. Mr. Trump called her \u201ca lovely woman,\u201d but refused to apologize. Nonetheless, the Bushes \u2014 a clan as competitive as it is genteel \u2014 have also proved willing to go negative when necessary, if not directly then at least by letting those in their orbit play rough. Mr. Bush\u2019s father relied on Lee Atwater, who in a memoir nicknamed himself the \u201cbad boy\u201d of American politics, and his brother often delegated his unsavory tasks to Karl Rove.", "sentence_answer": "Standing onstage in Simi Valley, Calif., Mr. Bush called on Mr. Trump to apologize for inserting Mr. Bush\u2019s wife, Columba , who was born in Mexico, in the immigration debate.", "paragraph_id": "5d70091ac8e4820a9b66b186"} +{"question": "Which online news outlet ran the Ben & Jerry's sponsored post?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe sustainable living plan is much broader than the sustainable sourcing of agricultural materials,\u201d Mr. Polman said. \u201cIt\u2019s really using your business model to address big issues in society and make a positive contribution.\u201d Mr. Polman says the sustainable living plan is profitable as well as ethical. The company claims that efficiency upgrades to Unilever factories have created savings of 400 million euros, or $430 million, since 2008. It is also aggressively marketing sustainable brands in the hope of increasing sales (including a paid post from Ben & Jerry\u2019s on the website of The New York Times).", "answer": "The New York Times", "sentence": "It is also aggressively marketing sustainable brands in the hope of increasing sales (including a paid post from Ben & Jerry\u2019s on the website of The New York Times )", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe sustainable living plan is much broader than the sustainable sourcing of agricultural materials,\u201d Mr. Polman said. \u201cIt\u2019s really using your business model to address big issues in society and make a positive contribution.\u201d Mr. Polman says the sustainable living plan is profitable as well as ethical. The company claims that efficiency upgrades to Unilever factories have created savings of 400 million euros, or $430 million, since 2008. It is also aggressively marketing sustainable brands in the hope of increasing sales (including a paid post from Ben & Jerry\u2019s on the website of The New York Times ) .", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe sustainable living plan is much broader than the sustainable sourcing of agricultural materials,\u201d Mr. Polman said. \u201cIt\u2019s really using your business model to address big issues in society and make a positive contribution.\u201d Mr. Polman says the sustainable living plan is profitable as well as ethical. The company claims that efficiency upgrades to Unilever factories have created savings of 400 million euros, or $430 million, since 2008. It is also aggressively marketing sustainable brands in the hope of increasing sales (including a paid post from Ben & Jerry\u2019s on the website of The New York Times ).", "sentence_answer": "It is also aggressively marketing sustainable brands in the hope of increasing sales (including a paid post from Ben & Jerry\u2019s on the website of The New York Times )", "paragraph_id": "5d703550c8e4820a9b66df6b"} +{"question": "Who brings a popular message of social justice?", "paragraph": "He added, \u201cI think that our church in Cuba is still looking too much into itself.\u201d But Francis has unique advantages in Cuba, given that he is a native Spanish speaker bearing a popular message of social justice and the pitfalls of capitalism. Cuban officials have already signaled their approval. During his last trip to the Vatican, Ra\u00fal Castro joked that Francis might even convince him to return to church. Few expect that a Cuban government still so firmly in power is going to roll over, no matter how popular the pope may be. And those government critics, especially in Miami, who want Francis to publicly rebuke Mr. Castro are likely to be disappointed. The toughest negotiations will likely happen in private. \u201cCuba is his hardest task,\u201d Mr. Hare said. \u201cHe will know that he has to engineer a new path in Cuba and he has the best opportunity yet with his rhetoric, background of social activism and lack of stuffiness to open the key to the Cuban door.\u201d", "answer": "Francis", "sentence": "But Francis has unique advantages in Cuba, given that he is a native Spanish speaker bearing a popular message of social justice and the pitfalls of capitalism.", "paragraph_sentence": "He added, \u201cI think that our church in Cuba is still looking too much into itself.\u201d But Francis has unique advantages in Cuba, given that he is a native Spanish speaker bearing a popular message of social justice and the pitfalls of capitalism. Cuban officials have already signaled their approval. During his last trip to the Vatican, Ra\u00fal Castro joked that Francis might even convince him to return to church. Few expect that a Cuban government still so firmly in power is going to roll over, no matter how popular the pope may be. And those government critics, especially in Miami, who want Francis to publicly rebuke Mr. Castro are likely to be disappointed. The toughest negotiations will likely happen in private. \u201cCuba is his hardest task,\u201d Mr. Hare said. \u201cHe will know that he has to engineer a new path in Cuba and he has the best opportunity yet with his rhetoric, background of social activism and lack of stuffiness to open the key to the Cuban door.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "He added, \u201cI think that our church in Cuba is still looking too much into itself.\u201d But Francis has unique advantages in Cuba, given that he is a native Spanish speaker bearing a popular message of social justice and the pitfalls of capitalism. Cuban officials have already signaled their approval. During his last trip to the Vatican, Ra\u00fal Castro joked that Francis might even convince him to return to church. Few expect that a Cuban government still so firmly in power is going to roll over, no matter how popular the pope may be. And those government critics, especially in Miami, who want Francis to publicly rebuke Mr. Castro are likely to be disappointed. The toughest negotiations will likely happen in private. \u201cCuba is his hardest task,\u201d Mr. Hare said. \u201cHe will know that he has to engineer a new path in Cuba and he has the best opportunity yet with his rhetoric, background of social activism and lack of stuffiness to open the key to the Cuban door.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "But Francis has unique advantages in Cuba, given that he is a native Spanish speaker bearing a popular message of social justice and the pitfalls of capitalism.", "paragraph_id": "5d7018aac8e4820a9b66c4bc"} +{"question": "What animal does NeuroLinx explore sleep on?", "paragraph": "Dr. Coggan had earlier grown disappointed with the \u201cestablishment\u201d science in which, he says, academic research and corporate profit priorities are increasingly indistinguishable. He bootstrapped the research laboratory with his own money and now supports it with funding from a variety of private individual contributions and scientific research grants. NeuroLinx now supports a range of research projects, including an exploration of the way dolphins sleep, an effort to create a computer simulation of the ubiquitous lab worm C. elegans (known as the Open Worm project), and an exploration of nerve damage in diseases like multiple sclerosis. Dr. Ohayon had done early research in the field of autonomous agents based on neural networks, computing models inspired by biological nervous systems, but stopped for almost a decade because of worries about military applications of the technology.", "answer": "dolphins", "sentence": "NeuroLinx now supports a range of research projects, including an exploration of the way dolphins sleep, an effort to create a computer simulation of the ubiquitous lab worm C. elegans (known as the Open Worm project), and an exploration of nerve damage in diseases like multiple sclerosis.", "paragraph_sentence": "Dr. Coggan had earlier grown disappointed with the \u201cestablishment\u201d science in which, he says, academic research and corporate profit priorities are increasingly indistinguishable. He bootstrapped the research laboratory with his own money and now supports it with funding from a variety of private individual contributions and scientific research grants. NeuroLinx now supports a range of research projects, including an exploration of the way dolphins sleep, an effort to create a computer simulation of the ubiquitous lab worm C. elegans (known as the Open Worm project), and an exploration of nerve damage in diseases like multiple sclerosis. Dr. Ohayon had done early research in the field of autonomous agents based on neural networks, computing models inspired by biological nervous systems, but stopped for almost a decade because of worries about military applications of the technology.", "paragraph_answer": "Dr. Coggan had earlier grown disappointed with the \u201cestablishment\u201d science in which, he says, academic research and corporate profit priorities are increasingly indistinguishable. He bootstrapped the research laboratory with his own money and now supports it with funding from a variety of private individual contributions and scientific research grants. NeuroLinx now supports a range of research projects, including an exploration of the way dolphins sleep, an effort to create a computer simulation of the ubiquitous lab worm C. elegans (known as the Open Worm project), and an exploration of nerve damage in diseases like multiple sclerosis. Dr. Ohayon had done early research in the field of autonomous agents based on neural networks, computing models inspired by biological nervous systems, but stopped for almost a decade because of worries about military applications of the technology.", "sentence_answer": "NeuroLinx now supports a range of research projects, including an exploration of the way dolphins sleep, an effort to create a computer simulation of the ubiquitous lab worm C. elegans (known as the Open Worm project), and an exploration of nerve damage in diseases like multiple sclerosis.", "paragraph_id": "5d700f34c8e4820a9b66bb35"} +{"question": "What is the Rangers score against the west?", "paragraph": "Cam Talbot got his second straight start in net for the Rangers, with Henrik Lundqvist out for at least three weeks with a vascular injury after a puck hit his throat on Jan. 31. Talbot had a shutout win last season in his last game at Nashville, 90 miles from where he played college hockey in Huntsville, Ala. The Rangers had performed well against Western Conference teams this season, especially on the road; they were 7-1-0 in away games against the West entering Saturday. They had also won four straight in Nashville.", "answer": "7-1-0", "sentence": "The Rangers had performed well against Western Conference teams this season, especially on the road; they were 7-1-0 in away games against the West entering Saturday.", "paragraph_sentence": "Cam Talbot got his second straight start in net for the Rangers, with Henrik Lundqvist out for at least three weeks with a vascular injury after a puck hit his throat on Jan. 31. Talbot had a shutout win last season in his last game at Nashville, 90 miles from where he played college hockey in Huntsville, Ala. The Rangers had performed well against Western Conference teams this season, especially on the road; they were 7-1-0 in away games against the West entering Saturday. They had also won four straight in Nashville.", "paragraph_answer": "Cam Talbot got his second straight start in net for the Rangers, with Henrik Lundqvist out for at least three weeks with a vascular injury after a puck hit his throat on Jan. 31. Talbot had a shutout win last season in his last game at Nashville, 90 miles from where he played college hockey in Huntsville, Ala. The Rangers had performed well against Western Conference teams this season, especially on the road; they were 7-1-0 in away games against the West entering Saturday. They had also won four straight in Nashville.", "sentence_answer": "The Rangers had performed well against Western Conference teams this season, especially on the road; they were 7-1-0 in away games against the West entering Saturday.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026c8c8e4820a9b66d335"} +{"question": "The capital projects \"tracker\" is updated how often?", "paragraph": "The department also created a capital projects \u201ctracker\u201d on its website so that people can check on the status of park construction. The feature, which is updated monthly, has had 56,000 visits since it made its debut in October. While the department\u2019s options are limited when it comes to soliciting bids, Mr. Silver did say that he planned to bundle several smaller projects into one \u2014 five Brooklyn dog runs, for example. That could make the job more attractive to prospective contractors.", "answer": "monthly", "sentence": "The feature, which is updated monthly , has had 56,000 visits since it made its debut in October.", "paragraph_sentence": "The department also created a capital projects \u201ctracker\u201d on its website so that people can check on the status of park construction. The feature, which is updated monthly , has had 56,000 visits since it made its debut in October. While the department\u2019s options are limited when it comes to soliciting bids, Mr. Silver did say that he planned to bundle several smaller projects into one \u2014 five Brooklyn dog runs, for example. That could make the job more attractive to prospective contractors.", "paragraph_answer": "The department also created a capital projects \u201ctracker\u201d on its website so that people can check on the status of park construction. The feature, which is updated monthly , has had 56,000 visits since it made its debut in October. While the department\u2019s options are limited when it comes to soliciting bids, Mr. Silver did say that he planned to bundle several smaller projects into one \u2014 five Brooklyn dog runs, for example. That could make the job more attractive to prospective contractors.", "sentence_answer": "The feature, which is updated monthly , has had 56,000 visits since it made its debut in October.", "paragraph_id": "5d704c93c8e4820a9b66ea00"} +{"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 .", "paragraph_id": "5d700a46c8e4820a9b66b3e7"} +{"question": "What right does academic censorship violate?", "paragraph": "LONDON \u2014 Students at Cardiff University have begun an online petition trying to bar Germaine Greer, the Australian feminist author, from speaking there next month because of her views on transgender women. Ms. Greer\u2019s views are well known, but the campaign to bar her from giving a lecture has raised the issue of academic censorship, and the university swiftly rejected the petition in the name of free speech. Ms. Greer, 76, who is best known for her best seller, \u201cThe Female Eunuch,\u201d has prompted outrage and protests in the past because of her comments. In a column in 2009 she wrote that transgender women seem like ghastly parodies and that a transgender woman was essentially \u201ca man\u2019s delusion that he is female.\u201d According to Varsity, Cambridge University\u2019s student newspaper, she suggested in January that transgender women do not know what it is like to have a vagina.", "answer": "free speech", "sentence": "Ms. Greer\u2019s views are well known, but the campaign to bar her from giving a lecture has raised the issue of academic censorship, and the university swiftly rejected the petition in the name of free speech .", "paragraph_sentence": "LONDON \u2014 Students at Cardiff University have begun an online petition trying to bar Germaine Greer, the Australian feminist author, from speaking there next month because of her views on transgender women. Ms. Greer\u2019s views are well known, but the campaign to bar her from giving a lecture has raised the issue of academic censorship, and the university swiftly rejected the petition in the name of free speech . Ms. Greer, 76, who is best known for her best seller, \u201cThe Female Eunuch,\u201d has prompted outrage and protests in the past because of her comments. In a column in 2009 she wrote that transgender women seem like ghastly parodies and that a transgender woman was essentially \u201ca man\u2019s delusion that he is female.\u201d According to Varsity, Cambridge University\u2019s student newspaper, she suggested in January that transgender women do not know what it is like to have a vagina.", "paragraph_answer": "LONDON \u2014 Students at Cardiff University have begun an online petition trying to bar Germaine Greer, the Australian feminist author, from speaking there next month because of her views on transgender women. Ms. Greer\u2019s views are well known, but the campaign to bar her from giving a lecture has raised the issue of academic censorship, and the university swiftly rejected the petition in the name of free speech . Ms. Greer, 76, who is best known for her best seller, \u201cThe Female Eunuch,\u201d has prompted outrage and protests in the past because of her comments. In a column in 2009 she wrote that transgender women seem like ghastly parodies and that a transgender woman was essentially \u201ca man\u2019s delusion that he is female.\u201d According to Varsity, Cambridge University\u2019s student newspaper, she suggested in January that transgender women do not know what it is like to have a vagina.", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Greer\u2019s views are well known, but the campaign to bar her from giving a lecture has raised the issue of academic censorship, and the university swiftly rejected the petition in the name of free speech .", "paragraph_id": "5d70231cc8e4820a9b66cf46"} +{"question": "Who is the director of Love?", "paragraph": "\u2018Love\u2019 (No rating, 2:14) Telling the story of a romance entirely through explicit sex, the Argentine director Gaspar No\u00e9 creates a visual tranquillity and dreamy eroticism that strips the film of salaciousness and highlights the only conversation it cares about: The one that runs from between the legs to between the ears. (Catsoulis) \u2605 \u2018The Martian\u2019 (PG-13, 2:21) Matt Damon stars in Ridley Scott\u2019s space western and blissed-out cosmic high about an American astronaut who, like a latter-day Robinson Crusoe, learns to survive on his own island of despair. Funny, loose and optimistic. (Dargis) \u2018Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials\u2019 (PG-13, 2:11) The second in a series about a racially diverse but otherwise interchangeable set of teenagers adds nothing new to the unkillable dystopian genre, but it\u2019s at least less ponderous than its predecessor. The many chases and ludicrous narrow escapes offer respectable doses of adrenaline. (John Williams) \u2018Meet the Patels\u2019 (PG, 1:28) This tidy, easygoing documentary \u2014 about the efforts of Indian-born parents to marry off their prosperous son (the actor Ravi Patel) through assorted matchmaking means \u2014 is a fascinating, good-humored and sometimes dramatic examination of family dynamics. Though Mr. Patel is on camera most often (shot by his wry, understated foil, sister and co-director, Geeta), it\u2019s his parents and the barely seen Geeta who prove most compelling. (Webster)", "answer": "Gaspar No\u00e9", "sentence": "\u2018Love\u2019 (No rating, 2:14) Telling the story of a romance entirely through explicit sex, the Argentine director Gaspar No\u00e9 creates a visual tranquillity and dreamy eroticism that strips the film of salaciousness and highlights the only conversation it cares about: The one that runs from between the legs to between the ears.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u2018Love\u2019 (No rating, 2:14) Telling the story of a romance entirely through explicit sex, the Argentine director Gaspar No\u00e9 creates a visual tranquillity and dreamy eroticism that strips the film of salaciousness and highlights the only conversation it cares about: The one that runs from between the legs to between the ears. (Catsoulis) \u2605 \u2018The Martian\u2019 (PG-13, 2:21) Matt Damon stars in Ridley Scott\u2019s space western and blissed-out cosmic high about an American astronaut who, like a latter-day Robinson Crusoe, learns to survive on his own island of despair. Funny, loose and optimistic. (Dargis) \u2018Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials\u2019 (PG-13, 2:11) The second in a series about a racially diverse but otherwise interchangeable set of teenagers adds nothing new to the unkillable dystopian genre, but it\u2019s at least less ponderous than its predecessor. The many chases and ludicrous narrow escapes offer respectable doses of adrenaline. (John Williams) \u2018Meet the Patels\u2019 (PG, 1:28) This tidy, easygoing documentary \u2014 about the efforts of Indian-born parents to marry off their prosperous son (the actor Ravi Patel) through assorted matchmaking means \u2014 is a fascinating, good-humored and sometimes dramatic examination of family dynamics. Though Mr. Patel is on camera most often (shot by his wry, understated foil, sister and co-director, Geeta), it\u2019s his parents and the barely seen Geeta who prove most compelling. (Webster)", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Love\u2019 (No rating, 2:14) Telling the story of a romance entirely through explicit sex, the Argentine director Gaspar No\u00e9 creates a visual tranquillity and dreamy eroticism that strips the film of salaciousness and highlights the only conversation it cares about: The one that runs from between the legs to between the ears. (Catsoulis) \u2605 \u2018The Martian\u2019 (PG-13, 2:21) Matt Damon stars in Ridley Scott\u2019s space western and blissed-out cosmic high about an American astronaut who, like a latter-day Robinson Crusoe, learns to survive on his own island of despair. Funny, loose and optimistic. (Dargis) \u2018Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials\u2019 (PG-13, 2:11) The second in a series about a racially diverse but otherwise interchangeable set of teenagers adds nothing new to the unkillable dystopian genre, but it\u2019s at least less ponderous than its predecessor. The many chases and ludicrous narrow escapes offer respectable doses of adrenaline. (John Williams) \u2018Meet the Patels\u2019 (PG, 1:28) This tidy, easygoing documentary \u2014 about the efforts of Indian-born parents to marry off their prosperous son (the actor Ravi Patel) through assorted matchmaking means \u2014 is a fascinating, good-humored and sometimes dramatic examination of family dynamics. Though Mr. Patel is on camera most often (shot by his wry, understated foil, sister and co-director, Geeta), it\u2019s his parents and the barely seen Geeta who prove most compelling. (Webster)", "sentence_answer": "\u2018Love\u2019 (No rating, 2:14) Telling the story of a romance entirely through explicit sex, the Argentine director Gaspar No\u00e9 creates a visual tranquillity and dreamy eroticism that strips the film of salaciousness and highlights the only conversation it cares about: The one that runs from between the legs to between the ears.", "paragraph_id": "5d701ff2c8e4820a9b66cba5"} +{"question": "What did James P. Gorman speak about at the New York Times DealBook conference?", "paragraph": "In an informal poll of the audience at The New York Times DealBook conference at the Whitney Museum on Tuesday, more than half of the respondents said Wall Street banks were no more or less trustworthy than they were in 2008, when the financial crisis erupted, sending the global financial markets in to a tailspin. There remains an illusion \u2014 on Wall Street and beyond \u2014 that only a small pool of talent is capable of working on Wall Street, said James P. Gorman, Morgan Stanley\u2019s chairman and chief executive, who spoke in the morning at the conference about the future of finance.", "answer": "future of finance", "sentence": "There remains an illusion \u2014 on Wall Street and beyond \u2014 that only a small pool of talent is capable of working on Wall Street, said James P. Gorman, Morgan Stanley\u2019s chairman and chief executive, who spoke in the morning at the conference about the future of finance .", "paragraph_sentence": "In an informal poll of the audience at The New York Times DealBook conference at the Whitney Museum on Tuesday, more than half of the respondents said Wall Street banks were no more or less trustworthy than they were in 2008, when the financial crisis erupted, sending the global financial markets in to a tailspin. There remains an illusion \u2014 on Wall Street and beyond \u2014 that only a small pool of talent is capable of working on Wall Street, said James P. Gorman, Morgan Stanley\u2019s chairman and chief executive, who spoke in the morning at the conference about the future of finance . ", "paragraph_answer": "In an informal poll of the audience at The New York Times DealBook conference at the Whitney Museum on Tuesday, more than half of the respondents said Wall Street banks were no more or less trustworthy than they were in 2008, when the financial crisis erupted, sending the global financial markets in to a tailspin. There remains an illusion \u2014 on Wall Street and beyond \u2014 that only a small pool of talent is capable of working on Wall Street, said James P. Gorman, Morgan Stanley\u2019s chairman and chief executive, who spoke in the morning at the conference about the future of finance .", "sentence_answer": "There remains an illusion \u2014 on Wall Street and beyond \u2014 that only a small pool of talent is capable of working on Wall Street, said James P. Gorman, Morgan Stanley\u2019s chairman and chief executive, who spoke in the morning at the conference about the future of finance .", "paragraph_id": "5d703148c8e4820a9b66dd27"} +{"question": "What causes accidents?", "paragraph": "The argument on the other side boils down to a simple notion: Drivers are going to do it anyway, so why not minimize the riskiest kinds of multitasking, like looking down at the phone or handling it? People use their phones too compulsively to expect them to stop, said Nagraj Kashyap, senior vice president for ventures and innovation at Qualcomm Ventures, an investing arm of the telecom giant, which recently injected $3 million into Navdy. \u201cTo completely eliminate it is a pipe dream,\u201d Mr. Kashyap said of motorist multitasking. \u201cThe best way to handle it is to make it as safe as you can.\u201d", "answer": "looking down at the phone or handling it", "sentence": "The argument on the other side boils down to a simple notion: Drivers are going to do it anyway, so why not minimize the riskiest kinds of multitasking, like looking down at the phone or handling it ?", "paragraph_sentence": " The argument on the other side boils down to a simple notion: Drivers are going to do it anyway, so why not minimize the riskiest kinds of multitasking, like looking down at the phone or handling it ? People use their phones too compulsively to expect them to stop, said Nagraj Kashyap, senior vice president for ventures and innovation at Qualcomm Ventures, an investing arm of the telecom giant, which recently injected $3 million into Navdy. \u201cTo completely eliminate it is a pipe dream,\u201d Mr. Kashyap said of motorist multitasking. \u201cThe best way to handle it is to make it as safe as you can.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The argument on the other side boils down to a simple notion: Drivers are going to do it anyway, so why not minimize the riskiest kinds of multitasking, like looking down at the phone or handling it ? People use their phones too compulsively to expect them to stop, said Nagraj Kashyap, senior vice president for ventures and innovation at Qualcomm Ventures, an investing arm of the telecom giant, which recently injected $3 million into Navdy. \u201cTo completely eliminate it is a pipe dream,\u201d Mr. Kashyap said of motorist multitasking. \u201cThe best way to handle it is to make it as safe as you can.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The argument on the other side boils down to a simple notion: Drivers are going to do it anyway, so why not minimize the riskiest kinds of multitasking, like looking down at the phone or handling it ?", "paragraph_id": "5d7027eac8e4820a9b66d5a3"} +{"question": "In which city was the author shot?", "paragraph": "That category could easily have included me. In 2006 I was shot at by a drunken 20-something man on the North Side of Chicago while riding in a car with three female friends. The reason? I was in the back seat next to the man\u2019s ex-girlfriend. Enraged, he burst from his house, pistol popping. Luckily, his aim was bad, and my friend was a good defensive driver: The shooter only managed to crack the rear window. I learned later that he had loose ties to a Hispanic set. Since then, I have sometimes wondered how close I came, as a brown man, then in my mid-20s, to having my death trivialized by a two-word phrase in a police blotter. The chimera of devious street tribes might give people a scapegoat for Chicago\u2019s gun violence, but it doesn\u2019t reflect the complex reality on the ground. And sending in tactical units to \u201cdestroy the gangs,\u201d as the former Chicago police superintendent Garry McCarthy recently vowed, distracts from the structural problems that lead to gun violence in inner-city neighborhoods. When our solution to crime is to target gangs, we risk targeting whole swaths of people in economically disadvantaged neighborhoods, almost all of them black and Hispanic. A real solution would involve more opportunities for employment and education, stricter policies on gun control and safe spaces for those who have been traumatized, in order to minimize the chance of violence being perpetuated \u2014 the same things people have spent half a century calling for in these neighborhoods.", "answer": "Chicago", "sentence": "In 2006 I was shot at by a drunken 20-something man on the North Side of Chicago while riding in a car with three female friends.", "paragraph_sentence": "That category could easily have included me. In 2006 I was shot at by a drunken 20-something man on the North Side of Chicago while riding in a car with three female friends. The reason? I was in the back seat next to the man\u2019s ex-girlfriend. Enraged, he burst from his house, pistol popping. Luckily, his aim was bad, and my friend was a good defensive driver: The shooter only managed to crack the rear window. I learned later that he had loose ties to a Hispanic set. Since then, I have sometimes wondered how close I came, as a brown man, then in my mid-20s, to having my death trivialized by a two-word phrase in a police blotter. The chimera of devious street tribes might give people a scapegoat for Chicago\u2019s gun violence, but it doesn\u2019t reflect the complex reality on the ground. And sending in tactical units to \u201cdestroy the gangs,\u201d as the former Chicago police superintendent Garry McCarthy recently vowed, distracts from the structural problems that lead to gun violence in inner-city neighborhoods. When our solution to crime is to target gangs, we risk targeting whole swaths of people in economically disadvantaged neighborhoods, almost all of them black and Hispanic. A real solution would involve more opportunities for employment and education, stricter policies on gun control and safe spaces for those who have been traumatized, in order to minimize the chance of violence being perpetuated \u2014 the same things people have spent half a century calling for in these neighborhoods.", "paragraph_answer": "That category could easily have included me. In 2006 I was shot at by a drunken 20-something man on the North Side of Chicago while riding in a car with three female friends. The reason? I was in the back seat next to the man\u2019s ex-girlfriend. Enraged, he burst from his house, pistol popping. Luckily, his aim was bad, and my friend was a good defensive driver: The shooter only managed to crack the rear window. I learned later that he had loose ties to a Hispanic set. Since then, I have sometimes wondered how close I came, as a brown man, then in my mid-20s, to having my death trivialized by a two-word phrase in a police blotter. The chimera of devious street tribes might give people a scapegoat for Chicago\u2019s gun violence, but it doesn\u2019t reflect the complex reality on the ground. And sending in tactical units to \u201cdestroy the gangs,\u201d as the former Chicago police superintendent Garry McCarthy recently vowed, distracts from the structural problems that lead to gun violence in inner-city neighborhoods. When our solution to crime is to target gangs, we risk targeting whole swaths of people in economically disadvantaged neighborhoods, almost all of them black and Hispanic. A real solution would involve more opportunities for employment and education, stricter policies on gun control and safe spaces for those who have been traumatized, in order to minimize the chance of violence being perpetuated \u2014 the same things people have spent half a century calling for in these neighborhoods.", "sentence_answer": "In 2006 I was shot at by a drunken 20-something man on the North Side of Chicago while riding in a car with three female friends.", "paragraph_id": "5d7015fcc8e4820a9b66c1fa"} +{"question": "What regime does Saudi Arabia ally itself with the United States against?", "paragraph": "Saudi Arabia can flirt with countries like Russia, China and France, but, as they have recognized, Washington is indispensable. And despite the perseverance of arguments that Riyadh is a greater source of extremism than Tehran \u2014 something no serving American official ever discusses \u2014 Saudi Arabia remains a crucial American ally in opposing both Iran and regional extremists like the Islamic State. This is hardly the first time the American-Saudi alliance has been strained. And this time, the basis of the partnership has been modified. Both sides have clearly found there\u2019s no plausible alternative and have come home to each other again.", "answer": "Iran", "sentence": "And despite the perseverance of arguments that Riyadh is a greater source of extremism than Tehran \u2014 something no serving American official ever discusses \u2014 Saudi Arabia remains a crucial American ally in opposing both Iran and regional extremists like the Islamic State.", "paragraph_sentence": "Saudi Arabia can flirt with countries like Russia, China and France, but, as they have recognized, Washington is indispensable. And despite the perseverance of arguments that Riyadh is a greater source of extremism than Tehran \u2014 something no serving American official ever discusses \u2014 Saudi Arabia remains a crucial American ally in opposing both Iran and regional extremists like the Islamic State. This is hardly the first time the American-Saudi alliance has been strained. And this time, the basis of the partnership has been modified. Both sides have clearly found there\u2019s no plausible alternative and have come home to each other again.", "paragraph_answer": "Saudi Arabia can flirt with countries like Russia, China and France, but, as they have recognized, Washington is indispensable. And despite the perseverance of arguments that Riyadh is a greater source of extremism than Tehran \u2014 something no serving American official ever discusses \u2014 Saudi Arabia remains a crucial American ally in opposing both Iran and regional extremists like the Islamic State. This is hardly the first time the American-Saudi alliance has been strained. And this time, the basis of the partnership has been modified. Both sides have clearly found there\u2019s no plausible alternative and have come home to each other again.", "sentence_answer": "And despite the perseverance of arguments that Riyadh is a greater source of extremism than Tehran \u2014 something no serving American official ever discusses \u2014 Saudi Arabia remains a crucial American ally in opposing both Iran and regional extremists like the Islamic State.", "paragraph_id": "5d700993c8e4820a9b66b269"} +{"question": "What building was designed by Rosario Candela?", "paragraph": "These conversions include 12 East 88th Street, a red-brick 13-story building near Fifth Avenue designed by Rosario Candela, the architect responsible for much of the Upper East Side\u2019s elegant look. Under an approved offering plan, Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create up to 53 units for sale in the building, ranging from one- to five-bedrooms, after combining some of the existing 65 apartments. Seventeen of the units currently have tenants paying regulated rents. Just outside the Carnegie Hill Historic District, the property, completed in 1931 and on the same block as the Guggenheim Museum, can be altered without city approval. But other than upgrading windows, the developer said there were no plans to change the exterior.", "answer": "a red-brick 13-story building", "sentence": "These conversions include 12 East 88th Street, a red-brick 13-story building near Fifth Avenue designed by Rosario Candela, the architect responsible for much of the Upper East Side\u2019s elegant look.", "paragraph_sentence": " These conversions include 12 East 88th Street, a red-brick 13-story building near Fifth Avenue designed by Rosario Candela, the architect responsible for much of the Upper East Side\u2019s elegant look. Under an approved offering plan, Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create up to 53 units for sale in the building, ranging from one- to five-bedrooms, after combining some of the existing 65 apartments. Seventeen of the units currently have tenants paying regulated rents. Just outside the Carnegie Hill Historic District, the property, completed in 1931 and on the same block as the Guggenheim Museum, can be altered without city approval. But other than upgrading windows, the developer said there were no plans to change the exterior.", "paragraph_answer": "These conversions include 12 East 88th Street, a red-brick 13-story building near Fifth Avenue designed by Rosario Candela, the architect responsible for much of the Upper East Side\u2019s elegant look. Under an approved offering plan, Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create up to 53 units for sale in the building, ranging from one- to five-bedrooms, after combining some of the existing 65 apartments. Seventeen of the units currently have tenants paying regulated rents. Just outside the Carnegie Hill Historic District, the property, completed in 1931 and on the same block as the Guggenheim Museum, can be altered without city approval. But other than upgrading windows, the developer said there were no plans to change the exterior.", "sentence_answer": "These conversions include 12 East 88th Street, a red-brick 13-story building near Fifth Avenue designed by Rosario Candela, the architect responsible for much of the Upper East Side\u2019s elegant look.", "paragraph_id": "5d7014edc8e4820a9b66c0f8"} +{"question": "Which state is facing drought?", "paragraph": "And now, as the end of the official rainy season approaches \u2014 this state gets 90 percent of its water from December through April, most of it in December and January \u2014 California is facing a punishing fourth year of drought. Temperatures in Southern California soared to record-high levels over the weekend, approaching 100 degrees in some places. Reservoirs are low. Landscapes are parched and blighted with fields of dead or dormant orange trees. And the Sierra Nevada snowpack, which is counted on to provide 30 percent of the state\u2019s water supply as it melts through early summer, is at its second-lowest level on record.", "answer": "California", "sentence": "And now, as the end of the official rainy season approaches \u2014 this state gets 90 percent of its water from December through April, most of it in December and January \u2014 California is facing a punishing fourth year of drought.", "paragraph_sentence": " And now, as the end of the official rainy season approaches \u2014 this state gets 90 percent of its water from December through April, most of it in December and January \u2014 California is facing a punishing fourth year of drought. Temperatures in Southern California soared to record-high levels over the weekend, approaching 100 degrees in some places. Reservoirs are low. Landscapes are parched and blighted with fields of dead or dormant orange trees. And the Sierra Nevada snowpack, which is counted on to provide 30 percent of the state\u2019s water supply as it melts through early summer, is at its second-lowest level on record.", "paragraph_answer": "And now, as the end of the official rainy season approaches \u2014 this state gets 90 percent of its water from December through April, most of it in December and January \u2014 California is facing a punishing fourth year of drought. Temperatures in Southern California soared to record-high levels over the weekend, approaching 100 degrees in some places. Reservoirs are low. Landscapes are parched and blighted with fields of dead or dormant orange trees. And the Sierra Nevada snowpack, which is counted on to provide 30 percent of the state\u2019s water supply as it melts through early summer, is at its second-lowest level on record.", "sentence_answer": "And now, as the end of the official rainy season approaches \u2014 this state gets 90 percent of its water from December through April, most of it in December and January \u2014 California is facing a punishing fourth year of drought.", "paragraph_id": "5d700a8bc8e4820a9b66b453"} +{"question": "Who is the Senator of Kentucky?", "paragraph": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Emerging from an all-night session that was more exhausting than dramatic, Senate Republicans on Friday squeaked through a budget blueprint that would repeal the Affordable Care Act, fundamentally remake federal health care for the poor and elderly, and push the federal deficit toward zero over the next decade. The 52-to-46 vote came at 3:28 a.m. after the Senate considered hundreds of amendments and voted on dozens \u2014 many of them politically freighted, some of them contradictory, but none of them binding. No Democrats voted for the budget. Among Republicans, only Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky, who is likely to seek the White House, and Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, who has announced his intention to do so, voted no. Senator Michael B. Enzi of Wyoming, the chairman of the Budget Committee, hailed a plan that he said would \u201cprotect the nation\u2019s most vulnerable citizens, strengthen national defense and bring robust economic growth.\u201d", "answer": "Rand Paul", "sentence": "Among Republicans, only Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky, who is likely to seek the White House, and Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, who has announced his intention to do so, voted no.", "paragraph_sentence": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Emerging from an all-night session that was more exhausting than dramatic, Senate Republicans on Friday squeaked through a budget blueprint that would repeal the Affordable Care Act, fundamentally remake federal health care for the poor and elderly, and push the federal deficit toward zero over the next decade. The 52-to-46 vote came at 3:28 a.m. after the Senate considered hundreds of amendments and voted on dozens \u2014 many of them politically freighted, some of them contradictory, but none of them binding. No Democrats voted for the budget. Among Republicans, only Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky, who is likely to seek the White House, and Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, who has announced his intention to do so, voted no. Senator Michael B. Enzi of Wyoming, the chairman of the Budget Committee, hailed a plan that he said would \u201cprotect the nation\u2019s most vulnerable citizens, strengthen national defense and bring robust economic growth.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Emerging from an all-night session that was more exhausting than dramatic, Senate Republicans on Friday squeaked through a budget blueprint that would repeal the Affordable Care Act, fundamentally remake federal health care for the poor and elderly, and push the federal deficit toward zero over the next decade. The 52-to-46 vote came at 3:28 a.m. after the Senate considered hundreds of amendments and voted on dozens \u2014 many of them politically freighted, some of them contradictory, but none of them binding. No Democrats voted for the budget. Among Republicans, only Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky, who is likely to seek the White House, and Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, who has announced his intention to do so, voted no. Senator Michael B. Enzi of Wyoming, the chairman of the Budget Committee, hailed a plan that he said would \u201cprotect the nation\u2019s most vulnerable citizens, strengthen national defense and bring robust economic growth.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Among Republicans, only Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky, who is likely to seek the White House, and Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, who has announced his intention to do so, voted no.", "paragraph_id": "5d701efdc8e4820a9b66cab2"} +{"question": "Did the unemployment rate increase or decrease?", "paragraph": "Economists thought the nation added 200,000 jobs in November; the Bureau of Labor Statistics\u2019 best guess in the jobs report released Friday morning was 211,000. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent, and average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent last month, both identical to the forecasters\u2019 projections. You\u2019ll rarely see an economic report that more closely matches economists\u2019 expectations. Another report earlier in the week that suggested that the manufacturing sector was contracting looks to be an outlier.", "answer": "unchanged", "sentence": "The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent, and average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent last month, both identical to the forecasters\u2019 projections.", "paragraph_sentence": "Economists thought the nation added 200,000 jobs in November; the Bureau of Labor Statistics\u2019 best guess in the jobs report released Friday morning was 211,000. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent, and average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent last month, both identical to the forecasters\u2019 projections. You\u2019ll rarely see an economic report that more closely matches economists\u2019 expectations. Another report earlier in the week that suggested that the manufacturing sector was contracting looks to be an outlier.", "paragraph_answer": "Economists thought the nation added 200,000 jobs in November; the Bureau of Labor Statistics\u2019 best guess in the jobs report released Friday morning was 211,000. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent, and average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent last month, both identical to the forecasters\u2019 projections. You\u2019ll rarely see an economic report that more closely matches economists\u2019 expectations. Another report earlier in the week that suggested that the manufacturing sector was contracting looks to be an outlier.", "sentence_answer": "The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent, and average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent last month, both identical to the forecasters\u2019 projections.", "paragraph_id": "5d700eb1c8e4820a9b66baa1"} +{"question": "What eludes the grasp of Mr. d'Arcy James?", "paragraph": "With his resolute jaw, gleaming smile and heroic tenor, Mr. d\u2019Arcy James wasn\u2019t meant to play a sad sack like Nick. Though he works hard, the character eludes his grasp. Mr. Borle brings his well-polished panoply of comic tics, winks and flourishes to his portrayal of Shakespeare as a glam rock star. As anyone who saw his Tony-winning Captain Hook in \u201cPeter and the Starcatcher\u201d knows, Mr. Borle is a master of carefully stylized excess. In \u201cSomething Rotten!,\u201d though, he has nothing else to fall back on. Like the show itself, it\u2019s both too much and not enough.", "answer": "the character", "sentence": "Though he works hard, the character eludes his grasp.", "paragraph_sentence": "With his resolute jaw, gleaming smile and heroic tenor, Mr. d\u2019Arcy James wasn\u2019t meant to play a sad sack like Nick. Though he works hard, the character eludes his grasp. Mr. Borle brings his well-polished panoply of comic tics, winks and flourishes to his portrayal of Shakespeare as a glam rock star. As anyone who saw his Tony-winning Captain Hook in \u201cPeter and the Starcatcher\u201d knows, Mr. Borle is a master of carefully stylized excess. In \u201cSomething Rotten!,\u201d though, he has nothing else to fall back on. Like the show itself, it\u2019s both too much and not enough.", "paragraph_answer": "With his resolute jaw, gleaming smile and heroic tenor, Mr. d\u2019Arcy James wasn\u2019t meant to play a sad sack like Nick. Though he works hard, the character eludes his grasp. Mr. Borle brings his well-polished panoply of comic tics, winks and flourishes to his portrayal of Shakespeare as a glam rock star. As anyone who saw his Tony-winning Captain Hook in \u201cPeter and the Starcatcher\u201d knows, Mr. Borle is a master of carefully stylized excess. In \u201cSomething Rotten!,\u201d though, he has nothing else to fall back on. Like the show itself, it\u2019s both too much and not enough.", "sentence_answer": "Though he works hard, the character eludes his grasp.", "paragraph_id": "5d702c37c8e4820a9b66d9d7"} +{"question": "How many more potential candidates are also running this year?", "paragraph": "The biggest question in voters\u2019 minds about Mr. Huckabee, 59, who seemed to add a final punctuation mark to his political career by skipping the 2012 presidential race, may be why he has returned to the fray. Although American politics is full of stories of the ultimate triumph of also-rans, from Richard M. Nixon to Ronald Reagan, Mr. Huckabee would seem to face greater obstacles than during his first presidential campaign, when he battled only a couple of rivals for the party\u2019s conservative base. Now half a dozen or more declared and likely candidates appeal to social conservatives, and Mr. Huckabee\u2019s party has moved further rightward. He is vulnerable to criticism for positions he once held in favor of the Common Core education standards and a cap-and-trade program to fight global warming.", "answer": "half a dozen or more", "sentence": "Now half a dozen or more declared and likely candidates appeal to social conservatives, and Mr. Huckabee\u2019s party has moved further rightward.", "paragraph_sentence": "The biggest question in voters\u2019 minds about Mr. Huckabee, 59, who seemed to add a final punctuation mark to his political career by skipping the 2012 presidential race, may be why he has returned to the fray. Although American politics is full of stories of the ultimate triumph of also-rans, from Richard M. Nixon to Ronald Reagan, Mr. Huckabee would seem to face greater obstacles than during his first presidential campaign, when he battled only a couple of rivals for the party\u2019s conservative base. Now half a dozen or more declared and likely candidates appeal to social conservatives, and Mr. Huckabee\u2019s party has moved further rightward. He is vulnerable to criticism for positions he once held in favor of the Common Core education standards and a cap-and-trade program to fight global warming.", "paragraph_answer": "The biggest question in voters\u2019 minds about Mr. Huckabee, 59, who seemed to add a final punctuation mark to his political career by skipping the 2012 presidential race, may be why he has returned to the fray. Although American politics is full of stories of the ultimate triumph of also-rans, from Richard M. Nixon to Ronald Reagan, Mr. Huckabee would seem to face greater obstacles than during his first presidential campaign, when he battled only a couple of rivals for the party\u2019s conservative base. Now half a dozen or more declared and likely candidates appeal to social conservatives, and Mr. Huckabee\u2019s party has moved further rightward. He is vulnerable to criticism for positions he once held in favor of the Common Core education standards and a cap-and-trade program to fight global warming.", "sentence_answer": "Now half a dozen or more declared and likely candidates appeal to social conservatives, and Mr. Huckabee\u2019s party has moved further rightward.", "paragraph_id": "5d70436ec8e4820a9b66e6ba"} +{"question": "What was the reporter asked to ignore when talking to Marcelo?", "paragraph": "The #nightshift hashtag is especially well populated by the armed professions and the healing ones. Sometimes they are almost one and the same, as in the case of @armedmedic3153, a.k.a. Marcelo Aguirre, a paramedic in Newark and suburban New Jersey. He owns an AR-15, a \u00ad9-millimeter\u00ad and a shotgun, but the only thing he shoots on the night shift is his camera. He works nights so he can study days; he wants to be a doctor. Nights are good preparation for that: You get more serious cases. You learn on the job. A 12-hour course each night you\u2019re on. Twenty-four hours if you take a double. After a while, the adrenaline that juices you when you\u2019re new \u2014 when you\u2019re still keeping a tally of the lives you\u2019ve saved \u2014 disappears. You just do the job. \u201cHigh speed and low drag,\u201d Aguirre told me when I called. \u201cPlease ignore the siren,\u201d he said. \u201cWe\u2019re going to a call.\u201d A stroke. Nothing to get excited about. Coffee sustains him. He stays clean. Some guys, he said, use Provigil, but that\u2019s prescribed. \u201cFor shift-work disorder,\u201d he said.", "answer": "Please ignore the siren", "sentence": "\u201c Please ignore the siren ,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_sentence": "The #nightshift hashtag is especially well populated by the armed professions and the healing ones. Sometimes they are almost one and the same, as in the case of @armedmedic3153, a.k.a. Marcelo Aguirre, a paramedic in Newark and suburban New Jersey. He owns an AR-15, a \u00ad9-millimeter\u00ad and a shotgun, but the only thing he shoots on the night shift is his camera. He works nights so he can study days; he wants to be a doctor. Nights are good preparation for that: You get more serious cases. You learn on the job. A 12-hour course each night you\u2019re on. Twenty-four hours if you take a double. After a while, the adrenaline that juices you when you\u2019re new \u2014 when you\u2019re still keeping a tally of the lives you\u2019ve saved \u2014 disappears. You just do the job. \u201cHigh speed and low drag,\u201d Aguirre told me when I called. \u201c Please ignore the siren ,\u201d he said. \u201cWe\u2019re going to a call.\u201d A stroke. Nothing to get excited about. Coffee sustains him. He stays clean. Some guys, he said, use Provigil, but that\u2019s prescribed. \u201cFor shift-work disorder,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "The #nightshift hashtag is especially well populated by the armed professions and the healing ones. Sometimes they are almost one and the same, as in the case of @armedmedic3153, a.k.a. Marcelo Aguirre, a paramedic in Newark and suburban New Jersey. He owns an AR-15, a \u00ad9-millimeter\u00ad and a shotgun, but the only thing he shoots on the night shift is his camera. He works nights so he can study days; he wants to be a doctor. Nights are good preparation for that: You get more serious cases. You learn on the job. A 12-hour course each night you\u2019re on. Twenty-four hours if you take a double. After a while, the adrenaline that juices you when you\u2019re new \u2014 when you\u2019re still keeping a tally of the lives you\u2019ve saved \u2014 disappears. You just do the job. \u201cHigh speed and low drag,\u201d Aguirre told me when I called. \u201c Please ignore the siren ,\u201d he said. \u201cWe\u2019re going to a call.\u201d A stroke. Nothing to get excited about. Coffee sustains him. He stays clean. Some guys, he said, use Provigil, but that\u2019s prescribed. \u201cFor shift-work disorder,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "\u201c Please ignore the siren ,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_id": "5d703385c8e4820a9b66dead"} +{"question": "who declined to be interviewed for this article ?", "paragraph": "Marco Simons, a lawyer with EarthRights International, an advocacy group in Washington, said that companies were increasingly fighting back against the human rights lawyers suing them. \u201cThis is the new playbook from defendants,\u201d said Mr. Simons, who is involved in a lawsuit against Chiquita. Citing continuing litigation, Mr. Collingsworth as well as executives of Drummond declined to be interviewed for this article. American companies that operated in Colombia have all insisted that they were not involved in violence against any workers or citizens there, either directly or indirectly.", "answer": "Mr. Collingsworth as well as executives of Drummond", "sentence": "Citing continuing litigation, Mr. Collingsworth as well as executives of Drummond declined to be interviewed for this article.", "paragraph_sentence": "Marco Simons, a lawyer with EarthRights International, an advocacy group in Washington, said that companies were increasingly fighting back against the human rights lawyers suing them. \u201cThis is the new playbook from defendants,\u201d said Mr. Simons, who is involved in a lawsuit against Chiquita. Citing continuing litigation, Mr. Collingsworth as well as executives of Drummond declined to be interviewed for this article. American companies that operated in Colombia have all insisted that they were not involved in violence against any workers or citizens there, either directly or indirectly.", "paragraph_answer": "Marco Simons, a lawyer with EarthRights International, an advocacy group in Washington, said that companies were increasingly fighting back against the human rights lawyers suing them. \u201cThis is the new playbook from defendants,\u201d said Mr. Simons, who is involved in a lawsuit against Chiquita. Citing continuing litigation, Mr. Collingsworth as well as executives of Drummond declined to be interviewed for this article. American companies that operated in Colombia have all insisted that they were not involved in violence against any workers or citizens there, either directly or indirectly.", "sentence_answer": "Citing continuing litigation, Mr. Collingsworth as well as executives of Drummond declined to be interviewed for this article.", "paragraph_id": "5d7028b0c8e4820a9b66d657"} +{"question": "What is a priority for president Obama?", "paragraph": "Talks on the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a priority for President Obama, deadlocked two months ago. \u2022 Oregon\u2019s medicinal marijuana shops began sales to recreational users today.", "answer": "Talks on the Trans-Pacific Partnership", "sentence": "Talks on the Trans-Pacific Partnership , a priority for President Obama, deadlocked two months ago.", "paragraph_sentence": " Talks on the Trans-Pacific Partnership , a priority for President Obama, deadlocked two months ago. \u2022 Oregon\u2019s medicinal marijuana shops began sales to recreational users today.", "paragraph_answer": " Talks on the Trans-Pacific Partnership , a priority for President Obama, deadlocked two months ago. \u2022 Oregon\u2019s medicinal marijuana shops began sales to recreational users today.", "sentence_answer": " Talks on the Trans-Pacific Partnership , a priority for President Obama, deadlocked two months ago.", "paragraph_id": "5d702cebc8e4820a9b66da73"} +{"question": "Did the rise cause some sell offs?", "paragraph": "The data also caused the dollar to rise sharply against its major currency counterparts. The euro fell to $1.07, its lowest level in six months, and the dollar rose against the Japanese yen to 123.19. The stronger dollar caused a sell-off in commodities as well. Benchmark crude oil fell 91 cents, or 2 percent, to settle at $44.29 a barrel. Brent crude, which is used to price international oils, fell 56 cents, or 1.2 percent, to settle at $47.42 a barrel. Gold fell $16.50, or 1.5 percent, to $1,087.70 an ounce. Silver fell 29 cents, or 2 percent, to $14.69 an ounce. High-grade copper fell a penny, or 0.6 percent, to settle at $2.242 a pound.", "answer": "The stronger dollar caused a sell-off in commodities as well.", "sentence": "The stronger dollar caused a sell-off in commodities as well. Benchmark crude oil fell 91 cents, or 2 percent, to settle at $44.29 a barrel.", "paragraph_sentence": "The data also caused the dollar to rise sharply against its major currency counterparts. The euro fell to $1.07, its lowest level in six months, and the dollar rose against the Japanese yen to 123.19. The stronger dollar caused a sell-off in commodities as well. Benchmark crude oil fell 91 cents, or 2 percent, to settle at $44.29 a barrel. Brent crude, which is used to price international oils, fell 56 cents, or 1.2 percent, to settle at $47.42 a barrel. Gold fell $16.50, or 1.5 percent, to $1,087.70 an ounce. Silver fell 29 cents, or 2 percent, to $14.69 an ounce. High-grade copper fell a penny, or 0.6 percent, to settle at $2.242 a pound.", "paragraph_answer": "The data also caused the dollar to rise sharply against its major currency counterparts. The euro fell to $1.07, its lowest level in six months, and the dollar rose against the Japanese yen to 123.19. The stronger dollar caused a sell-off in commodities as well. Benchmark crude oil fell 91 cents, or 2 percent, to settle at $44.29 a barrel. Brent crude, which is used to price international oils, fell 56 cents, or 1.2 percent, to settle at $47.42 a barrel. Gold fell $16.50, or 1.5 percent, to $1,087.70 an ounce. Silver fell 29 cents, or 2 percent, to $14.69 an ounce. High-grade copper fell a penny, or 0.6 percent, to settle at $2.242 a pound.", "sentence_answer": " The stronger dollar caused a sell-off in commodities as well. Benchmark crude oil fell 91 cents, or 2 percent, to settle at $44.29 a barrel.", "paragraph_id": "5d701073c8e4820a9b66bcd2"} +{"question": "What did the South and the United States need?", "paragraph": "After reading Michiko Kakutani\u2019s review of Harper Lee\u2019s novel \u201cGo Set a Watchman,\u201d I couldn\u2019t help but feel a sense of worry and sadness about the Atticus Finch the book holds in its pages. As a native of Alabama, I had held up Atticus in my own mind as a redemptive figure, a symbol of hope, a hero who was brave enough to fight for what is right despite the poisonous and dangerous pools of racism long associated with whites in the Deep South. He was a symbol of the good that I desperately wanted to believe was around me as a child growing up in the late 1960s and \u201970s near Birmingham. But the reality was often more complicated. When \u201cTo Kill a Mockingbird\u201d was published in 1960, the South, and the United States, needed the heroic story of Atticus Finch. But over the past 50 years, we\u2019ve witnessed struggle, strife and, most of all, unprecedented triumph.", "answer": "the heroic story of Atticus Finch", "sentence": "When \u201cTo Kill a Mockingbird\u201d was published in 1960, the South, and the United States, needed the heroic story of Atticus Finch .", "paragraph_sentence": "After reading Michiko Kakutani\u2019s review of Harper Lee\u2019s novel \u201cGo Set a Watchman,\u201d I couldn\u2019t help but feel a sense of worry and sadness about the Atticus Finch the book holds in its pages. As a native of Alabama, I had held up Atticus in my own mind as a redemptive figure, a symbol of hope, a hero who was brave enough to fight for what is right despite the poisonous and dangerous pools of racism long associated with whites in the Deep South. He was a symbol of the good that I desperately wanted to believe was around me as a child growing up in the late 1960s and \u201970s near Birmingham. But the reality was often more complicated. When \u201cTo Kill a Mockingbird\u201d was published in 1960, the South, and the United States, needed the heroic story of Atticus Finch . But over the past 50 years, we\u2019ve witnessed struggle, strife and, most of all, unprecedented triumph.", "paragraph_answer": "After reading Michiko Kakutani\u2019s review of Harper Lee\u2019s novel \u201cGo Set a Watchman,\u201d I couldn\u2019t help but feel a sense of worry and sadness about the Atticus Finch the book holds in its pages. As a native of Alabama, I had held up Atticus in my own mind as a redemptive figure, a symbol of hope, a hero who was brave enough to fight for what is right despite the poisonous and dangerous pools of racism long associated with whites in the Deep South. He was a symbol of the good that I desperately wanted to believe was around me as a child growing up in the late 1960s and \u201970s near Birmingham. But the reality was often more complicated. When \u201cTo Kill a Mockingbird\u201d was published in 1960, the South, and the United States, needed the heroic story of Atticus Finch . But over the past 50 years, we\u2019ve witnessed struggle, strife and, most of all, unprecedented triumph.", "sentence_answer": "When \u201cTo Kill a Mockingbird\u201d was published in 1960, the South, and the United States, needed the heroic story of Atticus Finch .", "paragraph_id": "5d702fe7c8e4820a9b66dc77"} +{"question": "How many Europeans 65 or older are there for every 100 residents aged 20 to 64?", "paragraph": "The demographic shift is more pressing in Europe than almost any other major region, save Japan. There are an estimated 28 Europeans 65 or older for every 100 residents ages 20 to 64, almost twice the world average, according to the United Nations, and compared with 24.7 for the United States. By the end of the century, the United Nations expects the European figure to double. Such trends will transform societies, potentially reducing economic growth and increasing stress on public pension systems and requiring more elder care. Japan already faces existential questions in a country where adult diaper sales are beginning to eclipse those of baby diapers.", "answer": "28", "sentence": "There are an estimated 28 Europeans 65 or older for every 100 residents ages 20 to 64, almost twice the world average, according to the United Nations, and compared with 24.7 for the United States.", "paragraph_sentence": "The demographic shift is more pressing in Europe than almost any other major region, save Japan. There are an estimated 28 Europeans 65 or older for every 100 residents ages 20 to 64, almost twice the world average, according to the United Nations, and compared with 24.7 for the United States. By the end of the century, the United Nations expects the European figure to double. Such trends will transform societies, potentially reducing economic growth and increasing stress on public pension systems and requiring more elder care. Japan already faces existential questions in a country where adult diaper sales are beginning to eclipse those of baby diapers.", "paragraph_answer": "The demographic shift is more pressing in Europe than almost any other major region, save Japan. There are an estimated 28 Europeans 65 or older for every 100 residents ages 20 to 64, almost twice the world average, according to the United Nations, and compared with 24.7 for the United States. By the end of the century, the United Nations expects the European figure to double. Such trends will transform societies, potentially reducing economic growth and increasing stress on public pension systems and requiring more elder care. Japan already faces existential questions in a country where adult diaper sales are beginning to eclipse those of baby diapers.", "sentence_answer": "There are an estimated 28 Europeans 65 or older for every 100 residents ages 20 to 64, almost twice the world average, according to the United Nations, and compared with 24.7 for the United States.", "paragraph_id": "5d704f3cc8e4820a9b66eace"} +{"question": "What team did he help to the state championship?", "paragraph": "He also played for the New Jersey Nets (now the Brooklyn Nets), the Utah Jazz and the Detroit Pistons. For his career, he averaged 12 points and 6.1 rebounds per game. More notably, he led the league three times in personal fouls, testimony to his ferocious inside play (and possibly because the refs were never crazy about him), and because he dunked so often and shot well from midrange, his career shooting percentage, .572, is the seventh highest in league history. Darryl Dawkins was born in Orlando on Jan. 11, 1957. He was raised mostly by his mother, the former Harriet James, though Mr. Tyler, his friend, said he remained close to his father, Frank Dawkins. He led Maynard Evans High School in Orlando to the Florida state championship in 1975.", "answer": "Maynard Evans High School", "sentence": "He led Maynard Evans High School in Orlando to the Florida state championship in 1975.", "paragraph_sentence": "He also played for the New Jersey Nets (now the Brooklyn Nets), the Utah Jazz and the Detroit Pistons. For his career, he averaged 12 points and 6.1 rebounds per game. More notably, he led the league three times in personal fouls, testimony to his ferocious inside play (and possibly because the refs were never crazy about him), and because he dunked so often and shot well from midrange, his career shooting percentage, .572, is the seventh highest in league history. Darryl Dawkins was born in Orlando on Jan. 11, 1957. He was raised mostly by his mother, the former Harriet James, though Mr. Tyler, his friend, said he remained close to his father, Frank Dawkins. He led Maynard Evans High School in Orlando to the Florida state championship in 1975. ", "paragraph_answer": "He also played for the New Jersey Nets (now the Brooklyn Nets), the Utah Jazz and the Detroit Pistons. For his career, he averaged 12 points and 6.1 rebounds per game. More notably, he led the league three times in personal fouls, testimony to his ferocious inside play (and possibly because the refs were never crazy about him), and because he dunked so often and shot well from midrange, his career shooting percentage, .572, is the seventh highest in league history. Darryl Dawkins was born in Orlando on Jan. 11, 1957. He was raised mostly by his mother, the former Harriet James, though Mr. Tyler, his friend, said he remained close to his father, Frank Dawkins. He led Maynard Evans High School in Orlando to the Florida state championship in 1975.", "sentence_answer": "He led Maynard Evans High School in Orlando to the Florida state championship in 1975.", "paragraph_id": "5d704d01c8e4820a9b66ea30"} +{"question": "Why did the residents criticize Cuomo?", "paragraph": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law, the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "answer": "board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license", "sentence": "But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law, the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "paragraph_answer": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law, the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "sentence_answer": "But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier.", "paragraph_id": "5d704229c8e4820a9b66e607"} +{"question": "What region did the board warned about cannibalizing in crowd gambling market?", "paragraph": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "answer": "Northeast", "sentence": "But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast .", "paragraph_sentence": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast . The board could still decide not to award a license.", "paragraph_answer": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast . The board could still decide not to award a license.", "sentence_answer": "But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast .", "paragraph_id": "5d7012f1c8e4820a9b66bf74"} +{"question": "What institution was the author joking that should raise the tuition to $1 billion a year?", "paragraph": "The third force at work is what economists call price discrimination. Businesses of all sorts have an incentive to charge different prices to different consumers based on their willingness and ability to pay. Movie theaters, for example, charge children less than adults for a ticket. Colleges have increasingly followed this practice by raising published prices and offering more financial aid based on a family\u2019s resources. I often joke that Harvard should complete the process by setting tuition at $1 billion a year. But that sticker price applies only to the children of Bill Gates. Everyone else gets a special price, just for you.", "answer": "Harvard", "sentence": "I often joke that Harvard should complete the process by setting tuition at $1 billion a year.", "paragraph_sentence": "The third force at work is what economists call price discrimination. Businesses of all sorts have an incentive to charge different prices to different consumers based on their willingness and ability to pay. Movie theaters, for example, charge children less than adults for a ticket. Colleges have increasingly followed this practice by raising published prices and offering more financial aid based on a family\u2019s resources. I often joke that Harvard should complete the process by setting tuition at $1 billion a year. But that sticker price applies only to the children of Bill Gates. Everyone else gets a special price, just for you.", "paragraph_answer": "The third force at work is what economists call price discrimination. Businesses of all sorts have an incentive to charge different prices to different consumers based on their willingness and ability to pay. Movie theaters, for example, charge children less than adults for a ticket. Colleges have increasingly followed this practice by raising published prices and offering more financial aid based on a family\u2019s resources. I often joke that Harvard should complete the process by setting tuition at $1 billion a year. But that sticker price applies only to the children of Bill Gates. Everyone else gets a special price, just for you.", "sentence_answer": "I often joke that Harvard should complete the process by setting tuition at $1 billion a year.", "paragraph_id": "5d70075ac8e4820a9b66ad61"} +{"question": "Who is the executive director of the World Peace Foundation?", "paragraph": "Along with mounting economic pressures, it seemed that the government was willing to give ground for the sake of stability. Similarly, the rebels, who form an alliance known as the Sudanese Revolutionary Front, came to the talks under a new political reality. The regional dynamics that once bolstered them have shifted. With the fall of Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi in Libya and a civil war consuming South Sudan, the rebels no longer seemed as able to garner support from neighbors. Yet some analysts question whether the divided Sudanese government can, or even really wants to, reach a deal right now. \u201cThe question is whether the government of Sudan, comprised of the ruling National Congress Party, the military and National Security under President Bashir, is cohesive to make the bold steps, which involve politically difficult sacrifices,\u201d said Alex de Waal, executive director of the World Peace Foundation. With the end of the rainy season, fighting is expected to resume. Commanders in the Sudanese Army still believe that a military victory over the rebels is possible, and they seem to want to delay negotiations until further gains can be made. Another problem is the dizzying number of competing interests in a country awash in rebel movements. In the provinces of Blue Nile and South Kordofan, the Sudanese Peoples Liberation Movement-North, once part of the party that now governs the nation of South Sudan, has been fighting an insurgency since 2011.", "answer": "Alex de Waal", "sentence": "\u201cThe question is whether the government of Sudan, comprised of the ruling National Congress Party, the military and National Security under President Bashir, is cohesive to make the bold steps, which involve politically difficult sacrifices,\u201d said Alex de Waal , executive director of the World Peace Foundation.", "paragraph_sentence": "Along with mounting economic pressures, it seemed that the government was willing to give ground for the sake of stability. Similarly, the rebels, who form an alliance known as the Sudanese Revolutionary Front, came to the talks under a new political reality. The regional dynamics that once bolstered them have shifted. With the fall of Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi in Libya and a civil war consuming South Sudan, the rebels no longer seemed as able to garner support from neighbors. Yet some analysts question whether the divided Sudanese government can, or even really wants to, reach a deal right now. \u201cThe question is whether the government of Sudan, comprised of the ruling National Congress Party, the military and National Security under President Bashir, is cohesive to make the bold steps, which involve politically difficult sacrifices,\u201d said Alex de Waal , executive director of the World Peace Foundation. With the end of the rainy season, fighting is expected to resume. Commanders in the Sudanese Army still believe that a military victory over the rebels is possible, and they seem to want to delay negotiations until further gains can be made. Another problem is the dizzying number of competing interests in a country awash in rebel movements. In the provinces of Blue Nile and South Kordofan, the Sudanese Peoples Liberation Movement-North, once part of the party that now governs the nation of South Sudan, has been fighting an insurgency since 2011.", "paragraph_answer": "Along with mounting economic pressures, it seemed that the government was willing to give ground for the sake of stability. Similarly, the rebels, who form an alliance known as the Sudanese Revolutionary Front, came to the talks under a new political reality. The regional dynamics that once bolstered them have shifted. With the fall of Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi in Libya and a civil war consuming South Sudan, the rebels no longer seemed as able to garner support from neighbors. Yet some analysts question whether the divided Sudanese government can, or even really wants to, reach a deal right now. \u201cThe question is whether the government of Sudan, comprised of the ruling National Congress Party, the military and National Security under President Bashir, is cohesive to make the bold steps, which involve politically difficult sacrifices,\u201d said Alex de Waal , executive director of the World Peace Foundation. With the end of the rainy season, fighting is expected to resume. Commanders in the Sudanese Army still believe that a military victory over the rebels is possible, and they seem to want to delay negotiations until further gains can be made. Another problem is the dizzying number of competing interests in a country awash in rebel movements. In the provinces of Blue Nile and South Kordofan, the Sudanese Peoples Liberation Movement-North, once part of the party that now governs the nation of South Sudan, has been fighting an insurgency since 2011.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe question is whether the government of Sudan, comprised of the ruling National Congress Party, the military and National Security under President Bashir, is cohesive to make the bold steps, which involve politically difficult sacrifices,\u201d said Alex de Waal , executive director of the World Peace Foundation.", "paragraph_id": "5d703e72c8e4820a9b66e3f2"} +{"question": "What happens when women speak up in meetings or negotiations?", "paragraph": "Take Mr. Wadhwa\u2019s claim that women in tech often underplay their accomplishments and that they should adopt a brash tone. In an article responding to the WNYC podcast, Mr. Wadhwa wrote that his findings were the product of two research\n reports, but those do not mention the confidence problem. When I asked him about it, he said the idea was born out of many interviews with women. His critics concede that women do sometimes underplay their strengths, but they point to another concern: Studies show that when women speak up in negotiations or other meetings, they are often penalized for doing so. And should women get ahead by aping the air of overconfidence and bravado that characterizes the Valley\u2019s most cringe-inducing men? \u201cI think that in 2015 we can give women better advice than \u2018Behave more like men,\u2019 \u201d said Cate Huston, a software engineer who has worked at Google and IBM.", "answer": "they are often penalized", "sentence": "His critics concede that women do sometimes underplay their strengths, but they point to another concern: Studies show that when women speak up in negotiations or other meetings, they are often penalized for doing so.", "paragraph_sentence": "Take Mr. Wadhwa\u2019s claim that women in tech often underplay their accomplishments and that they should adopt a brash tone. In an article responding to the WNYC podcast, Mr. Wadhwa wrote that his findings were the product of two research reports, but those do not mention the confidence problem. When I asked him about it, he said the idea was born out of many interviews with women. His critics concede that women do sometimes underplay their strengths, but they point to another concern: Studies show that when women speak up in negotiations or other meetings, they are often penalized for doing so. And should women get ahead by aping the air of overconfidence and bravado that characterizes the Valley\u2019s most cringe-inducing men? \u201cI think that in 2015 we can give women better advice than \u2018Behave more like men,\u2019 \u201d said Cate Huston, a software engineer who has worked at Google and IBM.", "paragraph_answer": "Take Mr. Wadhwa\u2019s claim that women in tech often underplay their accomplishments and that they should adopt a brash tone. In an article responding to the WNYC podcast, Mr. Wadhwa wrote that his findings were the product of two research reports, but those do not mention the confidence problem. When I asked him about it, he said the idea was born out of many interviews with women. His critics concede that women do sometimes underplay their strengths, but they point to another concern: Studies show that when women speak up in negotiations or other meetings, they are often penalized for doing so. And should women get ahead by aping the air of overconfidence and bravado that characterizes the Valley\u2019s most cringe-inducing men? \u201cI think that in 2015 we can give women better advice than \u2018Behave more like men,\u2019 \u201d said Cate Huston, a software engineer who has worked at Google and IBM.", "sentence_answer": "His critics concede that women do sometimes underplay their strengths, but they point to another concern: Studies show that when women speak up in negotiations or other meetings, they are often penalized for doing so.", "paragraph_id": "5d702b9dc8e4820a9b66d940"} +{"question": "What two weapons was used to break down a door?", "paragraph": "For a moment, he twirled the rope in his hands like a lasso, then threw the hook over the wire, and tugged hard, testing for explosives. When nothing happened he signaled two comrades, who ran up and started snipping the wire with cutters. Although this was a typical training exercise for raw recruits in an elemental soldierly skill, there was nothing typical about the scene. Far from enlistees, these soldiers were regulars in the Ukrainian National Guard, presumably battle-hardened after months on the front lines in eastern Ukraine. And the trainer was an American military instructor, drilling troops for battle with the United States\u2019 former Cold War foe, Russia, and Russian-backed separatists. \u201cIt\u2019s been a long time since I heard a target called an Ivan,\u201d First Sgt. David Dzwik, one of the trainers, said in an interview out in the sunny forest, while observing the Ukrainians run through drills. \u201cNow, I\u2019m hearing it again.\u201d The course on cutting wire is one of 63 classes of remedial military instruction being provided by 300 United States Army trainers in three consecutive two-month courses. Here in western Ukraine, they are far from the fighting, and their job is to instill some basic military know-how in Ukrainian soldiers, who the trainers have discovered are woefully unprepared. The largely unschooled troops are learning such basic skills as how to use an encrypted walkie-talkie; how to break open a door with a sledgehammer and a crowbar; and how to drag a wounded colleague across a field while holding a rifle at the ready. When the war began a year ago, the Ukrainian Army was all but worthless \u2014 rife with corruption and Russian spies, and made up largely of \u201cskeleton\u201d battalions of officers with just a few men. About 1 percent of the equipment was manufactured in the past decade.", "answer": "sledgehammer and a crowbar", "sentence": "The largely unschooled troops are learning such basic skills as how to use an encrypted walkie-talkie; how to break open a door with a sledgehammer and a crowbar ; and how to drag a wounded colleague across a field while holding a rifle at the ready.", "paragraph_sentence": "For a moment, he twirled the rope in his hands like a lasso, then threw the hook over the wire, and tugged hard, testing for explosives. When nothing happened he signaled two comrades, who ran up and started snipping the wire with cutters. Although this was a typical training exercise for raw recruits in an elemental soldierly skill, there was nothing typical about the scene. Far from enlistees, these soldiers were regulars in the Ukrainian National Guard, presumably battle-hardened after months on the front lines in eastern Ukraine. And the trainer was an American military instructor, drilling troops for battle with the United States\u2019 former Cold War foe, Russia, and Russian-backed separatists. \u201cIt\u2019s been a long time since I heard a target called an Ivan,\u201d First Sgt. David Dzwik, one of the trainers, said in an interview out in the sunny forest, while observing the Ukrainians run through drills. \u201cNow, I\u2019m hearing it again.\u201d The course on cutting wire is one of 63 classes of remedial military instruction being provided by 300 United States Army trainers in three consecutive two-month courses. Here in western Ukraine, they are far from the fighting, and their job is to instill some basic military know-how in Ukrainian soldiers, who the trainers have discovered are woefully unprepared. The largely unschooled troops are learning such basic skills as how to use an encrypted walkie-talkie; how to break open a door with a sledgehammer and a crowbar ; and how to drag a wounded colleague across a field while holding a rifle at the ready. When the war began a year ago, the Ukrainian Army was all but worthless \u2014 rife with corruption and Russian spies, and made up largely of \u201cskeleton\u201d battalions of officers with just a few men. About 1 percent of the equipment was manufactured in the past decade.", "paragraph_answer": "For a moment, he twirled the rope in his hands like a lasso, then threw the hook over the wire, and tugged hard, testing for explosives. When nothing happened he signaled two comrades, who ran up and started snipping the wire with cutters. Although this was a typical training exercise for raw recruits in an elemental soldierly skill, there was nothing typical about the scene. Far from enlistees, these soldiers were regulars in the Ukrainian National Guard, presumably battle-hardened after months on the front lines in eastern Ukraine. And the trainer was an American military instructor, drilling troops for battle with the United States\u2019 former Cold War foe, Russia, and Russian-backed separatists. \u201cIt\u2019s been a long time since I heard a target called an Ivan,\u201d First Sgt. David Dzwik, one of the trainers, said in an interview out in the sunny forest, while observing the Ukrainians run through drills. \u201cNow, I\u2019m hearing it again.\u201d The course on cutting wire is one of 63 classes of remedial military instruction being provided by 300 United States Army trainers in three consecutive two-month courses. Here in western Ukraine, they are far from the fighting, and their job is to instill some basic military know-how in Ukrainian soldiers, who the trainers have discovered are woefully unprepared. The largely unschooled troops are learning such basic skills as how to use an encrypted walkie-talkie; how to break open a door with a sledgehammer and a crowbar ; and how to drag a wounded colleague across a field while holding a rifle at the ready. When the war began a year ago, the Ukrainian Army was all but worthless \u2014 rife with corruption and Russian spies, and made up largely of \u201cskeleton\u201d battalions of officers with just a few men. About 1 percent of the equipment was manufactured in the past decade.", "sentence_answer": "The largely unschooled troops are learning such basic skills as how to use an encrypted walkie-talkie; how to break open a door with a sledgehammer and a crowbar ; and how to drag a wounded colleague across a field while holding a rifle at the ready.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026dac8e4820a9b66d35d"} +{"question": "What caught Ms. Basford and her publisher off guard?", "paragraph": "Surging demand caught Ms. Basford and her publisher off guard. Fan mail poured in from busy professionals and parents who confided to Ms. Basford that they found coloring in her books relaxing. More accolades flowed on social media, as people posted images from their coloring books. Hard-core fans often buy several copies of her books at a time, to experiment with different color combinations. Others have turned it into a social activity. Rebekah Jean Duthie, who lives in Queensland, Australia, and works for the Australian Red Cross, says she regularly gathers with friends for \u201ccoloring circles\u201d at cafes and in one another\u2019s homes. \u201cEach page can transport you back to a gentler time of life,\u201d she said of Ms. Basford\u2019s books in an email.", "answer": "Surging demand", "sentence": "Surging demand caught Ms. Basford and her publisher off guard.", "paragraph_sentence": " Surging demand caught Ms. Basford and her publisher off guard. Fan mail poured in from busy professionals and parents who confided to Ms. Basford that they found coloring in her books relaxing. More accolades flowed on social media, as people posted images from their coloring books. Hard-core fans often buy several copies of her books at a time, to experiment with different color combinations. Others have turned it into a social activity. Rebekah Jean Duthie, who lives in Queensland, Australia, and works for the Australian Red Cross, says she regularly gathers with friends for \u201ccoloring circles\u201d at cafes and in one another\u2019s homes. \u201cEach page can transport you back to a gentler time of life,\u201d she said of Ms. Basford\u2019s books in an email.", "paragraph_answer": " Surging demand caught Ms. Basford and her publisher off guard. Fan mail poured in from busy professionals and parents who confided to Ms. Basford that they found coloring in her books relaxing. More accolades flowed on social media, as people posted images from their coloring books. Hard-core fans often buy several copies of her books at a time, to experiment with different color combinations. Others have turned it into a social activity. Rebekah Jean Duthie, who lives in Queensland, Australia, and works for the Australian Red Cross, says she regularly gathers with friends for \u201ccoloring circles\u201d at cafes and in one another\u2019s homes. \u201cEach page can transport you back to a gentler time of life,\u201d she said of Ms. Basford\u2019s books in an email.", "sentence_answer": " Surging demand caught Ms. Basford and her publisher off guard.", "paragraph_id": "5d70221ec8e4820a9b66ce25"} +{"question": "How much did it cost to provide bodycam video per hour in Florida?", "paragraph": "In Florida, the Sarasota Police Department has temporarily halted its body camera program after an American Civil Liberties Union of Florida lawyer sued over the cost of obtaining footage. The city said it would charge $18,000 for 84 hours of video to be placed on DVDs \u2014 about $214 an hour of video. Some of the most intense public discussion of the issue is taking place in Washington State, where state law allows anyone to file a public records request to obtain body camera recordings. In Bremerton, Chief Strachan tested body cameras last fall before deciding not to purchase them. He said the demands the department had received for video during the testing period had been too burdensome. \u201cWe got a request for any and all video shot by a police officer,\u201d he said. \u201cIt\u2019s pretty much impossible.\u201d", "answer": "$214", "sentence": "The city said it would charge $18,000 for 84 hours of video to be placed on DVDs \u2014 about $214 an hour of video.", "paragraph_sentence": "In Florida, the Sarasota Police Department has temporarily halted its body camera program after an American Civil Liberties Union of Florida lawyer sued over the cost of obtaining footage. The city said it would charge $18,000 for 84 hours of video to be placed on DVDs \u2014 about $214 an hour of video. Some of the most intense public discussion of the issue is taking place in Washington State, where state law allows anyone to file a public records request to obtain body camera recordings. In Bremerton, Chief Strachan tested body cameras last fall before deciding not to purchase them. He said the demands the department had received for video during the testing period had been too burdensome. \u201cWe got a request for any and all video shot by a police officer,\u201d he said. \u201cIt\u2019s pretty much impossible.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "In Florida, the Sarasota Police Department has temporarily halted its body camera program after an American Civil Liberties Union of Florida lawyer sued over the cost of obtaining footage. The city said it would charge $18,000 for 84 hours of video to be placed on DVDs \u2014 about $214 an hour of video. Some of the most intense public discussion of the issue is taking place in Washington State, where state law allows anyone to file a public records request to obtain body camera recordings. In Bremerton, Chief Strachan tested body cameras last fall before deciding not to purchase them. He said the demands the department had received for video during the testing period had been too burdensome. \u201cWe got a request for any and all video shot by a police officer,\u201d he said. \u201cIt\u2019s pretty much impossible.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The city said it would charge $18,000 for 84 hours of video to be placed on DVDs \u2014 about $214 an hour of video.", "paragraph_id": "5d704a24c8e4820a9b66e95b"} +{"question": "how many groundwater basins are connected to surface water?", "paragraph": "If the connection between groundwater and surface water is considered, that time frame for running out of water altogether will almost certainly be even shorter. Arizona\u2019s top water official told ProPublica that it was both politically difficult and costly to properly account for the interconnection. But deep in a 685-page document that is part of Arizona\u2019s water plan, the state lists 42 groundwater basins that it says are connected to surface water, indicating a potential conflict over rights to those supplies. It\u2019s unclear how much water flows from one into the other, but the documents show that many of the water sources are heavily relied on as sources of both groundwater and surface supplies at the same time. Thomas Buschatzke, the director of Arizona\u2019s Department of Water Resources, acknowledged that pumping from wells could dry up streams, but said the current law kept the two resources separate, and \u201cit would be a huge upset to the economy to do away with that.\u201d", "answer": "42", "sentence": "But deep in a 685-page document that is part of Arizona\u2019s water plan, the state lists 42 groundwater basins that it says are connected to surface water, indicating a potential conflict over rights to those supplies.", "paragraph_sentence": "If the connection between groundwater and surface water is considered, that time frame for running out of water altogether will almost certainly be even shorter. Arizona\u2019s top water official told ProPublica that it was both politically difficult and costly to properly account for the interconnection. But deep in a 685-page document that is part of Arizona\u2019s water plan, the state lists 42 groundwater basins that it says are connected to surface water, indicating a potential conflict over rights to those supplies. It\u2019s unclear how much water flows from one into the other, but the documents show that many of the water sources are heavily relied on as sources of both groundwater and surface supplies at the same time. Thomas Buschatzke, the director of Arizona\u2019s Department of Water Resources, acknowledged that pumping from wells could dry up streams, but said the current law kept the two resources separate, and \u201cit would be a huge upset to the economy to do away with that.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "If the connection between groundwater and surface water is considered, that time frame for running out of water altogether will almost certainly be even shorter. Arizona\u2019s top water official told ProPublica that it was both politically difficult and costly to properly account for the interconnection. But deep in a 685-page document that is part of Arizona\u2019s water plan, the state lists 42 groundwater basins that it says are connected to surface water, indicating a potential conflict over rights to those supplies. It\u2019s unclear how much water flows from one into the other, but the documents show that many of the water sources are heavily relied on as sources of both groundwater and surface supplies at the same time. Thomas Buschatzke, the director of Arizona\u2019s Department of Water Resources, acknowledged that pumping from wells could dry up streams, but said the current law kept the two resources separate, and \u201cit would be a huge upset to the economy to do away with that.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "But deep in a 685-page document that is part of Arizona\u2019s water plan, the state lists 42 groundwater basins that it says are connected to surface water, indicating a potential conflict over rights to those supplies.", "paragraph_id": "5d7024bdc8e4820a9b66d121"} +{"question": "What type of style did Mr. Fernandez dream of bringing back?", "paragraph": "\u201cThey all come to the salon before going out,\u201d Mr. Fernand\u00e9z said of his nearly 20 clients a night. His own balding hair closely cropped, Mr. Fernand\u00e9z said he started in a state-run barbershop but had creative differences with his partners. \u201cBack then there was no styling and they wouldn\u2019t even wash hair,\u201d he remembered. \u201cI wanted to be different.\u201d His dream is to start a chain and help bring Cuban men\u2019s style back to the glory days. \u201cIt\u2019s like the \u201950s in Havana,\u201d Pavel Premdes, 26, said as he had his hair touched upward in a \u201cGrease\u201d-like wave. \u201cDorian is bringing it back.\u201d As another client showed off a cellphone picture of his girlfriend in librarian glasses straddling a pool table, an assistant to Mr. Fernand\u00e9z stood under an elevated glass chamber that looks like the cockpit of a helicopter that had crashed into the salon. It is used for hair straightening.", "answer": "Cuban men\u2019s style", "sentence": "His dream is to start a chain and help bring Cuban men\u2019s style back to the glory days.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThey all come to the salon before going out,\u201d Mr. Fernand\u00e9z said of his nearly 20 clients a night. His own balding hair closely cropped, Mr. Fernand\u00e9z said he started in a state-run barbershop but had creative differences with his partners. \u201cBack then there was no styling and they wouldn\u2019t even wash hair,\u201d he remembered. \u201cI wanted to be different.\u201d His dream is to start a chain and help bring Cuban men\u2019s style back to the glory days. \u201cIt\u2019s like the \u201950s in Havana,\u201d Pavel Premdes, 26, said as he had his hair touched upward in a \u201cGrease\u201d-like wave. \u201cDorian is bringing it back.\u201d As another client showed off a cellphone picture of his girlfriend in librarian glasses straddling a pool table, an assistant to Mr. Fernand\u00e9z stood under an elevated glass chamber that looks like the cockpit of a helicopter that had crashed into the salon. It is used for hair straightening.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThey all come to the salon before going out,\u201d Mr. Fernand\u00e9z said of his nearly 20 clients a night. His own balding hair closely cropped, Mr. Fernand\u00e9z said he started in a state-run barbershop but had creative differences with his partners. \u201cBack then there was no styling and they wouldn\u2019t even wash hair,\u201d he remembered. \u201cI wanted to be different.\u201d His dream is to start a chain and help bring Cuban men\u2019s style back to the glory days. \u201cIt\u2019s like the \u201950s in Havana,\u201d Pavel Premdes, 26, said as he had his hair touched upward in a \u201cGrease\u201d-like wave. \u201cDorian is bringing it back.\u201d As another client showed off a cellphone picture of his girlfriend in librarian glasses straddling a pool table, an assistant to Mr. Fernand\u00e9z stood under an elevated glass chamber that looks like the cockpit of a helicopter that had crashed into the salon. It is used for hair straightening.", "sentence_answer": "His dream is to start a chain and help bring Cuban men\u2019s style back to the glory days.", "paragraph_id": "5d70081bc8e4820a9b66af4f"} +{"question": "Which people, according to the pope, are viewed as an unwanted obligation by others?", "paragraph": "\u201cLike \u2026\u201d I groped. \u201c\u2026Greed?\u201d All I knew about greed was cartoons of Scrooge McDuck sitting on a pile of money. There were obviously a lot of character failings we could have discussed. My friends and I were capable of floating for weeks without seriously directing attention at anything that didn\u2019t involve ourselves. But as long as we kept away from boys\u2019 wandering hands, we felt spiritually A-O.K. This pope is highly unlikely to accept gay marriage, and he\u2019ll never give abortion a pass. But in Washington he grouped abortion in a long catalog of wrongs that need to be righted: hungry children, bombing, \u201cimmigrants who drown in the search for a better tomorrow,\u201d old or sick people who are treated as a burden, terrorism, war, drug trafficking and environmental devastation. It\u2019s a long, long way from believing that God looked at Clark Gable\u2019s soul and saw nothing but a guy who got divorced.", "answer": "old or sick people", "sentence": "But in Washington he grouped abortion in a long catalog of wrongs that need to be righted: hungry children, bombing, \u201cimmigrants who drown in the search for a better tomorrow,\u201d old or sick people who are treated as a burden, terrorism, war, drug trafficking and environmental devastation.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cLike \u2026\u201d I groped. \u201c\u2026Greed?\u201d All I knew about greed was cartoons of Scrooge McDuck sitting on a pile of money. There were obviously a lot of character failings we could have discussed. My friends and I were capable of floating for weeks without seriously directing attention at anything that didn\u2019t involve ourselves. But as long as we kept away from boys\u2019 wandering hands, we felt spiritually A-O.K. This pope is highly unlikely to accept gay marriage, and he\u2019ll never give abortion a pass. But in Washington he grouped abortion in a long catalog of wrongs that need to be righted: hungry children, bombing, \u201cimmigrants who drown in the search for a better tomorrow,\u201d old or sick people who are treated as a burden, terrorism, war, drug trafficking and environmental devastation. It\u2019s a long, long way from believing that God looked at Clark Gable\u2019s soul and saw nothing but a guy who got divorced.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cLike \u2026\u201d I groped. \u201c\u2026Greed?\u201d All I knew about greed was cartoons of Scrooge McDuck sitting on a pile of money. There were obviously a lot of character failings we could have discussed. My friends and I were capable of floating for weeks without seriously directing attention at anything that didn\u2019t involve ourselves. But as long as we kept away from boys\u2019 wandering hands, we felt spiritually A-O.K. This pope is highly unlikely to accept gay marriage, and he\u2019ll never give abortion a pass. But in Washington he grouped abortion in a long catalog of wrongs that need to be righted: hungry children, bombing, \u201cimmigrants who drown in the search for a better tomorrow,\u201d old or sick people who are treated as a burden, terrorism, war, drug trafficking and environmental devastation. It\u2019s a long, long way from believing that God looked at Clark Gable\u2019s soul and saw nothing but a guy who got divorced.", "sentence_answer": "But in Washington he grouped abortion in a long catalog of wrongs that need to be righted: hungry children, bombing, \u201cimmigrants who drown in the search for a better tomorrow,\u201d old or sick people who are treated as a burden, terrorism, war, drug trafficking and environmental devastation.", "paragraph_id": "5d70ccdac8e4820a9b66f72a"} +{"question": "Who is James following after in order to lead his team to victory?", "paragraph": "For that reason, Brown\u2019s task in 1964 seems a little easier than the one James faces now. James\u2019s group, defying the odds, turned back Golden State in Games 2 and 3 to give Cleveland a two-games-to-one series lead, when few people were giving them much of a chance to actually take four games against the Warriors and win the N.B.A. title. Still, to have any shot, James, who had 40 points, 12 rebounds and 8 assists in the Cavaliers\u2019 96-91 win Tuesday night, will do well to keep to Brown\u2019s blueprint.", "answer": "Brown", "sentence": "For that reason, Brown \u2019s task in 1964 seems a little easier than the one James faces now.", "paragraph_sentence": " For that reason, Brown \u2019s task in 1964 seems a little easier than the one James faces now. James\u2019s group, defying the odds, turned back Golden State in Games 2 and 3 to give Cleveland a two-games-to-one series lead, when few people were giving them much of a chance to actually take four games against the Warriors and win the N.B.A. title. Still, to have any shot, James, who had 40 points, 12 rebounds and 8 assists in the Cavaliers\u2019 96-91 win Tuesday night, will do well to keep to Brown\u2019s blueprint.", "paragraph_answer": "For that reason, Brown \u2019s task in 1964 seems a little easier than the one James faces now. James\u2019s group, defying the odds, turned back Golden State in Games 2 and 3 to give Cleveland a two-games-to-one series lead, when few people were giving them much of a chance to actually take four games against the Warriors and win the N.B.A. title. Still, to have any shot, James, who had 40 points, 12 rebounds and 8 assists in the Cavaliers\u2019 96-91 win Tuesday night, will do well to keep to Brown\u2019s blueprint.", "sentence_answer": "For that reason, Brown \u2019s task in 1964 seems a little easier than the one James faces now.", "paragraph_id": "5d702607c8e4820a9b66d24e"} +{"question": "What is the name of the festival on Saturday and Sunday?", "paragraph": "New York International Children\u2019s Film Festival (Saturday and Sunday) This celebration of young people\u2019s cinema has never shied away from challenging films, and that\u2019s certainly true this second weekend of the festival, which offers two features that examine the Holocaust: Dennis Bots\u2019s \u201cSecrets of War,\u201d about two Dutch schoolboys whose friendship is threatened by their parents\u2019 opposing views on the Nazis (Saturday, for ages 9 and older), and Nicolas Vanier\u2019s \u201cBelle and Sebastian,\u201d from France, in which a boy and a reviled stray dog become involved in a Resistance mission (Sunday, for ages 7 and older). Options also include the Japanese Pop artist Takashi Murakami\u2019s sci-fi fantasy, \u201cJellyfish Eyes\u201d (Saturday, for ages 9 and older) and several programs of short films, including two retrospectives of Aardman Animations. (Through March 22. Tickets may be available at the door for screenings listed as sold out.) At various locations; full schedule is on the website; 212-349-0330, gkids.com/fest2015. \u2018Pilobolus Rules!\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) Anyone can see a dance performed, but what about seeing it unperformed? In this program from the BAMkids series at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the renowned troupe Pilobolus will unspool four of its signature works \u2014 \u201cWalklyndon,\u201d \u201cPseudopodia,\u201d \u201cThe Transformation\u201d and \u201cAll Is Not Lost\u201d \u2014 so that children can gain insight into the creative process. Recommended for ages 6 through 11, the show promises to be hands-on and interactive. Saturday at 2 and 6 p.m., Sunday at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m., BAM Fisher, at the Fishman Space, 321 Ashland Place, near Lafayette Avenue, Fort Greene; 718-636-4100, bam.org/kids. \u2018The Pinkertonian Mystery\u2019 (Sunday) Young detectives should get their notebooks and magnifying glasses ready. The DiMenna Children\u2019s History Museum at the New-York Historical Society is asking them and their families to help solve a Victorian-era crime. Live In Theater, known for its interactive murder mysteries, will present the case, a premiere production that unfolds throughout the museum galleries. Young visitors will portray members of the Pinkerton National Detective Agency, out to capture a crook called El Diablo in 1875. (Also on April 12 and 26.) From 3 to 5 p.m., 170 Central Park West, at 77th Street, 212-873-3400, nyhistory.org. The Pop Ups (Sunday) The rock duo Jacob Stein and Jason Rabinowitz, otherwise known as the Pop Ups, are popping up again for a concert at the Jewish Museum. Featuring tunes from their Grammy-nominated children\u2019s album, \u201cAppetite for Construction,\u201d this interactive show features puppets and colorful props as well as music. It will take their intended audience \u2014 3- to 8-year-olds \u2014 on adventures involving treasure, mermaids, stars and the biggest crayons they\u2019ve ever seen. At 11:30 a.m., 1109 Fifth Avenue, at 92nd Street, 212-423-3337, thejewishmuseum.org. \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 11 a.m. and 1 p.m., 13th Street Repertory Theater, 50 West 13th Street, Greenwich Village, 212-352-3101, 13thstreetrep.org. \u2018Sing Back, Brooklyn! With Lloyd H. Miller\u2019 (Saturday) The Bronx, Queens, Manhattan and Staten Island are invited to sing back, too, in this free family program at the Brooklyn Historical Society. Lloyd H. Miller, a proud son of Brooklyn and leader of the band the Deedle Deedle Dees, known for its tunes celebrating science and history, hosts this event \u2014 with singalongs, stories and skits \u2014 the first Saturday of every month. March is Women\u2019s History Month, so you can guess this Saturday\u2019s theme. At 11 a.m., 128 Pierrepont Street, near Clinton Street, Brooklyn Heights, 718-222-4111, brooklynhistory.org.", "answer": "New York International Children\u2019s Film Festival", "sentence": "New York International Children\u2019s Film Festival (Saturday and Sunday)", "paragraph_sentence": " New York International Children\u2019s Film Festival (Saturday and Sunday) This celebration of young people\u2019s cinema has never shied away from challenging films, and that\u2019s certainly true this second weekend of the festival, which offers two features that examine the Holocaust: Dennis Bots\u2019s \u201cSecrets of War,\u201d about two Dutch schoolboys whose friendship is threatened by their parents\u2019 opposing views on the Nazis (Saturday, for ages 9 and older), and Nicolas Vanier\u2019s \u201cBelle and Sebastian,\u201d from France, in which a boy and a reviled stray dog become involved in a Resistance mission (Sunday, for ages 7 and older). Options also include the Japanese Pop artist Takashi Murakami\u2019s sci-fi fantasy, \u201cJellyfish Eyes\u201d (Saturday, for ages 9 and older) and several programs of short films, including two retrospectives of Aardman Animations. (Through March 22. Tickets may be available at the door for screenings listed as sold out.) At various locations; full schedule is on the website; 212-349-0330, gkids.com/fest2015. \u2018Pilobolus Rules!\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) Anyone can see a dance performed, but what about seeing it unperformed? In this program from the BAMkids series at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the renowned troupe Pilobolus will unspool four of its signature works \u2014 \u201cWalklyndon,\u201d \u201cPseudopodia,\u201d \u201cThe Transformation\u201d and \u201cAll Is Not Lost\u201d \u2014 so that children can gain insight into the creative process. Recommended for ages 6 through 11, the show promises to be hands-on and interactive. Saturday at 2 and 6 p.m., Sunday at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m., BAM Fisher, at the Fishman Space, 321 Ashland Place, near Lafayette Avenue, Fort Greene; 718-636-4100, bam.org/kids. \u2018The Pinkertonian Mystery\u2019 (Sunday) Young detectives should get their notebooks and magnifying glasses ready. The DiMenna Children\u2019s History Museum at the New-York Historical Society is asking them and their families to help solve a Victorian-era crime. Live In Theater, known for its interactive murder mysteries, will present the case, a premiere production that unfolds throughout the museum galleries. Young visitors will portray members of the Pinkerton National Detective Agency, out to capture a crook called El Diablo in 1875. (Also on April 12 and 26.) From 3 to 5 p.m., 170 Central Park West, at 77th Street, 212-873-3400, nyhistory.org. The Pop Ups (Sunday) The rock duo Jacob Stein and Jason Rabinowitz, otherwise known as the Pop Ups, are popping up again for a concert at the Jewish Museum. Featuring tunes from their Grammy-nominated children\u2019s album, \u201cAppetite for Construction,\u201d this interactive show features puppets and colorful props as well as music. It will take their intended audience \u2014 3- to 8-year-olds \u2014 on adventures involving treasure, mermaids, stars and the biggest crayons they\u2019ve ever seen. At 11:30 a.m., 1109 Fifth Avenue, at 92nd Street, 212-423-3337, thejewishmuseum.org. \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 11 a.m. and 1 p.m., 13th Street Repertory Theater, 50 West 13th Street, Greenwich Village, 212-352-3101, 13thstreetrep.org. \u2018Sing Back, Brooklyn! With Lloyd H. Miller\u2019 (Saturday) The Bronx, Queens, Manhattan and Staten Island are invited to sing back, too, in this free family program at the Brooklyn Historical Society. Lloyd H. Miller, a proud son of Brooklyn and leader of the band the Deedle Deedle Dees, known for its tunes celebrating science and history, hosts this event \u2014 with singalongs, stories and skits \u2014 the first Saturday of every month. March is Women\u2019s History Month, so you can guess this Saturday\u2019s theme. At 11 a.m., 128 Pierrepont Street, near Clinton Street, Brooklyn Heights, 718-222-4111, brooklynhistory.org.", "paragraph_answer": " New York International Children\u2019s Film Festival (Saturday and Sunday) This celebration of young people\u2019s cinema has never shied away from challenging films, and that\u2019s certainly true this second weekend of the festival, which offers two features that examine the Holocaust: Dennis Bots\u2019s \u201cSecrets of War,\u201d about two Dutch schoolboys whose friendship is threatened by their parents\u2019 opposing views on the Nazis (Saturday, for ages 9 and older), and Nicolas Vanier\u2019s \u201cBelle and Sebastian,\u201d from France, in which a boy and a reviled stray dog become involved in a Resistance mission (Sunday, for ages 7 and older). Options also include the Japanese Pop artist Takashi Murakami\u2019s sci-fi fantasy, \u201cJellyfish Eyes\u201d (Saturday, for ages 9 and older) and several programs of short films, including two retrospectives of Aardman Animations. (Through March 22. Tickets may be available at the door for screenings listed as sold out.) At various locations; full schedule is on the website; 212-349-0330, gkids.com/fest2015. \u2018Pilobolus Rules!\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) Anyone can see a dance performed, but what about seeing it unperformed? In this program from the BAMkids series at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the renowned troupe Pilobolus will unspool four of its signature works \u2014 \u201cWalklyndon,\u201d \u201cPseudopodia,\u201d \u201cThe Transformation\u201d and \u201cAll Is Not Lost\u201d \u2014 so that children can gain insight into the creative process. Recommended for ages 6 through 11, the show promises to be hands-on and interactive. Saturday at 2 and 6 p.m., Sunday at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m., BAM Fisher, at the Fishman Space, 321 Ashland Place, near Lafayette Avenue, Fort Greene; 718-636-4100, bam.org/kids. \u2018The Pinkertonian Mystery\u2019 (Sunday) Young detectives should get their notebooks and magnifying glasses ready. The DiMenna Children\u2019s History Museum at the New-York Historical Society is asking them and their families to help solve a Victorian-era crime. Live In Theater, known for its interactive murder mysteries, will present the case, a premiere production that unfolds throughout the museum galleries. Young visitors will portray members of the Pinkerton National Detective Agency, out to capture a crook called El Diablo in 1875. (Also on April 12 and 26.) From 3 to 5 p.m., 170 Central Park West, at 77th Street, 212-873-3400, nyhistory.org. The Pop Ups (Sunday) The rock duo Jacob Stein and Jason Rabinowitz, otherwise known as the Pop Ups, are popping up again for a concert at the Jewish Museum. Featuring tunes from their Grammy-nominated children\u2019s album, \u201cAppetite for Construction,\u201d this interactive show features puppets and colorful props as well as music. It will take their intended audience \u2014 3- to 8-year-olds \u2014 on adventures involving treasure, mermaids, stars and the biggest crayons they\u2019ve ever seen. At 11:30 a.m., 1109 Fifth Avenue, at 92nd Street, 212-423-3337, thejewishmuseum.org. \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 11 a.m. and 1 p.m., 13th Street Repertory Theater, 50 West 13th Street, Greenwich Village, 212-352-3101, 13thstreetrep.org. \u2018Sing Back, Brooklyn! With Lloyd H. Miller\u2019 (Saturday) The Bronx, Queens, Manhattan and Staten Island are invited to sing back, too, in this free family program at the Brooklyn Historical Society. Lloyd H. Miller, a proud son of Brooklyn and leader of the band the Deedle Deedle Dees, known for its tunes celebrating science and history, hosts this event \u2014 with singalongs, stories and skits \u2014 the first Saturday of every month. March is Women\u2019s History Month, so you can guess this Saturday\u2019s theme. At 11 a.m., 128 Pierrepont Street, near Clinton Street, Brooklyn Heights, 718-222-4111, brooklynhistory.org.", "sentence_answer": " New York International Children\u2019s Film Festival (Saturday and Sunday)", "paragraph_id": "5d70a39ec8e4820a9b66f68b"} +{"question": "Why is Reid using the filibuster?", "paragraph": "Mr. Reid is using his power to filibuster bills and toss up chaff \u2014 a role Senate Republicans enjoyed for several years \u2014 to push back on anything Mr. McConnell may wish to accomplish. \u201cThere seems to be a pattern of Harry Reid whipping his members into a frenzy,\u201d said Senator Shelley Moore Capito, Republican of West Virginia. For years, Congress has had to settle for temporary patches to prevent deep cuts in Medicare payments to doctors, like a 21 percent cut scheduled to take effect April 1 if Congress does not intervene. The House measure would permanently remove the threat of such cuts, and would require some higher-income Medicare beneficiaries to pay higher premiums, a change Republicans hail as a major reform. It also would renew the popular Children\u2019s Health Insurance Program and provide $7.2 billion for community health centers \u2014 crucial to both rural and urban areas where doctors are scarce \u2014 over two years.", "answer": "to push back on anything Mr. McConnell may wish to accomplish", "sentence": "Mr. Reid is using his power to filibuster bills and toss up chaff \u2014 a role Senate Republicans enjoyed for several years \u2014 to push back on anything Mr. McConnell may wish to accomplish .", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Reid is using his power to filibuster bills and toss up chaff \u2014 a role Senate Republicans enjoyed for several years \u2014 to push back on anything Mr. McConnell may wish to accomplish . \u201cThere seems to be a pattern of Harry Reid whipping his members into a frenzy,\u201d said Senator Shelley Moore Capito, Republican of West Virginia. For years, Congress has had to settle for temporary patches to prevent deep cuts in Medicare payments to doctors, like a 21 percent cut scheduled to take effect April 1 if Congress does not intervene. The House measure would permanently remove the threat of such cuts, and would require some higher-income Medicare beneficiaries to pay higher premiums, a change Republicans hail as a major reform. It also would renew the popular Children\u2019s Health Insurance Program and provide $7.2 billion for community health centers \u2014 crucial to both rural and urban areas where doctors are scarce \u2014 over two years.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Reid is using his power to filibuster bills and toss up chaff \u2014 a role Senate Republicans enjoyed for several years \u2014 to push back on anything Mr. McConnell may wish to accomplish . \u201cThere seems to be a pattern of Harry Reid whipping his members into a frenzy,\u201d said Senator Shelley Moore Capito, Republican of West Virginia. For years, Congress has had to settle for temporary patches to prevent deep cuts in Medicare payments to doctors, like a 21 percent cut scheduled to take effect April 1 if Congress does not intervene. The House measure would permanently remove the threat of such cuts, and would require some higher-income Medicare beneficiaries to pay higher premiums, a change Republicans hail as a major reform. It also would renew the popular Children\u2019s Health Insurance Program and provide $7.2 billion for community health centers \u2014 crucial to both rural and urban areas where doctors are scarce \u2014 over two years.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Reid is using his power to filibuster bills and toss up chaff \u2014 a role Senate Republicans enjoyed for several years \u2014 to push back on anything Mr. McConnell may wish to accomplish .", "paragraph_id": "5d70196ec8e4820a9b66c56f"} +{"question": "What is the real struggle over?", "paragraph": "The Flussbad speaks to a tradition here; there are other urban Flussbads in this part of the world, so the idea has local resonance. Gottfried Ludewig is a young member of the Berlin City Parliament from the center-right Christian Democratic Union, Angela Merkel\u2019s party. He has become one of the project\u2019s most vocal champions, enlisting political allies across the aisle, corralling money for a feasibility study and promoting a grass-roots, community-based campaign. Neither he nor Tim Edler would divulge the project\u2019s projected cost, which must be many, many millions of dollars. But both said the major hurdle would not be money. The real struggle is over civic identity.", "answer": "civic identity", "sentence": "The real struggle is over civic identity .", "paragraph_sentence": "The Flussbad speaks to a tradition here; there are other urban Flussbads in this part of the world, so the idea has local resonance. Gottfried Ludewig is a young member of the Berlin City Parliament from the center-right Christian Democratic Union, Angela Merkel\u2019s party. He has become one of the project\u2019s most vocal champions, enlisting political allies across the aisle, corralling money for a feasibility study and promoting a grass-roots, community-based campaign. Neither he nor Tim Edler would divulge the project\u2019s projected cost, which must be many, many millions of dollars. But both said the major hurdle would not be money. The real struggle is over civic identity . ", "paragraph_answer": "The Flussbad speaks to a tradition here; there are other urban Flussbads in this part of the world, so the idea has local resonance. Gottfried Ludewig is a young member of the Berlin City Parliament from the center-right Christian Democratic Union, Angela Merkel\u2019s party. He has become one of the project\u2019s most vocal champions, enlisting political allies across the aisle, corralling money for a feasibility study and promoting a grass-roots, community-based campaign. Neither he nor Tim Edler would divulge the project\u2019s projected cost, which must be many, many millions of dollars. But both said the major hurdle would not be money. The real struggle is over civic identity .", "sentence_answer": "The real struggle is over civic identity .", "paragraph_id": "5d703f1cc8e4820a9b66e44c"} +{"question": "Who ran into Lockette?", "paragraph": "It made all the difference. Butler, a reserve cornerback and undrafted rookie who was understandably convinced he would be the goat after Kearse had played pinball wizard at his expense, turned out to be quite the contrary. This was not by chance. He recognized an opportunity and made it happen, correctly reading the pick play and slant route the Seahawks were counting on and beating Ricardo Lockette to the ball as he and Lockette collided. It was the first interception of Butler\u2019s N.F.L. career.", "answer": "Butler,", "sentence": "Butler, a reserve cornerback and undrafted rookie who was understandably convinced he would be the goat after Kearse had played pinball wizard at his expense, turned out to be quite the contrary.", "paragraph_sentence": "It made all the difference. Butler, a reserve cornerback and undrafted rookie who was understandably convinced he would be the goat after Kearse had played pinball wizard at his expense, turned out to be quite the contrary. This was not by chance. He recognized an opportunity and made it happen, correctly reading the pick play and slant route the Seahawks were counting on and beating Ricardo Lockette to the ball as he and Lockette collided. It was the first interception of Butler\u2019s N.F.L. career.", "paragraph_answer": "It made all the difference. Butler, a reserve cornerback and undrafted rookie who was understandably convinced he would be the goat after Kearse had played pinball wizard at his expense, turned out to be quite the contrary. This was not by chance. He recognized an opportunity and made it happen, correctly reading the pick play and slant route the Seahawks were counting on and beating Ricardo Lockette to the ball as he and Lockette collided. It was the first interception of Butler\u2019s N.F.L. career.", "sentence_answer": " Butler, a reserve cornerback and undrafted rookie who was understandably convinced he would be the goat after Kearse had played pinball wizard at his expense, turned out to be quite the contrary.", "paragraph_id": "5d7012f8c8e4820a9b66bf83"} +{"question": "The guidelines about consumption of fat have changed from limiting overall fat to what fat?", "paragraph": "So, as the guidelines have recommended cutting down on meat, especially red meat, this meant that many people began to increase their consumption of carbohydrates. Decades later, it\u2019s not hard to find evidence that this might have been a bad move. Many now believe that excessive carbohydrate consumption may be contributing to the obesity and diabetes epidemics. A Cochrane Review of all randomized controlled trials of reduced or modified dietary fat interventions found that replacing fat with carbohydrates does not protect even against cardiovascular problems, let alone death. Interestingly, the new dietary recommendations may acknowledge this as well, dropping the recommendation to limit overall fat consumption in favor of a more refined recommendation to limit only saturated fat. Even that recommendation is hotly contested by some, though. The committee is also bending a bit on salt, putting less emphasis on the 1,500-milligram daily limit on sodium for special populations, in light of the mounting evidence that too little sodium may be as bad as too much, if not worse.", "answer": "saturated fat", "sentence": "Interestingly, the new dietary recommendations may acknowledge this as well, dropping the recommendation to limit overall fat consumption in favor of a more refined recommendation to limit only saturated fat .", "paragraph_sentence": "So, as the guidelines have recommended cutting down on meat, especially red meat, this meant that many people began to increase their consumption of carbohydrates. Decades later, it\u2019s not hard to find evidence that this might have been a bad move. Many now believe that excessive carbohydrate consumption may be contributing to the obesity and diabetes epidemics. A Cochrane Review of all randomized controlled trials of reduced or modified dietary fat interventions found that replacing fat with carbohydrates does not protect even against cardiovascular problems, let alone death. Interestingly, the new dietary recommendations may acknowledge this as well, dropping the recommendation to limit overall fat consumption in favor of a more refined recommendation to limit only saturated fat . Even that recommendation is hotly contested by some, though. The committee is also bending a bit on salt, putting less emphasis on the 1,500-milligram daily limit on sodium for special populations, in light of the mounting evidence that too little sodium may be as bad as too much, if not worse.", "paragraph_answer": "So, as the guidelines have recommended cutting down on meat, especially red meat, this meant that many people began to increase their consumption of carbohydrates. Decades later, it\u2019s not hard to find evidence that this might have been a bad move. Many now believe that excessive carbohydrate consumption may be contributing to the obesity and diabetes epidemics. A Cochrane Review of all randomized controlled trials of reduced or modified dietary fat interventions found that replacing fat with carbohydrates does not protect even against cardiovascular problems, let alone death. Interestingly, the new dietary recommendations may acknowledge this as well, dropping the recommendation to limit overall fat consumption in favor of a more refined recommendation to limit only saturated fat . Even that recommendation is hotly contested by some, though. The committee is also bending a bit on salt, putting less emphasis on the 1,500-milligram daily limit on sodium for special populations, in light of the mounting evidence that too little sodium may be as bad as too much, if not worse.", "sentence_answer": "Interestingly, the new dietary recommendations may acknowledge this as well, dropping the recommendation to limit overall fat consumption in favor of a more refined recommendation to limit only saturated fat .", "paragraph_id": "5d701c85c8e4820a9b66c7fa"} +{"question": "Who reported the news?", "paragraph": "The Siberian Times first reported news of the discovery in city of Yakutsk last month. The cubs were unveiled at the Kingdom of Permafrost Museum in Yakutian last week. Placed on an ice-block pedestal, they looked like sleeping house cats bundled in thick brown coats. The lion cubs probably died in their dens after a landslide, Albert Protopopov, a researcher with the Yakutian Academy of Sciences, said to The Siberian Times. Heaps of mud, rock and ice entombed their corpses from the elements for thousands of years.", "answer": "The Siberian Times", "sentence": "The Siberian Times first reported news of the discovery in city of Yakutsk last month.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Siberian Times first reported news of the discovery in city of Yakutsk last month. The cubs were unveiled at the Kingdom of Permafrost Museum in Yakutian last week. Placed on an ice-block pedestal, they looked like sleeping house cats bundled in thick brown coats. The lion cubs probably died in their dens after a landslide, Albert Protopopov, a researcher with the Yakutian Academy of Sciences, said to The Siberian Times. Heaps of mud, rock and ice entombed their corpses from the elements for thousands of years.", "paragraph_answer": " The Siberian Times first reported news of the discovery in city of Yakutsk last month. The cubs were unveiled at the Kingdom of Permafrost Museum in Yakutian last week. Placed on an ice-block pedestal, they looked like sleeping house cats bundled in thick brown coats. The lion cubs probably died in their dens after a landslide, Albert Protopopov, a researcher with the Yakutian Academy of Sciences, said to The Siberian Times. Heaps of mud, rock and ice entombed their corpses from the elements for thousands of years.", "sentence_answer": " The Siberian Times first reported news of the discovery in city of Yakutsk last month.", "paragraph_id": "5d70386ac8e4820a9b66e127"} +{"question": "What is the nationality of the head of the European Council?", "paragraph": "President Obama did not come to Gdansk. Prime Minister David Cameron of Britain is in the thick of his re-election campaign. Fran\u00e7ois Hollande, the French president, planned his own commemoration at the Arc de Triomphe in Paris. And Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany skipped Gdansk and will arrive in Moscow for talks with Mr. Putin, but not until the day after his mega-event on Saturday. Still, Poles announced the participation of the presidents of Lithuania, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Romania and Ukraine, as well as Slovakia\u2019s prime minister and the head of the European Council, Donald Tusk, the former Polish prime minister.", "answer": "Polish", "sentence": "Still, Poles announced the participation of the presidents of Lithuania, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Romania and Ukraine, as well as Slovakia\u2019s prime minister and the head of the European Council, Donald Tusk, the former Polish prime minister.", "paragraph_sentence": "President Obama did not come to Gdansk. Prime Minister David Cameron of Britain is in the thick of his re-election campaign. Fran\u00e7ois Hollande, the French president, planned his own commemoration at the Arc de Triomphe in Paris. And Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany skipped Gdansk and will arrive in Moscow for talks with Mr. Putin, but not until the day after his mega-event on Saturday. Still, Poles announced the participation of the presidents of Lithuania, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Romania and Ukraine, as well as Slovakia\u2019s prime minister and the head of the European Council, Donald Tusk, the former Polish prime minister. ", "paragraph_answer": "President Obama did not come to Gdansk. Prime Minister David Cameron of Britain is in the thick of his re-election campaign. Fran\u00e7ois Hollande, the French president, planned his own commemoration at the Arc de Triomphe in Paris. And Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany skipped Gdansk and will arrive in Moscow for talks with Mr. Putin, but not until the day after his mega-event on Saturday. Still, Poles announced the participation of the presidents of Lithuania, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Romania and Ukraine, as well as Slovakia\u2019s prime minister and the head of the European Council, Donald Tusk, the former Polish prime minister.", "sentence_answer": "Still, Poles announced the participation of the presidents of Lithuania, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Romania and Ukraine, as well as Slovakia\u2019s prime minister and the head of the European Council, Donald Tusk, the former Polish prime minister.", "paragraph_id": "5d701fb2c8e4820a9b66cb54"} +{"question": "When does Jessie come back?", "paragraph": "Soon it becomes clear from the wails that Mann needs to intervene in the dispute. But by the time Jessie comes running up the stairs in tears, shouting \u201cI hate her, Mommy\u201d and disappearing into the woods, the opportunity for peacemaking has slipped away. Our interview falls off into awkward silence. Ten minutes later, however, tears dried, Jessie is prowling around in the cabin, having spontaneously fashioned a skirt and bolero for herself out of green leaves, like a sprite of nature. Acting quickly to seize the moment, Mann sets up her Toyo on the tripod. Disappearing beneath the photographer\u2019s cloth, her hands protruding as they adjust the knobs that control the accordionlike bellows, she tilts and focuses the image that appears upside down on the screen at the back of the camera. The process takes several long minutes.", "answer": "Ten minutes later", "sentence": "Ten minutes later , however, tears dried, Jessie is prowling around in the cabin, having spontaneously fashioned a skirt and bolero for herself out of green leaves, like a sprite of nature.", "paragraph_sentence": "Soon it becomes clear from the wails that Mann needs to intervene in the dispute. But by the time Jessie comes running up the stairs in tears, shouting \u201cI hate her, Mommy\u201d and disappearing into the woods, the opportunity for peacemaking has slipped away. Our interview falls off into awkward silence. Ten minutes later , however, tears dried, Jessie is prowling around in the cabin, having spontaneously fashioned a skirt and bolero for herself out of green leaves, like a sprite of nature. Acting quickly to seize the moment, Mann sets up her Toyo on the tripod. Disappearing beneath the photographer\u2019s cloth, her hands protruding as they adjust the knobs that control the accordionlike bellows, she tilts and focuses the image that appears upside down on the screen at the back of the camera. The process takes several long minutes.", "paragraph_answer": "Soon it becomes clear from the wails that Mann needs to intervene in the dispute. But by the time Jessie comes running up the stairs in tears, shouting \u201cI hate her, Mommy\u201d and disappearing into the woods, the opportunity for peacemaking has slipped away. Our interview falls off into awkward silence. Ten minutes later , however, tears dried, Jessie is prowling around in the cabin, having spontaneously fashioned a skirt and bolero for herself out of green leaves, like a sprite of nature. Acting quickly to seize the moment, Mann sets up her Toyo on the tripod. Disappearing beneath the photographer\u2019s cloth, her hands protruding as they adjust the knobs that control the accordionlike bellows, she tilts and focuses the image that appears upside down on the screen at the back of the camera. The process takes several long minutes.", "sentence_answer": " Ten minutes later , however, tears dried, Jessie is prowling around in the cabin, having spontaneously fashioned a skirt and bolero for herself out of green leaves, like a sprite of nature.", "paragraph_id": "5d700c68c8e4820a9b66b78a"} +{"question": "The \"autonomous\" driver for most Rolls customer is called what?", "paragraph": "When Rolls buyers do not feel like doing the driving, they often have another option. \u201cMost customers already have an autonomous driver,\u201d he said. \u201cIt\u2019s called a chauffeur.\u201d", "answer": "chauffeur", "sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s called a chauffeur .", "paragraph_sentence": "When Rolls buyers do not feel like doing the driving, they often have another option. \u201cMost customers already have an autonomous driver,\u201d he said. \u201cIt\u2019s called a chauffeur . \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "When Rolls buyers do not feel like doing the driving, they often have another option. \u201cMost customers already have an autonomous driver,\u201d he said. \u201cIt\u2019s called a chauffeur .\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s called a chauffeur .", "paragraph_id": "5d702846c8e4820a9b66d5f0"} +{"question": "What is a typical motif found in the jewelry that Marie Hill makes?", "paragraph": "Founded and run by British-born Marie Hill, this shop trains, employs and supports Cambodian crafts people, stocking mostly Cambodian-made textiles and jewelry. Silver filigree pendants ($18 to $45) depict a flame motif found in ancient Khmer temples. Another Briton, the jeweler Madeline Green, sells her new Ammo brand here, delicate contemporary jewelry made from recycled brass bullet caps and silver ($7 to $75). 008 Street 9, Old Market area; 855-63-761-224; saomao.com, facebook.com/ammojewellery With three boutiques in Siem Reap, the luxury fashion designer Eric Raisina is renowned for transforming raffia, the palm tree-derived fiber from his birthplace, Madagascar, into sophisticated lace-like dresses as well as turning delicate silk into his trademark fur. Everything is handmade, including silk fur stoles, light and warm, making them ideal for travel ($495). (His new couture shop with an on-site atelier is barely two miles away from this boutique.)", "answer": "flame", "sentence": "Silver filigree pendants ($18 to $45) depict a flame motif found in ancient Khmer temples.", "paragraph_sentence": "Founded and run by British-born Marie Hill, this shop trains, employs and supports Cambodian crafts people, stocking mostly Cambodian-made textiles and jewelry. Silver filigree pendants ($18 to $45) depict a flame motif found in ancient Khmer temples. Another Briton, the jeweler Madeline Green, sells her new Ammo brand here, delicate contemporary jewelry made from recycled brass bullet caps and silver ($7 to $75). 008 Street 9, Old Market area; 855-63-761-224; saomao.com, facebook.com/ammojewellery With three boutiques in Siem Reap, the luxury fashion designer Eric Raisina is renowned for transforming raffia, the palm tree-derived fiber from his birthplace, Madagascar, into sophisticated lace-like dresses as well as turning delicate silk into his trademark fur. Everything is handmade, including silk fur stoles, light and warm, making them ideal for travel ($495). (His new couture shop with an on-site atelier is barely two miles away from this boutique.)", "paragraph_answer": "Founded and run by British-born Marie Hill, this shop trains, employs and supports Cambodian crafts people, stocking mostly Cambodian-made textiles and jewelry. Silver filigree pendants ($18 to $45) depict a flame motif found in ancient Khmer temples. Another Briton, the jeweler Madeline Green, sells her new Ammo brand here, delicate contemporary jewelry made from recycled brass bullet caps and silver ($7 to $75). 008 Street 9, Old Market area; 855-63-761-224; saomao.com, facebook.com/ammojewellery With three boutiques in Siem Reap, the luxury fashion designer Eric Raisina is renowned for transforming raffia, the palm tree-derived fiber from his birthplace, Madagascar, into sophisticated lace-like dresses as well as turning delicate silk into his trademark fur. Everything is handmade, including silk fur stoles, light and warm, making them ideal for travel ($495). (His new couture shop with an on-site atelier is barely two miles away from this boutique.)", "sentence_answer": "Silver filigree pendants ($18 to $45) depict a flame motif found in ancient Khmer temples.", "paragraph_id": "5d702337c8e4820a9b66cf7f"} +{"question": "Which actor plays the head of the Yonkers housing authority?", "paragraph": "Perhaps this is Mr. Simon refusing to invent motives that aren\u2019t in the public record. In any case, it leaves him with a bit of a cipher at the middle of his story. The excellent actor Oscar Isaac (\u201cInside Llewyn Davis\u201d) gives Wasicsko a convincing semblance of life, projecting decency, nervous energy, joy and disappointment, but he never seems to have quite enough to work with. That\u2019s reflected in the series, which occasionally takes a break from its tightly scripted council meetings and back-room deals for emotion-building montages set to Bruce Springsteen songs (\u201cHungry Heart,\u201d \u201cBrilliant Disguise,\u201d \u201cSecret Garden\u201d). The cast also includes Alfred Molina, giving an amusing caricature of a machine politician, and a number of actors who do good work as various cogs in the political and legal apparatus: Bob Balaban as the judge, Terry Kinney as the head of the Yonkers housing authority, Clarke Peters as a smooth-talking consultant and, especially, Catherine Keener as an anti-integration protester.", "answer": "Terry Kinney", "sentence": "The cast also includes Alfred Molina, giving an amusing caricature of a machine politician, and a number of actors who do good work as various cogs in the political and legal apparatus: Bob Balaban as the judge, Terry Kinney as the head of the Yonkers housing authority, Clarke Peters as a smooth-talking consultant and, especially, Catherine Keener as an anti-integration protester.", "paragraph_sentence": "Perhaps this is Mr. Simon refusing to invent motives that aren\u2019t in the public record. In any case, it leaves him with a bit of a cipher at the middle of his story. The excellent actor Oscar Isaac (\u201cInside Llewyn Davis\u201d) gives Wasicsko a convincing semblance of life, projecting decency, nervous energy, joy and disappointment, but he never seems to have quite enough to work with. That\u2019s reflected in the series, which occasionally takes a break from its tightly scripted council meetings and back-room deals for emotion-building montages set to Bruce Springsteen songs (\u201cHungry Heart,\u201d \u201cBrilliant Disguise,\u201d \u201cSecret Garden\u201d). The cast also includes Alfred Molina, giving an amusing caricature of a machine politician, and a number of actors who do good work as various cogs in the political and legal apparatus: Bob Balaban as the judge, Terry Kinney as the head of the Yonkers housing authority, Clarke Peters as a smooth-talking consultant and, especially, Catherine Keener as an anti-integration protester. ", "paragraph_answer": "Perhaps this is Mr. Simon refusing to invent motives that aren\u2019t in the public record. In any case, it leaves him with a bit of a cipher at the middle of his story. The excellent actor Oscar Isaac (\u201cInside Llewyn Davis\u201d) gives Wasicsko a convincing semblance of life, projecting decency, nervous energy, joy and disappointment, but he never seems to have quite enough to work with. That\u2019s reflected in the series, which occasionally takes a break from its tightly scripted council meetings and back-room deals for emotion-building montages set to Bruce Springsteen songs (\u201cHungry Heart,\u201d \u201cBrilliant Disguise,\u201d \u201cSecret Garden\u201d). The cast also includes Alfred Molina, giving an amusing caricature of a machine politician, and a number of actors who do good work as various cogs in the political and legal apparatus: Bob Balaban as the judge, Terry Kinney as the head of the Yonkers housing authority, Clarke Peters as a smooth-talking consultant and, especially, Catherine Keener as an anti-integration protester.", "sentence_answer": "The cast also includes Alfred Molina, giving an amusing caricature of a machine politician, and a number of actors who do good work as various cogs in the political and legal apparatus: Bob Balaban as the judge, Terry Kinney as the head of the Yonkers housing authority, Clarke Peters as a smooth-talking consultant and, especially, Catherine Keener as an anti-integration protester.", "paragraph_id": "5d705aa8c8e4820a9b66ee72"} +{"question": "What event will take place that will bridge west Africa and Staten island?", "paragraph": "\u2018African Story Circle\u2019 (Saturday) It\u2019s a long way from West Africa to Staten Island, but this free gathering will bridge that distance with tales that illuminate the relationship between ancient folklore and the modern immigrant family experience. Naomi Sturm, a folklorist from Staten Island Arts, will moderate the event, which will include storytellers from Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone. From 1 to 2 p.m., Culture Lounge, St. George Ferry Terminal, 10 Ferry Terminal Drive, St. George, Staten Island, 718-447-3329, statenislandarts.org.", "answer": "African Story Circle", "sentence": "\u2018 African Story Circle \u2019 (Saturday)", "paragraph_sentence": " \u2018 African Story Circle \u2019 (Saturday) It\u2019s a long way from West Africa to Staten Island, but this free gathering will bridge that distance with tales that illuminate the relationship between ancient folklore and the modern immigrant family experience. Naomi Sturm, a folklorist from Staten Island Arts, will moderate the event, which will include storytellers from Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone. From 1 to 2 p.m., Culture Lounge, St. George Ferry Terminal, 10 Ferry Terminal Drive, St. George, Staten Island, 718-447-3329, statenislandarts.org.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018 African Story Circle \u2019 (Saturday) It\u2019s a long way from West Africa to Staten Island, but this free gathering will bridge that distance with tales that illuminate the relationship between ancient folklore and the modern immigrant family experience. Naomi Sturm, a folklorist from Staten Island Arts, will moderate the event, which will include storytellers from Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone. From 1 to 2 p.m., Culture Lounge, St. George Ferry Terminal, 10 Ferry Terminal Drive, St. George, Staten Island, 718-447-3329, statenislandarts.org.", "sentence_answer": "\u2018 African Story Circle \u2019 (Saturday)", "paragraph_id": "5d7011d5c8e4820a9b66be43"} +{"question": "Besides being a friend, what is Elmendorf's relationship to the author?", "paragraph": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "answer": "former student", "sentence": "(Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective.", "paragraph_sentence": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "paragraph_answer": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "sentence_answer": "(Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective.", "paragraph_id": "5d705585c8e4820a9b66ecde"} +{"question": "What can you do if your house is so large that a new router can't cover it?", "paragraph": "One caveat: If you use a slower Internet service like DSL, you can probably hold on to a router for longer than three years. A newer router can still be useful because of the improved wireless range, but you won\u2019t experience a big difference in speeds. If your house is so large that a new router won\u2019t be able to cover every inch with a great Wi-Fi signal, you could install a Wi-Fi extender, which enhances an existing Wi-Fi connection to increase coverage. Powerline networking, which converts a house\u2019s electrical wiring into a wired Internet connection, is another option, but you\u2019ll have to check if your home supports it. As for Mr. McConnell, the retired engineer eventually solved his Wi-Fi headache by setting up his devices to stay on the 5 GHz radio band. To get a Wi-Fi signal to his iPad in the bedroom, he also set up an extender. Now everything is smooth sailing, he said. \u201cI\u2019ve got my life back,\u201d he said.", "answer": "you could install a Wi-Fi extender", "sentence": "If your house is so large that a new router won\u2019t be able to cover every inch with a great Wi-Fi signal, you could install a Wi-Fi extender , which enhances an existing Wi-Fi connection to increase coverage.", "paragraph_sentence": "One caveat: If you use a slower Internet service like DSL, you can probably hold on to a router for longer than three years. A newer router can still be useful because of the improved wireless range, but you won\u2019t experience a big difference in speeds. If your house is so large that a new router won\u2019t be able to cover every inch with a great Wi-Fi signal, you could install a Wi-Fi extender , which enhances an existing Wi-Fi connection to increase coverage. Powerline networking, which converts a house\u2019s electrical wiring into a wired Internet connection, is another option, but you\u2019ll have to check if your home supports it. As for Mr. McConnell, the retired engineer eventually solved his Wi-Fi headache by setting up his devices to stay on the 5 GHz radio band. To get a Wi-Fi signal to his iPad in the bedroom, he also set up an extender. Now everything is smooth sailing, he said. \u201cI\u2019ve got my life back,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "One caveat: If you use a slower Internet service like DSL, you can probably hold on to a router for longer than three years. A newer router can still be useful because of the improved wireless range, but you won\u2019t experience a big difference in speeds. If your house is so large that a new router won\u2019t be able to cover every inch with a great Wi-Fi signal, you could install a Wi-Fi extender , which enhances an existing Wi-Fi connection to increase coverage. Powerline networking, which converts a house\u2019s electrical wiring into a wired Internet connection, is another option, but you\u2019ll have to check if your home supports it. As for Mr. McConnell, the retired engineer eventually solved his Wi-Fi headache by setting up his devices to stay on the 5 GHz radio band. To get a Wi-Fi signal to his iPad in the bedroom, he also set up an extender. Now everything is smooth sailing, he said. \u201cI\u2019ve got my life back,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "If your house is so large that a new router won\u2019t be able to cover every inch with a great Wi-Fi signal, you could install a Wi-Fi extender , which enhances an existing Wi-Fi connection to increase coverage.", "paragraph_id": "5d70577dc8e4820a9b66ed79"} +{"question": "Who makes her own comedy when the writers aren't giving her good material?", "paragraph": "Tracee Ellis Ross, \u201cblack-ish\u201d The degree of difficulty that Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Ms. Metcalf and Ms. Nash face on their respective shows is vertiginous. But Ms. Ross works just as hard in her marriage of pragmatism and new-age nuttiness. Her screen time always feels shorter than her co-star Anthony Anderson\u2019s, but she just does more with what she\u2019s got. She\u2019s so good that even when the writers aren\u2019t giving her great comedy, she makes her own. D\u2019Angelo, Apollo Theater, Feb. 7 For an hour, I sat in my seat worried that he wasn\u2019t ready for us \u2014 for the screaming and hooting, for the orgasmic yeses. That mighty voice was tenuous. The pacing on the potent new songs felt rushed. He seemed fatigued. But during two encores, a very good show became unforgettable. D\u2019Angelo locked in and let go. Ready for us? Ha. We weren\u2019t ready for him. (Read the review) More highlights from the year, as chosen by our critics: Movies, Television, Pop Music, Classical Music, Classical Albums, Dance, Theater, Books and Art", "answer": "Tracee Ellis Ross", "sentence": "Tracee Ellis Ross , \u201cblack-ish\u201d The degree of difficulty that Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Ms. Metcalf and Ms. Nash face on their respective shows is vertiginous.", "paragraph_sentence": " Tracee Ellis Ross , \u201cblack-ish\u201d The degree of difficulty that Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Ms. Metcalf and Ms. Nash face on their respective shows is vertiginous. But Ms. Ross works just as hard in her marriage of pragmatism and new-age nuttiness. Her screen time always feels shorter than her co-star Anthony Anderson\u2019s, but she just does more with what she\u2019s got. She\u2019s so good that even when the writers aren\u2019t giving her great comedy, she makes her own. D\u2019Angelo, Apollo Theater, Feb. 7 For an hour, I sat in my seat worried that he wasn\u2019t ready for us \u2014 for the screaming and hooting, for the orgasmic yeses. That mighty voice was tenuous. The pacing on the potent new songs felt rushed. He seemed fatigued. But during two encores, a very good show became unforgettable. D\u2019Angelo locked in and let go. Ready for us? Ha. We weren\u2019t ready for him. (Read the review) More highlights from the year, as chosen by our critics: Movies, Television, Pop Music, Classical Music, Classical Albums, Dance, Theater, Books and Art", "paragraph_answer": " Tracee Ellis Ross , \u201cblack-ish\u201d The degree of difficulty that Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Ms. Metcalf and Ms. Nash face on their respective shows is vertiginous. But Ms. Ross works just as hard in her marriage of pragmatism and new-age nuttiness. Her screen time always feels shorter than her co-star Anthony Anderson\u2019s, but she just does more with what she\u2019s got. She\u2019s so good that even when the writers aren\u2019t giving her great comedy, she makes her own. D\u2019Angelo, Apollo Theater, Feb. 7 For an hour, I sat in my seat worried that he wasn\u2019t ready for us \u2014 for the screaming and hooting, for the orgasmic yeses. That mighty voice was tenuous. The pacing on the potent new songs felt rushed. He seemed fatigued. But during two encores, a very good show became unforgettable. D\u2019Angelo locked in and let go. Ready for us? Ha. We weren\u2019t ready for him. (Read the review) More highlights from the year, as chosen by our critics: Movies, Television, Pop Music, Classical Music, Classical Albums, Dance, Theater, Books and Art", "sentence_answer": " Tracee Ellis Ross , \u201cblack-ish\u201d The degree of difficulty that Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Ms. Metcalf and Ms. Nash face on their respective shows is vertiginous.", "paragraph_id": "5d705bd9c8e4820a9b66ef04"} +{"question": "How do most people search and read Wikipedia ?", "paragraph": "Most people search and read Wikipedia anonymously, since you don\u2019t need an account to view its tens of millions of articles in hundreds of languages. Every month, at least 75,000 volunteers in the United States and around the world contribute their time and passion to writing those articles and keeping the site going \u2014 and growing.", "answer": "anonymously", "sentence": "Most people search and read Wikipedia anonymously , since you don\u2019t need an account to view its tens of millions of articles in hundreds of languages.", "paragraph_sentence": " Most people search and read Wikipedia anonymously , since you don\u2019t need an account to view its tens of millions of articles in hundreds of languages. Every month, at least 75,000 volunteers in the United States and around the world contribute their time and passion to writing those articles and keeping the site going \u2014 and growing.", "paragraph_answer": "Most people search and read Wikipedia anonymously , since you don\u2019t need an account to view its tens of millions of articles in hundreds of languages. Every month, at least 75,000 volunteers in the United States and around the world contribute their time and passion to writing those articles and keeping the site going \u2014 and growing.", "sentence_answer": "Most people search and read Wikipedia anonymously , since you don\u2019t need an account to view its tens of millions of articles in hundreds of languages.", "paragraph_id": "5d70b47ac8e4820a9b66f6fe"} +{"question": "What disrupts the tranquility of the music?", "paragraph": "Luminous cluster-like chords unfold in steady rhythmic patterns during the slow movement, though the soloists and groups of orchestra instruments keep injecting squirrelly, creepy things into the tranquillity. The last movement begins with a whiplash sound and becomes a stew of crackling Bachian vitality. As an artist in residence with the Philharmonic this season, Ms. Batiashvili has become a familiar and welcome presence. She, along with Mr. Leleux, Mr. Gilbert and the composer, received enthusiastic ovations. I can imagine many orchestras following Mr. Gilbert\u2019s example by pairing these concertos together. A smart move by Mr. Escaich.", "answer": "creepy things", "sentence": "Luminous cluster-like chords unfold in steady rhythmic patterns during the slow movement, though the soloists and groups of orchestra instruments keep injecting squirrelly, creepy things into the tranquillity.", "paragraph_sentence": " Luminous cluster-like chords unfold in steady rhythmic patterns during the slow movement, though the soloists and groups of orchestra instruments keep injecting squirrelly, creepy things into the tranquillity. The last movement begins with a whiplash sound and becomes a stew of crackling Bachian vitality. As an artist in residence with the Philharmonic this season, Ms. Batiashvili has become a familiar and welcome presence. She, along with Mr. Leleux, Mr. Gilbert and the composer, received enthusiastic ovations. I can imagine many orchestras following Mr. Gilbert\u2019s example by pairing these concertos together. A smart move by Mr. Escaich.", "paragraph_answer": "Luminous cluster-like chords unfold in steady rhythmic patterns during the slow movement, though the soloists and groups of orchestra instruments keep injecting squirrelly, creepy things into the tranquillity. The last movement begins with a whiplash sound and becomes a stew of crackling Bachian vitality. As an artist in residence with the Philharmonic this season, Ms. Batiashvili has become a familiar and welcome presence. She, along with Mr. Leleux, Mr. Gilbert and the composer, received enthusiastic ovations. I can imagine many orchestras following Mr. Gilbert\u2019s example by pairing these concertos together. A smart move by Mr. Escaich.", "sentence_answer": "Luminous cluster-like chords unfold in steady rhythmic patterns during the slow movement, though the soloists and groups of orchestra instruments keep injecting squirrelly, creepy things into the tranquillity.", "paragraph_id": "5d701e3fc8e4820a9b66c9a8"} +{"question": "What disease has been linked with metzitzah b\u2019peh?", "paragraph": "Rabbi David Niederman, an influential Orthodox leader in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, sat outside a meeting of the New York City Board of Health on Wednesday, staring at a brochure and frowning. The pamphlet, created by the de Blasio administration, is a glossy but blunt warning about the dangers of metzitzah b\u2019peh, an Orthodox circumcision ritual linked to herpes infections in infants. \u201cSome babies can get sick with herpes, which can lead to death,\u201d the form reads in bold type. \u201cThere is no way to avoid the risk.\u201d \u201cSerious misstatements,\u201d Rabbi Niederman said, looking pained, as he read the brochure for the first time. But the rabbi declined to elaborate, telling a reporter that, for now, he wanted only to praise the city for trying to work with Orthodox leaders on the matter.", "answer": "herpes infections", "sentence": "The pamphlet, created by the de Blasio administration, is a glossy but blunt warning about the dangers of metzitzah b\u2019peh, an Orthodox circumcision ritual linked to herpes infections in infants.", "paragraph_sentence": "Rabbi David Niederman, an influential Orthodox leader in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, sat outside a meeting of the New York City Board of Health on Wednesday, staring at a brochure and frowning. The pamphlet, created by the de Blasio administration, is a glossy but blunt warning about the dangers of metzitzah b\u2019peh, an Orthodox circumcision ritual linked to herpes infections in infants. \u201cSome babies can get sick with herpes, which can lead to death,\u201d the form reads in bold type. \u201cThere is no way to avoid the risk.\u201d \u201cSerious misstatements,\u201d Rabbi Niederman said, looking pained, as he read the brochure for the first time. But the rabbi declined to elaborate, telling a reporter that, for now, he wanted only to praise the city for trying to work with Orthodox leaders on the matter.", "paragraph_answer": "Rabbi David Niederman, an influential Orthodox leader in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, sat outside a meeting of the New York City Board of Health on Wednesday, staring at a brochure and frowning. The pamphlet, created by the de Blasio administration, is a glossy but blunt warning about the dangers of metzitzah b\u2019peh, an Orthodox circumcision ritual linked to herpes infections in infants. \u201cSome babies can get sick with herpes, which can lead to death,\u201d the form reads in bold type. \u201cThere is no way to avoid the risk.\u201d \u201cSerious misstatements,\u201d Rabbi Niederman said, looking pained, as he read the brochure for the first time. But the rabbi declined to elaborate, telling a reporter that, for now, he wanted only to praise the city for trying to work with Orthodox leaders on the matter.", "sentence_answer": "The pamphlet, created by the de Blasio administration, is a glossy but blunt warning about the dangers of metzitzah b\u2019peh, an Orthodox circumcision ritual linked to herpes infections in infants.", "paragraph_id": "5d705633c8e4820a9b66ed0c"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d702b66c8e4820a9b66d8f5"} +{"question": "where did they place the photos of there love interests?", "paragraph": "\u201cThis knocked me off my feet,\u201d she said, adding, \u201cwhen I left Sweet Briar, there was no question that I would go on to graduate school.\u201d Jo Ann Soderquist Kramer, class of \u201964, said that when she arrived for her freshman year, she and her roommate each unpacked identical framed 8-by-10 photographs of their high school sweethearts and set them carefully on their bureaus. She also recalled being driven all the way to Massachusetts one football weekend (the sweethearts were Amherst and Williams men) in a white Cadillac with a hired driver named Coffee Jackson.", "answer": "on their bureaus", "sentence": "Jo Ann Soderquist Kramer, class of \u201964, said that when she arrived for her freshman year, she and her roommate each unpacked identical framed 8-by-10 photographs of their high school sweethearts and set them carefully on their bureaus .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThis knocked me off my feet,\u201d she said, adding, \u201cwhen I left Sweet Briar, there was no question that I would go on to graduate school.\u201d Jo Ann Soderquist Kramer, class of \u201964, said that when she arrived for her freshman year, she and her roommate each unpacked identical framed 8-by-10 photographs of their high school sweethearts and set them carefully on their bureaus . She also recalled being driven all the way to Massachusetts one football weekend (the sweethearts were Amherst and Williams men) in a white Cadillac with a hired driver named Coffee Jackson.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThis knocked me off my feet,\u201d she said, adding, \u201cwhen I left Sweet Briar, there was no question that I would go on to graduate school.\u201d Jo Ann Soderquist Kramer, class of \u201964, said that when she arrived for her freshman year, she and her roommate each unpacked identical framed 8-by-10 photographs of their high school sweethearts and set them carefully on their bureaus . She also recalled being driven all the way to Massachusetts one football weekend (the sweethearts were Amherst and Williams men) in a white Cadillac with a hired driver named Coffee Jackson.", "sentence_answer": "Jo Ann Soderquist Kramer, class of \u201964, said that when she arrived for her freshman year, she and her roommate each unpacked identical framed 8-by-10 photographs of their high school sweethearts and set them carefully on their bureaus .", "paragraph_id": "5d70310bc8e4820a9b66dd07"} +{"question": "How many people died in clashes with the police on the anniversary last year?", "paragraph": "Ms. Sabbagh was walking in a small group of fellow party members on Saturday with a wreath of flowers to lay in Tahrir Square to honor demonstrators killed there during previous protests, according to a witness account and a video recording of the scene. When her group took up the Arab Spring chant for \u201cbread, freedom and social justice,\u201d a contingent of masked riot police officers as numerous as the marchers \u201cfired bullets and gas within minutes,\u201d according to a testimonial posted on Facebook by Azza Soliman, a prominent human rights lawyer who was nearby at the time. In the video, the police officers are seen firing guns from across a narrow street. A friend, crouching down, grabs Ms. Sabbagh around the waist as she stands upright with blood running down her face. Then he is seen hurriedly carrying her away while the gunfire continues. A forensic report said birdshot fired at close range had pierced her lung and heart, according to news reports. The deaths on the anniversary of the revolt were predictable, rights activists say, because the swift use of firearms has become de facto police policy toward any unauthorized public assembly, especially in downtown Cairo. On the anniversary last year, more than 50 people died in clashes with the police.", "answer": "more than 50 people", "sentence": "On the anniversary last year, more than 50 people died in clashes with the police.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Sabbagh was walking in a small group of fellow party members on Saturday with a wreath of flowers to lay in Tahrir Square to honor demonstrators killed there during previous protests, according to a witness account and a video recording of the scene. When her group took up the Arab Spring chant for \u201cbread, freedom and social justice,\u201d a contingent of masked riot police officers as numerous as the marchers \u201cfired bullets and gas within minutes,\u201d according to a testimonial posted on Facebook by Azza Soliman, a prominent human rights lawyer who was nearby at the time. In the video, the police officers are seen firing guns from across a narrow street. A friend, crouching down, grabs Ms. Sabbagh around the waist as she stands upright with blood running down her face. Then he is seen hurriedly carrying her away while the gunfire continues. A forensic report said birdshot fired at close range had pierced her lung and heart, according to news reports. The deaths on the anniversary of the revolt were predictable, rights activists say, because the swift use of firearms has become de facto police policy toward any unauthorized public assembly, especially in downtown Cairo. On the anniversary last year, more than 50 people died in clashes with the police. ", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Sabbagh was walking in a small group of fellow party members on Saturday with a wreath of flowers to lay in Tahrir Square to honor demonstrators killed there during previous protests, according to a witness account and a video recording of the scene. When her group took up the Arab Spring chant for \u201cbread, freedom and social justice,\u201d a contingent of masked riot police officers as numerous as the marchers \u201cfired bullets and gas within minutes,\u201d according to a testimonial posted on Facebook by Azza Soliman, a prominent human rights lawyer who was nearby at the time. In the video, the police officers are seen firing guns from across a narrow street. A friend, crouching down, grabs Ms. Sabbagh around the waist as she stands upright with blood running down her face. Then he is seen hurriedly carrying her away while the gunfire continues. A forensic report said birdshot fired at close range had pierced her lung and heart, according to news reports. The deaths on the anniversary of the revolt were predictable, rights activists say, because the swift use of firearms has become de facto police policy toward any unauthorized public assembly, especially in downtown Cairo. On the anniversary last year, more than 50 people died in clashes with the police.", "sentence_answer": "On the anniversary last year, more than 50 people died in clashes with the police.", "paragraph_id": "5d703557c8e4820a9b66df7f"} +{"question": "What jobs does the writer have?", "paragraph": "The writer, a clinical social worker, is the author of \u201cWitness to Resilience: Stories of Intimate Violence.\u201d To the Editor: Jennifer Weiner\u2019s grandmother sounds spirited, energetic and kind. She can create her own \u201cin group,\u201d where only kind women are welcome. MAREA WEXLER\nNorthampton, Mass., Jan. 20, 2015", "answer": "clinical social worker", "sentence": "The writer, a clinical social worker , is the author of \u201cWitness to Resilience: Stories of Intimate Violence.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " The writer, a clinical social worker , is the author of \u201cWitness to Resilience: Stories of Intimate Violence.\u201d To the Editor: Jennifer Weiner\u2019s grandmother sounds spirited, energetic and kind. She can create her own \u201cin group,\u201d where only kind women are welcome. MAREA WEXLER Northampton, Mass., Jan. 20, 2015", "paragraph_answer": "The writer, a clinical social worker , is the author of \u201cWitness to Resilience: Stories of Intimate Violence.\u201d To the Editor: Jennifer Weiner\u2019s grandmother sounds spirited, energetic and kind. She can create her own \u201cin group,\u201d where only kind women are welcome. MAREA WEXLER Northampton, Mass., Jan. 20, 2015", "sentence_answer": "The writer, a clinical social worker , is the author of \u201cWitness to Resilience: Stories of Intimate Violence.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d7015a3c8e4820a9b66c1b9"} +{"question": "what was terrence collingsworth's profession ?", "paragraph": "Over the past decade, companies doing business in Colombia, like Chiquita Brands and Dole Food, have incurred the wrath of Terrence Collingsworth, a lawyer who has accused them of mistreating workers or conspiring to kill labor activists. But these days, Mr. Collingsworth is on the defensive. One of his targets, Drummond, a coal producer based in Birmingham, Ala., recently asked a federal judge to hold the lawyer in contempt as part of a libel suit it is pressing against him. Chiquita and Dole, pointing to the Drummond case, have also raised questions about his practices. The problems engulfing Mr. Collingsworth underscore the mounting difficulties facing a small group of plaintiffs\u2019 lawyers who have carved out a niche suing multinational corporations on charges that they violated human rights overseas.", "answer": "lawyer", "sentence": "Over the past decade, companies doing business in Colombia, like Chiquita Brands and Dole Food, have incurred the wrath of Terrence Collingsworth, a lawyer who has accused them of mistreating workers or conspiring to kill labor activists.", "paragraph_sentence": " Over the past decade, companies doing business in Colombia, like Chiquita Brands and Dole Food, have incurred the wrath of Terrence Collingsworth, a lawyer who has accused them of mistreating workers or conspiring to kill labor activists. But these days, Mr. Collingsworth is on the defensive. One of his targets, Drummond, a coal producer based in Birmingham, Ala., recently asked a federal judge to hold the lawyer in contempt as part of a libel suit it is pressing against him. Chiquita and Dole, pointing to the Drummond case, have also raised questions about his practices. The problems engulfing Mr. Collingsworth underscore the mounting difficulties facing a small group of plaintiffs\u2019 lawyers who have carved out a niche suing multinational corporations on charges that they violated human rights overseas.", "paragraph_answer": "Over the past decade, companies doing business in Colombia, like Chiquita Brands and Dole Food, have incurred the wrath of Terrence Collingsworth, a lawyer who has accused them of mistreating workers or conspiring to kill labor activists. But these days, Mr. Collingsworth is on the defensive. One of his targets, Drummond, a coal producer based in Birmingham, Ala., recently asked a federal judge to hold the lawyer in contempt as part of a libel suit it is pressing against him. Chiquita and Dole, pointing to the Drummond case, have also raised questions about his practices. The problems engulfing Mr. Collingsworth underscore the mounting difficulties facing a small group of plaintiffs\u2019 lawyers who have carved out a niche suing multinational corporations on charges that they violated human rights overseas.", "sentence_answer": "Over the past decade, companies doing business in Colombia, like Chiquita Brands and Dole Food, have incurred the wrath of Terrence Collingsworth, a lawyer who has accused them of mistreating workers or conspiring to kill labor activists.", "paragraph_id": "5d7024a5c8e4820a9b66d0f2"} +{"question": "What beer does Ninkasi Brewing make?", "paragraph": "The bandwidth of lagers is rather narrow, but they have their refreshing role to play. None did it better than our No. 1 brew, Session Premium Lager from Full Sail Brewing, clean, crisp, lively and fresh. Session, surprisingly, is not made entirely of malted barley. It uses a touch of malted wheat as well. Apparently, lager producers have found ways to be creative without exploding the genre. Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing. The Lawnmower, by the way, was the lowest in alcohol in the tasting at just 3.9 percent.", "answer": "Venn Dortmund-Style Lager", "sentence": "Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing.", "paragraph_sentence": "The bandwidth of lagers is rather narrow, but they have their refreshing role to play. None did it better than our No. 1 brew, Session Premium Lager from Full Sail Brewing, clean, crisp, lively and fresh. Session, surprisingly, is not made entirely of malted barley. It uses a touch of malted wheat as well. Apparently, lager producers have found ways to be creative without exploding the genre. Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing. The Lawnmower, by the way, was the lowest in alcohol in the tasting at just 3.9 percent.", "paragraph_answer": "The bandwidth of lagers is rather narrow, but they have their refreshing role to play. None did it better than our No. 1 brew, Session Premium Lager from Full Sail Brewing, clean, crisp, lively and fresh. Session, surprisingly, is not made entirely of malted barley. It uses a touch of malted wheat as well. Apparently, lager producers have found ways to be creative without exploding the genre. Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing. The Lawnmower, by the way, was the lowest in alcohol in the tasting at just 3.9 percent.", "sentence_answer": "Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing.", "paragraph_id": "5d7016e1c8e4820a9b66c2e9"} +{"question": "According to Laurence D. Fink, what kind of environment do we live in?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money,\u201d said Laurence D. Fink, the chief executive of BlackRock, who noted that three-quarters of the firm\u2019s clients were these types of buy-and-hold investors. \u201cWe are their agents, and we are investing money for them.\u201d Still, Hyun Song Shin, a top economist at the Bank for International Settlements, a banking and research center for central banks worldwide, argued on Wednesday that this relentless reach for yield by such investors might just as well signal a good old-fashioned investment bubble.", "answer": "low rate environment", "sentence": "\u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money ,\u201d said Laurence D. Fink, the chief executive of BlackRock, who noted that three-quarters of the firm\u2019s clients were these types of buy-and-hold investors. \u201cWe are their agents, and we are investing money for them.\u201d Still, Hyun Song Shin, a top economist at the Bank for International Settlements, a banking and research center for central banks worldwide, argued on Wednesday that this relentless reach for yield by such investors might just as well signal a good old-fashioned investment bubble.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money,\u201d said Laurence D. Fink, the chief executive of BlackRock, who noted that three-quarters of the firm\u2019s clients were these types of buy-and-hold investors. \u201cWe are their agents, and we are investing money for them.\u201d Still, Hyun Song Shin, a top economist at the Bank for International Settlements, a banking and research center for central banks worldwide, argued on Wednesday that this relentless reach for yield by such investors might just as well signal a good old-fashioned investment bubble.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money", "paragraph_id": "5d7025e9c8e4820a9b66d21f"} +{"question": "What other authorities have been unwilling to cooperate with the tribunal?", "paragraph": "The decade-old United Nations-backed tribunal has delivered guilty verdicts to only three defendants. The case against Ao An is strongly opposed by the Cambodian government, the police and the national investigating judge, who have been unwilling to cooperate with the tribunal. Experts say high-profile figures in present-day Cambodian politics fear that they could be implicated in the defendants\u2019 testimony. Any legal challenge could further delay the tribunal, which has already been criticized for its slow progress.", "answer": "the police and the national investigating judge", "sentence": "The case against Ao An is strongly opposed by the Cambodian government, the police and the national investigating judge , who have been unwilling to cooperate with the tribunal.", "paragraph_sentence": "The decade-old United Nations-backed tribunal has delivered guilty verdicts to only three defendants. The case against Ao An is strongly opposed by the Cambodian government, the police and the national investigating judge , who have been unwilling to cooperate with the tribunal. Experts say high-profile figures in present-day Cambodian politics fear that they could be implicated in the defendants\u2019 testimony. Any legal challenge could further delay the tribunal, which has already been criticized for its slow progress.", "paragraph_answer": "The decade-old United Nations-backed tribunal has delivered guilty verdicts to only three defendants. The case against Ao An is strongly opposed by the Cambodian government, the police and the national investigating judge , who have been unwilling to cooperate with the tribunal. Experts say high-profile figures in present-day Cambodian politics fear that they could be implicated in the defendants\u2019 testimony. Any legal challenge could further delay the tribunal, which has already been criticized for its slow progress.", "sentence_answer": "The case against Ao An is strongly opposed by the Cambodian government, the police and the national investigating judge , who have been unwilling to cooperate with the tribunal.", "paragraph_id": "5d7006a3c8e4820a9b66abe5"} +{"question": "In what year did Pete Rose admit that he had bet on baseball?", "paragraph": "ROSE ON HIS BEST BEHAVIOR A product of working-class west-side Cincinnati, Pete Rose, baseball\u2019s career hits leader, was barred from the game in 1989 and finally acknowledged in 2004 that he bet on baseball. Now 74, Rose has petitioned for reinstatement, and there had been hopes locally that something might happen in time for the All-Star Game. Those hopes faded last month after ESPN said it obtained a notebook that shows Rose bet on baseball during his last season as an active player in 1986, not just afterward as manager.", "answer": "2004", "sentence": "ROSE ON HIS BEST BEHAVIOR A product of working-class west-side Cincinnati, Pete Rose, baseball\u2019s career hits leader, was barred from the game in 1989 and finally acknowledged in 2004 that he bet on baseball.", "paragraph_sentence": " ROSE ON HIS BEST BEHAVIOR A product of working-class west-side Cincinnati, Pete Rose, baseball\u2019s career hits leader, was barred from the game in 1989 and finally acknowledged in 2004 that he bet on baseball. Now 74, Rose has petitioned for reinstatement, and there had been hopes locally that something might happen in time for the All-Star Game. Those hopes faded last month after ESPN said it obtained a notebook that shows Rose bet on baseball during his last season as an active player in 1986, not just afterward as manager.", "paragraph_answer": "ROSE ON HIS BEST BEHAVIOR A product of working-class west-side Cincinnati, Pete Rose, baseball\u2019s career hits leader, was barred from the game in 1989 and finally acknowledged in 2004 that he bet on baseball. Now 74, Rose has petitioned for reinstatement, and there had been hopes locally that something might happen in time for the All-Star Game. Those hopes faded last month after ESPN said it obtained a notebook that shows Rose bet on baseball during his last season as an active player in 1986, not just afterward as manager.", "sentence_answer": "ROSE ON HIS BEST BEHAVIOR A product of working-class west-side Cincinnati, Pete Rose, baseball\u2019s career hits leader, was barred from the game in 1989 and finally acknowledged in 2004 that he bet on baseball.", "paragraph_id": "5d7025bec8e4820a9b66d200"} +{"question": "How many locations of the Mr. Chow chain are there?", "paragraph": "Flash! Pop! And then she was gone. For the last 23 years, Mrs. Chow \u2014 first name pronounced Aay-vah, obviously \u2014 has been largely defined by her marriage to Michael Chow, the celebrity restaurateur. She gave up a successful fashion line, Eva Chun, in 1994 to be a mother. Yes, she has played a crucial role in keeping the Mr. Chow chain humming. But mostly her husband has basked in the spotlight while she has played the supporting part. That seems to be changing. With the bespectacled Mr. Chow approaching 77 and concentrating on making art, Mrs. Chow, who is in her late 50s, has increased her focus on their business, particularly when it comes to growth. A sixth location opened in Malibu, Calif., in 2012. Las Vegas and Mexico City are next. Last month, she oversaw the introduction of an exclusive Mr. Chow-branded wine.", "answer": "six", "sentence": "A six th location opened in Malibu, Calif., in 2012.", "paragraph_sentence": "Flash! Pop! And then she was gone. For the last 23 years, Mrs. Chow \u2014 first name pronounced Aay-vah, obviously \u2014 has been largely defined by her marriage to Michael Chow, the celebrity restaurateur. She gave up a successful fashion line, Eva Chun, in 1994 to be a mother. Yes, she has played a crucial role in keeping the Mr. Chow chain humming. But mostly her husband has basked in the spotlight while she has played the supporting part. That seems to be changing. With the bespectacled Mr. Chow approaching 77 and concentrating on making art, Mrs. Chow, who is in her late 50s, has increased her focus on their business, particularly when it comes to growth. A six th location opened in Malibu, Calif., in 2012. Las Vegas and Mexico City are next. Last month, she oversaw the introduction of an exclusive Mr. Chow-branded wine.", "paragraph_answer": "Flash! Pop! And then she was gone. For the last 23 years, Mrs. Chow \u2014 first name pronounced Aay-vah, obviously \u2014 has been largely defined by her marriage to Michael Chow, the celebrity restaurateur. She gave up a successful fashion line, Eva Chun, in 1994 to be a mother. Yes, she has played a crucial role in keeping the Mr. Chow chain humming. But mostly her husband has basked in the spotlight while she has played the supporting part. That seems to be changing. With the bespectacled Mr. Chow approaching 77 and concentrating on making art, Mrs. Chow, who is in her late 50s, has increased her focus on their business, particularly when it comes to growth. A six th location opened in Malibu, Calif., in 2012. Las Vegas and Mexico City are next. Last month, she oversaw the introduction of an exclusive Mr. Chow-branded wine.", "sentence_answer": "A six th location opened in Malibu, Calif., in 2012.", "paragraph_id": "5d7006efc8e4820a9b66ac52"} +{"question": "Who attacked Planned Parenthood in Wednesday's debate?", "paragraph": "But more importantly during Wednesday\u2019s debate, Fiorina unleashed a scurrilous attack in her pitch to defund Planned Parenthood, saying of the attack videos released about the group: \u201cI dare Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama to watch these tapes. Watch a fully formed fetus on the table, its heart beating, its legs kicking, while someone says, \u2018We have to keep it alive to harvest its brain.\u2019 \u201c In fact, the footage of the fetus was \u201cstock footage\u201d that \u201cwas added to the video to dramatize its content,\u201d according to PolitiFact, which rated Fiorina\u2019s comments as \u201cmostly false.\u201d FactCheck.org also said: \u201cWe are aware of no video showing such a scene.\u201d As Talking Points Memo\u2019s Josh Marshall put it Friday: \u201cFiorina has a habit of simply making things up.\u201d", "answer": "Fiorina", "sentence": "But more importantly during Wednesday\u2019s debate, Fiorina unleashed a scurrilous attack in her pitch to defund Planned Parenthood, saying of the attack videos released about the group: \u201cI dare Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama to watch these tapes.", "paragraph_sentence": " But more importantly during Wednesday\u2019s debate, Fiorina unleashed a scurrilous attack in her pitch to defund Planned Parenthood, saying of the attack videos released about the group: \u201cI dare Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama to watch these tapes. Watch a fully formed fetus on the table, its heart beating, its legs kicking, while someone says, \u2018We have to keep it alive to harvest its brain.\u2019 \u201c In fact, the footage of the fetus was \u201cstock footage\u201d that \u201cwas added to the video to dramatize its content,\u201d according to PolitiFact, which rated Fiorina\u2019s comments as \u201cmostly false.\u201d FactCheck.org also said: \u201cWe are aware of no video showing such a scene.\u201d As Talking Points Memo\u2019s Josh Marshall put it Friday: \u201cFiorina has a habit of simply making things up.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "But more importantly during Wednesday\u2019s debate, Fiorina unleashed a scurrilous attack in her pitch to defund Planned Parenthood, saying of the attack videos released about the group: \u201cI dare Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama to watch these tapes. Watch a fully formed fetus on the table, its heart beating, its legs kicking, while someone says, \u2018We have to keep it alive to harvest its brain.\u2019 \u201c In fact, the footage of the fetus was \u201cstock footage\u201d that \u201cwas added to the video to dramatize its content,\u201d according to PolitiFact, which rated Fiorina\u2019s comments as \u201cmostly false.\u201d FactCheck.org also said: \u201cWe are aware of no video showing such a scene.\u201d As Talking Points Memo\u2019s Josh Marshall put it Friday: \u201cFiorina has a habit of simply making things up.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "But more importantly during Wednesday\u2019s debate, Fiorina unleashed a scurrilous attack in her pitch to defund Planned Parenthood, saying of the attack videos released about the group: \u201cI dare Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama to watch these tapes.", "paragraph_id": "5d702b99c8e4820a9b66d935"} +{"question": "Who would Sandy cuddle with?", "paragraph": "Emily was surprised to see her mother so at ease in the traditional role of Felix\u2019s bubbe (Yiddish for \u201cgrandmother\u201d). As a parent in the 1970s, Sandy turned every interaction with her children into a political act. During story time, she would go through their picture books with a bottle of Wite-\u00adOut and a Magic Marker, changing a hero\u2019s name from male to female, revising plot lines, adding long hair or breasts to some of the drawings. Story time was a different experience with Felix. Sandy would cuddle with the baby and turn pages. If she couldn\u2019t remember the word for \u201czebra\u201d or \u201clion,\u201d she wouldn\u2019t fuss about it. \u201cOh, it\u2019s some animal,\u201d she would say.", "answer": "baby", "sentence": "Sandy would cuddle with the baby and turn pages.", "paragraph_sentence": "Emily was surprised to see her mother so at ease in the traditional role of Felix\u2019s bubbe (Yiddish for \u201cgrandmother\u201d). As a parent in the 1970s, Sandy turned every interaction with her children into a political act. During story time, she would go through their picture books with a bottle of Wite-\u00adOut and a Magic Marker, changing a hero\u2019s name from male to female, revising plot lines, adding long hair or breasts to some of the drawings. Story time was a different experience with Felix. Sandy would cuddle with the baby and turn pages. If she couldn\u2019t remember the word for \u201czebra\u201d or \u201clion,\u201d she wouldn\u2019t fuss about it. \u201cOh, it\u2019s some animal,\u201d she would say.", "paragraph_answer": "Emily was surprised to see her mother so at ease in the traditional role of Felix\u2019s bubbe (Yiddish for \u201cgrandmother\u201d). As a parent in the 1970s, Sandy turned every interaction with her children into a political act. During story time, she would go through their picture books with a bottle of Wite-\u00adOut and a Magic Marker, changing a hero\u2019s name from male to female, revising plot lines, adding long hair or breasts to some of the drawings. Story time was a different experience with Felix. Sandy would cuddle with the baby and turn pages. If she couldn\u2019t remember the word for \u201czebra\u201d or \u201clion,\u201d she wouldn\u2019t fuss about it. \u201cOh, it\u2019s some animal,\u201d she would say.", "sentence_answer": "Sandy would cuddle with the baby and turn pages.", "paragraph_id": "5d70416cc8e4820a9b66e598"} +{"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", "paragraph_id": "5d700a22c8e4820a9b66b3a4"} +{"question": "What two cities in California did they travel to?", "paragraph": "Until his health began to fail, we traveled to see the Cubs in San Francisco and San Diego, and Arizona, where in 2007 we took my son, Alex, to the first round of the National League playoffs so he could be duly indoctrinated: two games against the Diamondbacks, two losses by the Cubs. In truth, as time passes, the results have mattered less than the time we had together. The Cubs have been, more than anything else, a shared experience. I will remember that this October, when they reach the World Series. I plan to take Alex with me. But first I will have to speak with his high school basketball coach. I do not imagine he will be happy about my son missing practice right before the start of the season, so I am prepared to explain that the Cubs do not play in a World Series every day. If necessary, there is a deal I am prepared to make.", "answer": "San Francisco and San Diego", "sentence": "Until his health began to fail, we traveled to see the Cubs in San Francisco and San Diego ,", "paragraph_sentence": " Until his health began to fail, we traveled to see the Cubs in San Francisco and San Diego , and Arizona, where in 2007 we took my son, Alex, to the first round of the National League playoffs so he could be duly indoctrinated: two games against the Diamondbacks, two losses by the Cubs. In truth, as time passes, the results have mattered less than the time we had together. The Cubs have been, more than anything else, a shared experience. I will remember that this October, when they reach the World Series. I plan to take Alex with me. But first I will have to speak with his high school basketball coach. I do not imagine he will be happy about my son missing practice right before the start of the season, so I am prepared to explain that the Cubs do not play in a World Series every day. If necessary, there is a deal I am prepared to make.", "paragraph_answer": "Until his health began to fail, we traveled to see the Cubs in San Francisco and San Diego , and Arizona, where in 2007 we took my son, Alex, to the first round of the National League playoffs so he could be duly indoctrinated: two games against the Diamondbacks, two losses by the Cubs. In truth, as time passes, the results have mattered less than the time we had together. The Cubs have been, more than anything else, a shared experience. I will remember that this October, when they reach the World Series. I plan to take Alex with me. But first I will have to speak with his high school basketball coach. I do not imagine he will be happy about my son missing practice right before the start of the season, so I am prepared to explain that the Cubs do not play in a World Series every day. If necessary, there is a deal I am prepared to make.", "sentence_answer": "Until his health began to fail, we traveled to see the Cubs in San Francisco and San Diego ,", "paragraph_id": "5d700692c8e4820a9b66abc7"} +{"question": "Prudence unites what kind of a perspective with moral rigor?", "paragraph": "The poetics of damage permeates \u00adDavid Treuer\u2019s elegantly bitter fourth novel, \u201cPrudence,\u201d which unites a distinctly modern sociopolitical perspective with a more old-fashioned moral rigor about the \u00adconsequences of emotional cowardice, complicity and repression. On the evidence here, Treuer believes in bravery. Moreover, he believes that a lack of bravery isn\u2019t just sad, it\u2019s deeply destructive \u2014 and the destruction can\u2019t be undone. Cowardice can kill people. While there\u2019s much hope in this lyrical novel, as evidenced by the freedom with which it examines some of the more transgressive interstices of race, sexual orientation and gender, there\u2019s also an obdurate insistence on taking responsibility, particularly if one is a man. Treuer\u2019s perspective is bracingly tough. This \u00adauthor values honor. Who dares to take that kind of stance anymore?", "answer": "sociopolitical", "sentence": "The poetics of damage permeates \u00adDavid Treuer\u2019s elegantly bitter fourth novel, \u201cPrudence,\u201d which unites a distinctly modern sociopolitical perspective with a more old-fashioned moral rigor about the \u00adconsequences of emotional cowardice, complicity and repression.", "paragraph_sentence": " The poetics of damage permeates \u00adDavid Treuer\u2019s elegantly bitter fourth novel, \u201cPrudence,\u201d which unites a distinctly modern sociopolitical perspective with a more old-fashioned moral rigor about the \u00adconsequences of emotional cowardice, complicity and repression. On the evidence here, Treuer believes in bravery. Moreover, he believes that a lack of bravery isn\u2019t just sad, it\u2019s deeply destructive \u2014 and the destruction can\u2019t be undone. Cowardice can kill people. While there\u2019s much hope in this lyrical novel, as evidenced by the freedom with which it examines some of the more transgressive interstices of race, sexual orientation and gender, there\u2019s also an obdurate insistence on taking responsibility, particularly if one is a man. Treuer\u2019s perspective is bracingly tough. This \u00adauthor values honor. Who dares to take that kind of stance anymore?", "paragraph_answer": "The poetics of damage permeates \u00adDavid Treuer\u2019s elegantly bitter fourth novel, \u201cPrudence,\u201d which unites a distinctly modern sociopolitical perspective with a more old-fashioned moral rigor about the \u00adconsequences of emotional cowardice, complicity and repression. On the evidence here, Treuer believes in bravery. Moreover, he believes that a lack of bravery isn\u2019t just sad, it\u2019s deeply destructive \u2014 and the destruction can\u2019t be undone. Cowardice can kill people. While there\u2019s much hope in this lyrical novel, as evidenced by the freedom with which it examines some of the more transgressive interstices of race, sexual orientation and gender, there\u2019s also an obdurate insistence on taking responsibility, particularly if one is a man. Treuer\u2019s perspective is bracingly tough. This \u00adauthor values honor. Who dares to take that kind of stance anymore?", "sentence_answer": "The poetics of damage permeates \u00adDavid Treuer\u2019s elegantly bitter fourth novel, \u201cPrudence,\u201d which unites a distinctly modern sociopolitical perspective with a more old-fashioned moral rigor about the \u00adconsequences of emotional cowardice, complicity and repression.", "paragraph_id": "5d704383c8e4820a9b66e6ca"} +{"question": "What is Putin's short-term incentive for visiting the United Nations?", "paragraph": "The applause, of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade. Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early.", "answer": "The applause", "sentence": "The applause , of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade.", "paragraph_sentence": " The applause , of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade. Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early.", "paragraph_answer": " The applause , of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade. Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early.", "sentence_answer": " The applause , of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade.", "paragraph_id": "5d701bcec8e4820a9b66c74f"} +{"question": "How many hospitals received victims?", "paragraph": "No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei. The injured, many suffering from serious burns and smoke inhalation, were overwhelmingly young, in their 20s or younger, with one 18-year-old woman receiving burns on 90 percent of her body, according to the official Central News Agency.", "answer": "43", "sentence": "No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei.", "paragraph_sentence": " No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei. The injured, many suffering from serious burns and smoke inhalation, were overwhelmingly young, in their 20s or younger, with one 18-year-old woman receiving burns on 90 percent of her body, according to the official Central News Agency.", "paragraph_answer": "No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei. The injured, many suffering from serious burns and smoke inhalation, were overwhelmingly young, in their 20s or younger, with one 18-year-old woman receiving burns on 90 percent of her body, according to the official Central News Agency.", "sentence_answer": "No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei.", "paragraph_id": "5d704c44c8e4820a9b66e9e6"} +{"question": "Who is the foreign minister of Lithuania?", "paragraph": "\u201cI see no reason to delay,\u201d said Linas Linkevicius, the foreign minister of Lithuania. He noted that a cease-fire, known as the Minsk agreement, between the Ukrainian government and Russian-backed separatist rebels had not yet been fully carried out. \u201cIf we don\u2019t see real progress in the implementation of the Minsk agreement, then we need to go further,\u201d said Didier Reynders, the Belgian foreign minister. \u201cWithout that, we need to prolong the sanctions.\u201d Federica Mogherini, the high representative of the European Union for foreign affairs and security policy, told reporters at a news conference on Monday that the union could reach a political decision as soon as Thursday at the summit meeting here. \u201cThe general assessment today was clearly going in the direction of the rollover of sanctions,\u201d she said.", "answer": "Linas Linkevicius", "sentence": "\u201cI see no reason to delay,\u201d said Linas Linkevicius , the foreign minister of Lithuania.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cI see no reason to delay,\u201d said Linas Linkevicius , the foreign minister of Lithuania. He noted that a cease-fire, known as the Minsk agreement, between the Ukrainian government and Russian-backed separatist rebels had not yet been fully carried out. \u201cIf we don\u2019t see real progress in the implementation of the Minsk agreement, then we need to go further,\u201d said Didier Reynders, the Belgian foreign minister. \u201cWithout that, we need to prolong the sanctions.\u201d Federica Mogherini, the high representative of the European Union for foreign affairs and security policy, told reporters at a news conference on Monday that the union could reach a political decision as soon as Thursday at the summit meeting here. \u201cThe general assessment today was clearly going in the direction of the rollover of sanctions,\u201d she said.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI see no reason to delay,\u201d said Linas Linkevicius , the foreign minister of Lithuania. He noted that a cease-fire, known as the Minsk agreement, between the Ukrainian government and Russian-backed separatist rebels had not yet been fully carried out. \u201cIf we don\u2019t see real progress in the implementation of the Minsk agreement, then we need to go further,\u201d said Didier Reynders, the Belgian foreign minister. \u201cWithout that, we need to prolong the sanctions.\u201d Federica Mogherini, the high representative of the European Union for foreign affairs and security policy, told reporters at a news conference on Monday that the union could reach a political decision as soon as Thursday at the summit meeting here. \u201cThe general assessment today was clearly going in the direction of the rollover of sanctions,\u201d she said.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI see no reason to delay,\u201d said Linas Linkevicius , the foreign minister of Lithuania.", "paragraph_id": "5d70299dc8e4820a9b66d73f"} +{"question": "What street did the attack happen on?", "paragraph": "The attack occurred around 8:20 a.m., when the victim, a student at the private Whitestone Academy, was \u201caccosted from behind,\u201d Chief Boyce said. She was carrying a bag and walking east on 13th Avenue near 147th Street in the Whitestone neighborhood, he said. The assailant was wearing a hood over his head, and was \u201cwearing a surgical mask and he has surgical gloves on,\u201d Chief Boyce said. Detectives retrieved video images of the attacker that showed him running away. Carolyn Rutigliano, who lives about a block from where the attack happened, said she heard the girl scream. It lasted \u201cabout 15 seconds,\u201d she said, and an ambulance came shortly afterward. The police have not been able to identify him from the video, Chief Boyce said. The department released the video in the hopes that someone might be able to identify him.", "answer": "13th Avenue near 147th Street", "sentence": "She was carrying a bag and walking east on 13th Avenue near 147th Street in the Whitestone neighborhood", "paragraph_sentence": "The attack occurred around 8:20 a.m., when the victim, a student at the private Whitestone Academy, was \u201caccosted from behind,\u201d Chief Boyce said. She was carrying a bag and walking east on 13th Avenue near 147th Street in the Whitestone neighborhood , he said. The assailant was wearing a hood over his head, and was \u201cwearing a surgical mask and he has surgical gloves on,\u201d Chief Boyce said. Detectives retrieved video images of the attacker that showed him running away. Carolyn Rutigliano, who lives about a block from where the attack happened, said she heard the girl scream. It lasted \u201cabout 15 seconds,\u201d she said, and an ambulance came shortly afterward. The police have not been able to identify him from the video, Chief Boyce said. The department released the video in the hopes that someone might be able to identify him.", "paragraph_answer": "The attack occurred around 8:20 a.m., when the victim, a student at the private Whitestone Academy, was \u201caccosted from behind,\u201d Chief Boyce said. She was carrying a bag and walking east on 13th Avenue near 147th Street in the Whitestone neighborhood, he said. The assailant was wearing a hood over his head, and was \u201cwearing a surgical mask and he has surgical gloves on,\u201d Chief Boyce said. Detectives retrieved video images of the attacker that showed him running away. Carolyn Rutigliano, who lives about a block from where the attack happened, said she heard the girl scream. It lasted \u201cabout 15 seconds,\u201d she said, and an ambulance came shortly afterward. The police have not been able to identify him from the video, Chief Boyce said. The department released the video in the hopes that someone might be able to identify him.", "sentence_answer": "She was carrying a bag and walking east on 13th Avenue near 147th Street in the Whitestone neighborhood", "paragraph_id": "5d702dd7c8e4820a9b66db4b"} +{"question": "What products does HP Inc, primarily sell?", "paragraph": "Hewlett-Packard will release its earnings for the fourth quarter of 2015 on Tuesday. It will be something of a valedictory moment: On Nov. 1 the entity became two companies. One, HP Inc., primarily sells personal computers and printers. HP Enterprise, or HPE, sells computer hardware and software for business.", "answer": "HP Inc., primarily sells personal computers and printers", "sentence": "One, HP Inc., primarily sells personal computers and printers .", "paragraph_sentence": "Hewlett-Packard will release its earnings for the fourth quarter of 2015 on Tuesday. It will be something of a valedictory moment: On Nov. 1 the entity became two companies. One, HP Inc., primarily sells personal computers and printers . HP Enterprise, or HPE, sells computer hardware and software for business.", "paragraph_answer": "Hewlett-Packard will release its earnings for the fourth quarter of 2015 on Tuesday. It will be something of a valedictory moment: On Nov. 1 the entity became two companies. One, HP Inc., primarily sells personal computers and printers . HP Enterprise, or HPE, sells computer hardware and software for business.", "sentence_answer": "One, HP Inc., primarily sells personal computers and printers .", "paragraph_id": "5d702725c8e4820a9b66d4ee"} +{"question": "In which country did Russian fighting that the public considered necessary take place?", "paragraph": "If the Islamic State seemed a distant threat at one point, the Kremlin now appears genuinely concerned about repercussions. About 2,400 Russians have joined the extremist movement, a senior security official announced recently, and an additional 3,000 men from Central Asian states are believed to be fighting in Syria. It is considered unlikely that Mr. Putin will propose sending Russian troops to join the fighting. The memories of the Russian debacle in Afghanistan in the 1980s remain too fresh. Even Russian casualties fighting next door in Ukraine \u2014 a war the public accepted as necessary for its own protection \u2014 were hidden by the state.", "answer": "Ukraine", "sentence": "Even Russian casualties fighting next door in Ukraine \u2014 a war the public accepted as necessary for its own protection \u2014 were hidden by the state.", "paragraph_sentence": "If the Islamic State seemed a distant threat at one point, the Kremlin now appears genuinely concerned about repercussions. About 2,400 Russians have joined the extremist movement, a senior security official announced recently, and an additional 3,000 men from Central Asian states are believed to be fighting in Syria. It is considered unlikely that Mr. Putin will propose sending Russian troops to join the fighting. The memories of the Russian debacle in Afghanistan in the 1980s remain too fresh. Even Russian casualties fighting next door in Ukraine \u2014 a war the public accepted as necessary for its own protection \u2014 were hidden by the state. ", "paragraph_answer": "If the Islamic State seemed a distant threat at one point, the Kremlin now appears genuinely concerned about repercussions. About 2,400 Russians have joined the extremist movement, a senior security official announced recently, and an additional 3,000 men from Central Asian states are believed to be fighting in Syria. It is considered unlikely that Mr. Putin will propose sending Russian troops to join the fighting. The memories of the Russian debacle in Afghanistan in the 1980s remain too fresh. Even Russian casualties fighting next door in Ukraine \u2014 a war the public accepted as necessary for its own protection \u2014 were hidden by the state.", "sentence_answer": "Even Russian casualties fighting next door in Ukraine \u2014 a war the public accepted as necessary for its own protection \u2014 were hidden by the state.", "paragraph_id": "5d70197fc8e4820a9b66c581"} +{"question": "What was the one rider sitting by the movie poster in the F train saying about it?", "paragraph": "Among the authority\u2019s list of banned items: violent images that could scare children, material that could \u201cincite or provoke violence,\u201d and ads for escort services and tobacco products. Then there is the provision about depicting sexual activities in an offensive manner, which leaves room for interpretation. An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children. \u201cI glanced at it from the side of my eye, but I didn\u2019t really care to read it,\u201d said the passenger, Tara Griffiths, 21, a student at St. John\u2019s University in Queens. \u201cIt reminds me of \u2018Fifty Shades of Grey.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "it seemed inappropriate for children", "sentence": "At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children .", "paragraph_sentence": "Among the authority\u2019s list of banned items: violent images that could scare children, material that could \u201cincite or provoke violence,\u201d and ads for escort services and tobacco products. Then there is the provision about depicting sexual activities in an offensive manner, which leaves room for interpretation. An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children . \u201cI glanced at it from the side of my eye, but I didn\u2019t really care to read it,\u201d said the passenger, Tara Griffiths, 21, a student at St. John\u2019s University in Queens. \u201cIt reminds me of \u2018Fifty Shades of Grey.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Among the authority\u2019s list of banned items: violent images that could scare children, material that could \u201cincite or provoke violence,\u201d and ads for escort services and tobacco products. Then there is the provision about depicting sexual activities in an offensive manner, which leaves room for interpretation. An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children . \u201cI glanced at it from the side of my eye, but I didn\u2019t really care to read it,\u201d said the passenger, Tara Griffiths, 21, a student at St. John\u2019s University in Queens. \u201cIt reminds me of \u2018Fifty Shades of Grey.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children .", "paragraph_id": "5d7019a6c8e4820a9b66c5b2"} +{"question": "Why is the film rated R?", "paragraph": "\u201cBurnt\u201d has other flaws, like not giving Ms. Miller enough to do, but its main one is simply that at this point it\u2019s hard to care about people who mistake a third Michelin star for the most important thing in life. \u201cBurnt\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian), because when things heat up in the kitchen, curse words fly. Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes.", "answer": "because when things heat up in the kitchen, curse words fly.", "sentence": "\u201cBurnt\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian), because when things heat up in the kitchen, curse words fly. Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cBurnt\u201d has other flaws, like not giving Ms. Miller enough to do, but its main one is simply that at this point it\u2019s hard to care about people who mistake a third Michelin star for the most important thing in life. \u201cBurnt\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian), because when things heat up in the kitchen, curse words fly. Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cBurnt\u201d has other flaws, like not giving Ms. Miller enough to do, but its main one is simply that at this point it\u2019s hard to care about people who mistake a third Michelin star for the most important thing in life. \u201cBurnt\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian), because when things heat up in the kitchen, curse words fly. Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cBurnt\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian), because when things heat up in the kitchen, curse words fly. Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes.", "paragraph_id": "5d701867c8e4820a9b66c479"} +{"question": "Who is secretary general of the Bangladesh Imamia Welfare Foundation?", "paragraph": "The mosque\u2019s muezzin, Moazzem Hossain, was shot in the head and died later in a hospital. Three other men, including the mosque\u2019s 35-year-old imam, were wounded in the attack and were hospitalized, said Ahsan Habib, the officer in charge at Shibganj police station in Bogra district, about 120 miles north of the Bangladeshi capital. \u201cI have never heard, and never received any information, that there was rivalry or conflict between the Shiite community and anyone else,\u201d Mr. Habib said. \u201cThis attack just astonished me.\u201d A Shiite leader in the region, Mozaffor Hossen, 35, secretary general of the Bangladesh Imamia Welfare Foundation, said the gunmen brought a lock with them and used it to lock the compound\u2019s gate, then entered the mosque and opened fire.", "answer": "Mozaffor Hossen", "sentence": "A Shiite leader in the region, Mozaffor Hossen , 35, secretary general of the Bangladesh Imamia Welfare Foundation, said the gunmen brought a lock with them and used it to lock the compound\u2019s gate, then entered the mosque and opened fire.", "paragraph_sentence": "The mosque\u2019s muezzin, Moazzem Hossain, was shot in the head and died later in a hospital. Three other men, including the mosque\u2019s 35-year-old imam, were wounded in the attack and were hospitalized, said Ahsan Habib, the officer in charge at Shibganj police station in Bogra district, about 120 miles north of the Bangladeshi capital. \u201cI have never heard, and never received any information, that there was rivalry or conflict between the Shiite community and anyone else,\u201d Mr. Habib said. \u201cThis attack just astonished me.\u201d A Shiite leader in the region, Mozaffor Hossen , 35, secretary general of the Bangladesh Imamia Welfare Foundation, said the gunmen brought a lock with them and used it to lock the compound\u2019s gate, then entered the mosque and opened fire. ", "paragraph_answer": "The mosque\u2019s muezzin, Moazzem Hossain, was shot in the head and died later in a hospital. Three other men, including the mosque\u2019s 35-year-old imam, were wounded in the attack and were hospitalized, said Ahsan Habib, the officer in charge at Shibganj police station in Bogra district, about 120 miles north of the Bangladeshi capital. \u201cI have never heard, and never received any information, that there was rivalry or conflict between the Shiite community and anyone else,\u201d Mr. Habib said. \u201cThis attack just astonished me.\u201d A Shiite leader in the region, Mozaffor Hossen , 35, secretary general of the Bangladesh Imamia Welfare Foundation, said the gunmen brought a lock with them and used it to lock the compound\u2019s gate, then entered the mosque and opened fire.", "sentence_answer": "A Shiite leader in the region, Mozaffor Hossen , 35, secretary general of the Bangladesh Imamia Welfare Foundation, said the gunmen brought a lock with them and used it to lock the compound\u2019s gate, then entered the mosque and opened fire.", "paragraph_id": "5d70074dc8e4820a9b66ad42"} +{"question": "Which country did the writer go for the first foreign assignment", "paragraph": "WHAT a reporter carries out grows, inevitably, from the beliefs and standards carried in. For me, those were set out by the Times editor who first assigned me abroad in 1976, A. M. Rosenthal, and by his successors over the years. Abe called for \u201ckeeping the paper straight.\u201d He issued the dictum before my first foreign assignment: apartheid South Africa, a country justly seen as an open-and-shut case of oppression. But even there the need to keep the paper straight demanded, Abe said, that we tell not only the story of the oppressed, but that of all the other major players in South Africa\u2019s tragedy, including the Afrikaner people who built the fortress of racial prejudice that the country had become. Those stories might surprise us, he said, and give us a more textured sense of the truth.", "answer": "South Africa", "sentence": "He issued the dictum before my first foreign assignment: apartheid South Africa , a country justly seen as an open-and-shut case of oppression.", "paragraph_sentence": "WHAT a reporter carries out grows, inevitably, from the beliefs and standards carried in. For me, those were set out by the Times editor who first assigned me abroad in 1976, A. M. Rosenthal, and by his successors over the years. Abe called for \u201ckeeping the paper straight.\u201d He issued the dictum before my first foreign assignment: apartheid South Africa , a country justly seen as an open-and-shut case of oppression. But even there the need to keep the paper straight demanded, Abe said, that we tell not only the story of the oppressed, but that of all the other major players in South Africa\u2019s tragedy, including the Afrikaner people who built the fortress of racial prejudice that the country had become. Those stories might surprise us, he said, and give us a more textured sense of the truth.", "paragraph_answer": "WHAT a reporter carries out grows, inevitably, from the beliefs and standards carried in. For me, those were set out by the Times editor who first assigned me abroad in 1976, A. M. Rosenthal, and by his successors over the years. Abe called for \u201ckeeping the paper straight.\u201d He issued the dictum before my first foreign assignment: apartheid South Africa , a country justly seen as an open-and-shut case of oppression. But even there the need to keep the paper straight demanded, Abe said, that we tell not only the story of the oppressed, but that of all the other major players in South Africa\u2019s tragedy, including the Afrikaner people who built the fortress of racial prejudice that the country had become. Those stories might surprise us, he said, and give us a more textured sense of the truth.", "sentence_answer": "He issued the dictum before my first foreign assignment: apartheid South Africa , a country justly seen as an open-and-shut case of oppression.", "paragraph_id": "5d702a25c8e4820a9b66d79f"} +{"question": "Who argued that a law denying same-sex spouses next of kin notifications was unjust?", "paragraph": "Solicitor General Donald B. Verrilli Jr., the Obama administration\u2019s top appellate lawyer, who urged the justices to strike down the law, began his argument with a vivid image. Under the law, he said, \u201cthe spouse of a soldier killed in the line of duty cannot receive the dignity and solace of an official notification of next of kin.\u201d In his majority opinion in the case, United States v. Windsor, Justice Anthony M. Kennedy bristled at the unfairness of prohibiting same-sex couples \u201cfrom being buried together in veterans\u2019 cemeteries.\u201d", "answer": "Solicitor General Donald B. Verrilli Jr.", "sentence": "Solicitor General Donald B. Verrilli Jr. , the Obama administration\u2019s top appellate lawyer, who urged the justices to strike down the law, began his argument with a vivid image.", "paragraph_sentence": " Solicitor General Donald B. Verrilli Jr. , the Obama administration\u2019s top appellate lawyer, who urged the justices to strike down the law, began his argument with a vivid image. Under the law, he said, \u201cthe spouse of a soldier killed in the line of duty cannot receive the dignity and solace of an official notification of next of kin.\u201d In his majority opinion in the case, United States v. Windsor, Justice Anthony M. Kennedy bristled at the unfairness of prohibiting same-sex couples \u201cfrom being buried together in veterans\u2019 cemeteries.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": " Solicitor General Donald B. Verrilli Jr. , the Obama administration\u2019s top appellate lawyer, who urged the justices to strike down the law, began his argument with a vivid image. Under the law, he said, \u201cthe spouse of a soldier killed in the line of duty cannot receive the dignity and solace of an official notification of next of kin.\u201d In his majority opinion in the case, United States v. Windsor, Justice Anthony M. Kennedy bristled at the unfairness of prohibiting same-sex couples \u201cfrom being buried together in veterans\u2019 cemeteries.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Solicitor General Donald B. Verrilli Jr. , the Obama administration\u2019s top appellate lawyer, who urged the justices to strike down the law, began his argument with a vivid image.", "paragraph_id": "5d7008c0c8e4820a9b66b0b7"} +{"question": "Who did McConnell acknowledge as President?", "paragraph": "Mr. McConnell\u2019s acknowledgment that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats. But it doesn\u2019t mean he intends to be too cooperative with Mr. Obama during the president\u2019s final months in office. A die-hard protector of his state\u2019s coal industry, Mr. McConnell immediately dismissed the new Paris climate change accord as nothing more than a \u201clong-term planning document.\u201d He told The Washington Post that the White House shouldn\u2019t push the new Pacific trade pact until a lame-duck session next year \u2014 if at all \u2014 before the president leaves office.", "answer": "Barack Obama", "sentence": "that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. McConnell\u2019s acknowledgment that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats. But it doesn\u2019t mean he intends to be too cooperative with Mr. Obama during the president\u2019s final months in office. A die-hard protector of his state\u2019s coal industry, Mr. McConnell immediately dismissed the new Paris climate change accord as nothing more than a \u201clong-term planning document.\u201d He told The Washington Post that the White House shouldn\u2019t push the new Pacific trade pact until a lame-duck session next year \u2014 if at all \u2014 before the president leaves office.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. McConnell\u2019s acknowledgment that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats. But it doesn\u2019t mean he intends to be too cooperative with Mr. Obama during the president\u2019s final months in office. A die-hard protector of his state\u2019s coal industry, Mr. McConnell immediately dismissed the new Paris climate change accord as nothing more than a \u201clong-term planning document.\u201d He told The Washington Post that the White House shouldn\u2019t push the new Pacific trade pact until a lame-duck session next year \u2014 if at all \u2014 before the president leaves office.", "sentence_answer": "that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats.", "paragraph_id": "5d701242c8e4820a9b66be9f"} +{"question": "What did many countries involved in the Holocaust acknowledge?", "paragraph": "Third, Begley makes no mention of the many complex attempts by Polish gentiles to come to terms with the country\u2019s responsibility, which would include the novels of Jerzy Andrzejewski and Andrzej Szczypiorski and films by Andrzej Wajda, Jerzy Kawalerowicz and Wanda Jakubowska. There is also a great deal of important historical work by Poles on the Holocaust, some of which is now available in English. Many countries involved in the Holocaust acknowledged their collective responsibility only after considerable delay: France did not begin to question its myth of heroic Resistance until the 1980s and 1990s. Poles are now \u201cworking through the past\u201d \u2014 as Theodor Adorno put it \u2014 in a way comparable to the collective memory work of Germans since the 1960s. Last year\u2019s opening of a Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw is only the most visible sign of this.", "answer": "their collective responsibility", "sentence": "Many countries involved in the Holocaust acknowledged their collective responsibility only after considerable delay: France did not begin to question its myth of heroic Resistance until the 1980s and 1990s.", "paragraph_sentence": "Third, Begley makes no mention of the many complex attempts by Polish gentiles to come to terms with the country\u2019s responsibility, which would include the novels of Jerzy Andrzejewski and Andrzej Szczypiorski and films by Andrzej Wajda, Jerzy Kawalerowicz and Wanda Jakubowska. There is also a great deal of important historical work by Poles on the Holocaust, some of which is now available in English. Many countries involved in the Holocaust acknowledged their collective responsibility only after considerable delay: France did not begin to question its myth of heroic Resistance until the 1980s and 1990s. Poles are now \u201cworking through the past\u201d \u2014 as Theodor Adorno put it \u2014 in a way comparable to the collective memory work of Germans since the 1960s. Last year\u2019s opening of a Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw is only the most visible sign of this.", "paragraph_answer": "Third, Begley makes no mention of the many complex attempts by Polish gentiles to come to terms with the country\u2019s responsibility, which would include the novels of Jerzy Andrzejewski and Andrzej Szczypiorski and films by Andrzej Wajda, Jerzy Kawalerowicz and Wanda Jakubowska. There is also a great deal of important historical work by Poles on the Holocaust, some of which is now available in English. Many countries involved in the Holocaust acknowledged their collective responsibility only after considerable delay: France did not begin to question its myth of heroic Resistance until the 1980s and 1990s. Poles are now \u201cworking through the past\u201d \u2014 as Theodor Adorno put it \u2014 in a way comparable to the collective memory work of Germans since the 1960s. Last year\u2019s opening of a Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw is only the most visible sign of this.", "sentence_answer": "Many countries involved in the Holocaust acknowledged their collective responsibility only after considerable delay: France did not begin to question its myth of heroic Resistance until the 1980s and 1990s.", "paragraph_id": "5d7051a1c8e4820a9b66eb96"} +{"question": "What year did the author start a dining column?", "paragraph": "I started writing for The Times in the mid-80s. In 1991, I wrote my first piece for the Living section, as it was known then, about how FedExing ingredients was changing the game for chefs. In 1994, Trish Hall, then the Living section\u2019s editor, asked me if I wanted to write a column for the new Dining section. Duh \u2014 who would say no to that? Three years later (The Times doesn\u2019t often move quickly) The Minimalist was born, thanks in large part to the editor Rick Flaste. For the next 13 years \u2014 650 weeks, more or less, in a row \u2014 I never missed a deadline.", "answer": "1994", "sentence": "In 1994 , Trish Hall, then the Living section\u2019s editor, asked me if I wanted to write a column for the new Dining section.", "paragraph_sentence": "I started writing for The Times in the mid-80s. In 1991, I wrote my first piece for the Living section, as it was known then, about how FedExing ingredients was changing the game for chefs. In 1994 , Trish Hall, then the Living section\u2019s editor, asked me if I wanted to write a column for the new Dining section. Duh \u2014 who would say no to that? Three years later (The Times doesn\u2019t often move quickly) The Minimalist was born, thanks in large part to the editor Rick Flaste. For the next 13 years \u2014 650 weeks, more or less, in a row \u2014 I never missed a deadline.", "paragraph_answer": "I started writing for The Times in the mid-80s. In 1991, I wrote my first piece for the Living section, as it was known then, about how FedExing ingredients was changing the game for chefs. In 1994 , Trish Hall, then the Living section\u2019s editor, asked me if I wanted to write a column for the new Dining section. Duh \u2014 who would say no to that? Three years later (The Times doesn\u2019t often move quickly) The Minimalist was born, thanks in large part to the editor Rick Flaste. For the next 13 years \u2014 650 weeks, more or less, in a row \u2014 I never missed a deadline.", "sentence_answer": "In 1994 , Trish Hall, then the Living section\u2019s editor, asked me if I wanted to write a column for the new Dining section.", "paragraph_id": "5d70385ec8e4820a9b66e114"} +{"question": "Who is a competitor to Barnes and Noble?", "paragraph": "Still, the company\u2019s struggles are probably far from over. Barnes & Noble has been battered by Amazon, its powerful online rival, and has incurred big financial losses from its largely failed attempt to carve out territory in the e-book space with the Nook. While the company posted lower losses in its Nook division in the most recent quarter, sales were still disappointing, as the Nook segment tumbled 31.9 percent to $43.5 million, primarily because of lower digital content sales. The chain has closed more than 70 stores around the country in the last five years, and plans to close 10 more in the coming year.", "answer": "Amazon", "sentence": "Barnes & Noble has been battered by Amazon , its powerful online rival, and has incurred big financial losses from its largely failed attempt to carve out territory in the e-book space with the Nook.", "paragraph_sentence": "Still, the company\u2019s struggles are probably far from over. Barnes & Noble has been battered by Amazon , its powerful online rival, and has incurred big financial losses from its largely failed attempt to carve out territory in the e-book space with the Nook. While the company posted lower losses in its Nook division in the most recent quarter, sales were still disappointing, as the Nook segment tumbled 31.9 percent to $43.5 million, primarily because of lower digital content sales. The chain has closed more than 70 stores around the country in the last five years, and plans to close 10 more in the coming year.", "paragraph_answer": "Still, the company\u2019s struggles are probably far from over. Barnes & Noble has been battered by Amazon , its powerful online rival, and has incurred big financial losses from its largely failed attempt to carve out territory in the e-book space with the Nook. While the company posted lower losses in its Nook division in the most recent quarter, sales were still disappointing, as the Nook segment tumbled 31.9 percent to $43.5 million, primarily because of lower digital content sales. The chain has closed more than 70 stores around the country in the last five years, and plans to close 10 more in the coming year.", "sentence_answer": "Barnes & Noble has been battered by Amazon , its powerful online rival, and has incurred big financial losses from its largely failed attempt to carve out territory in the e-book space with the Nook.", "paragraph_id": "5d7022f9c8e4820a9b66cf03"} +{"question": "How long did it take to push the Boko Haram fighters back from Bosso?", "paragraph": "Boko Haram fighters crossed the Komadougou River separating Nigeria from Niger and attacked Bosso, a remote town that is a local seat of government with an open-air market that has been sheltering thousands of refugees from the conflict. An army officer in Niger said the fighters were pushed back after at least three hours of combat. Speaking from Niamey, the capital, the officer said all the Boko Haram fighters who entered Bosso were killed. Other Niger government officials could not be reached on Friday afternoon, and phone lines to Bosso, on Niger\u2019s eastern edge, were not working.", "answer": "three hours", "sentence": "An army officer in Niger said the fighters were pushed back after at least three hours of combat.", "paragraph_sentence": "Boko Haram fighters crossed the Komadougou River separating Nigeria from Niger and attacked Bosso, a remote town that is a local seat of government with an open-air market that has been sheltering thousands of refugees from the conflict. An army officer in Niger said the fighters were pushed back after at least three hours of combat. Speaking from Niamey, the capital, the officer said all the Boko Haram fighters who entered Bosso were killed. Other Niger government officials could not be reached on Friday afternoon, and phone lines to Bosso, on Niger\u2019s eastern edge, were not working.", "paragraph_answer": "Boko Haram fighters crossed the Komadougou River separating Nigeria from Niger and attacked Bosso, a remote town that is a local seat of government with an open-air market that has been sheltering thousands of refugees from the conflict. An army officer in Niger said the fighters were pushed back after at least three hours of combat. Speaking from Niamey, the capital, the officer said all the Boko Haram fighters who entered Bosso were killed. Other Niger government officials could not be reached on Friday afternoon, and phone lines to Bosso, on Niger\u2019s eastern edge, were not working.", "sentence_answer": "An army officer in Niger said the fighters were pushed back after at least three hours of combat.", "paragraph_id": "5d704e74c8e4820a9b66eaa0"} +{"question": "What did Madonna mention happened in December that caused her to be later for everything?", "paragraph": "Madonna was perfectly turned out and running nearly an hour late for an interview at her Upper East Side home on Wednesday evening. She looked tense as she apologized. \u201cI\u2019m late for everything now,\u201d she said. She added that she has been in a rush since December, when a hacker put unfinished songs online from her new album, \u201cRebel Heart\u201d; a suspect has been indicted in Israel. Madonna\u2019s immediate response was to release the finished, and much improved, versions of six songs for sale; they zoomed into the top 10 worldwide. She also worked frantically to finish the rest of the album, which arrives on Tuesday. It\u2019s at once familiar \u2014 full of love, dancing, empowerment, blasphemy and raunch \u2014 and up-to-the-minute, made with a huge number of collaborators and tweaked by multiple hands under Madonna\u2019s constant supervision. \u201cI intended to think about things, choose things more slowly \u2014 the whole process,\u201d she said. \u201cThen I got forced into putting everything out, and now I\u2019m trying to catch up with myself.\u201d", "answer": "a hacker put unfinished songs online from her new album, \u201cRebel Heart\u201d", "sentence": "She added that she has been in a rush since December, when a hacker put unfinished songs online from her new album, \u201cRebel Heart\u201d ; a suspect has been indicted in Israel.", "paragraph_sentence": "Madonna was perfectly turned out and running nearly an hour late for an interview at her Upper East Side home on Wednesday evening. She looked tense as she apologized. \u201cI\u2019m late for everything now,\u201d she said. She added that she has been in a rush since December, when a hacker put unfinished songs online from her new album, \u201cRebel Heart\u201d ; a suspect has been indicted in Israel. Madonna\u2019s immediate response was to release the finished, and much improved, versions of six songs for sale; they zoomed into the top 10 worldwide. She also worked frantically to finish the rest of the album, which arrives on Tuesday. It\u2019s at once familiar \u2014 full of love, dancing, empowerment, blasphemy and raunch \u2014 and up-to-the-minute, made with a huge number of collaborators and tweaked by multiple hands under Madonna\u2019s constant supervision. \u201cI intended to think about things, choose things more slowly \u2014 the whole process,\u201d she said. \u201cThen I got forced into putting everything out, and now I\u2019m trying to catch up with myself.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Madonna was perfectly turned out and running nearly an hour late for an interview at her Upper East Side home on Wednesday evening. She looked tense as she apologized. \u201cI\u2019m late for everything now,\u201d she said. She added that she has been in a rush since December, when a hacker put unfinished songs online from her new album, \u201cRebel Heart\u201d ; a suspect has been indicted in Israel. Madonna\u2019s immediate response was to release the finished, and much improved, versions of six songs for sale; they zoomed into the top 10 worldwide. She also worked frantically to finish the rest of the album, which arrives on Tuesday. It\u2019s at once familiar \u2014 full of love, dancing, empowerment, blasphemy and raunch \u2014 and up-to-the-minute, made with a huge number of collaborators and tweaked by multiple hands under Madonna\u2019s constant supervision. \u201cI intended to think about things, choose things more slowly \u2014 the whole process,\u201d she said. \u201cThen I got forced into putting everything out, and now I\u2019m trying to catch up with myself.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "She added that she has been in a rush since December, when a hacker put unfinished songs online from her new album, \u201cRebel Heart\u201d ; a suspect has been indicted in Israel.", "paragraph_id": "5d704edac8e4820a9b66eab2"} +{"question": "Who is it harder for to obtain weapons?", "paragraph": "Where Congress has faltered, the states have moved to tighten safety aspects of gun ownership. For instance, 10 states have made it harder for people with domestic violence convictions to obtain weapons. Court records show that the gunman in Louisiana had a history of mental illness and had once been the subject of a protective order in Carroll County, Ga., which may have been detected with a stronger mental health reporting systems. That too is the subject of legislation languishing in Congress.", "answer": "people with domestic violence convictions", "sentence": "For instance, 10 states have made it harder for people with domestic violence convictions to obtain weapons.", "paragraph_sentence": "Where Congress has faltered, the states have moved to tighten safety aspects of gun ownership. For instance, 10 states have made it harder for people with domestic violence convictions to obtain weapons. Court records show that the gunman in Louisiana had a history of mental illness and had once been the subject of a protective order in Carroll County, Ga., which may have been detected with a stronger mental health reporting systems. That too is the subject of legislation languishing in Congress.", "paragraph_answer": "Where Congress has faltered, the states have moved to tighten safety aspects of gun ownership. For instance, 10 states have made it harder for people with domestic violence convictions to obtain weapons. Court records show that the gunman in Louisiana had a history of mental illness and had once been the subject of a protective order in Carroll County, Ga., which may have been detected with a stronger mental health reporting systems. That too is the subject of legislation languishing in Congress.", "sentence_answer": "For instance, 10 states have made it harder for people with domestic violence convictions to obtain weapons.", "paragraph_id": "5d702b2bc8e4820a9b66d8a8"} +{"question": "What is causing the attacks to the bureau?", "paragraph": "The bureau is in the meantime coming under fire from lawmakers of both parties for failing to meet the challenges of today\u2019s searing drought. Representative Kevin McCarthy, the majority leader and a Republican from California\u2019s parched inland, has criticized the bureau\u2019s efforts in his state. Lawmakers like Mr. McCarthy are particularly furious that the bureau and the State of California continue to direct scarce water into rivers to support fish habitat, even as farms wither and families struggle to make do with less water.", "answer": "today\u2019s searing drought", "sentence": "The bureau is in the meantime coming under fire from lawmakers of both parties for failing to meet the challenges of today\u2019s searing drought .", "paragraph_sentence": " The bureau is in the meantime coming under fire from lawmakers of both parties for failing to meet the challenges of today\u2019s searing drought . Representative Kevin McCarthy, the majority leader and a Republican from California\u2019s parched inland, has criticized the bureau\u2019s efforts in his state. Lawmakers like Mr. McCarthy are particularly furious that the bureau and the State of California continue to direct scarce water into rivers to support fish habitat, even as farms wither and families struggle to make do with less water.", "paragraph_answer": "The bureau is in the meantime coming under fire from lawmakers of both parties for failing to meet the challenges of today\u2019s searing drought . Representative Kevin McCarthy, the majority leader and a Republican from California\u2019s parched inland, has criticized the bureau\u2019s efforts in his state. Lawmakers like Mr. McCarthy are particularly furious that the bureau and the State of California continue to direct scarce water into rivers to support fish habitat, even as farms wither and families struggle to make do with less water.", "sentence_answer": "The bureau is in the meantime coming under fire from lawmakers of both parties for failing to meet the challenges of today\u2019s searing drought .", "paragraph_id": "5d705d59c8e4820a9b66ef70"} +{"question": "what two countries seem to dominate the race?", "paragraph": "The Boston race has been dominated by East Africans, with Kenya and Ethiopia taking 16 of the last 18 women\u2019s titles. Kenya and Ethiopia also won 24 of the 26 men\u2019s races before Keflezighi gave the United States its first victory since 1983. Now it could be the women\u2019s turn. Flanagan was fourth in the 2013 Boston race, crossing the finish line a few hours before two explosions there killed three people and wounded more than 260. She led early last year, when she conceded to being overanxious in the aftermath of the bombings. \u201cEveryone knows that this is the one I want to win so badly,\u201d Flanagan said. \u201cThat\u2019s probably been one of my downfalls \u2014 that I want it too much.\u201d", "answer": "Kenya and Ethiopia", "sentence": "The Boston race has been dominated by East Africans, with Kenya and Ethiopia taking 16 of the last 18 women\u2019s titles.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Boston race has been dominated by East Africans, with Kenya and Ethiopia taking 16 of the last 18 women\u2019s titles. Kenya and Ethiopia also won 24 of the 26 men\u2019s races before Keflezighi gave the United States its first victory since 1983. Now it could be the women\u2019s turn. Flanagan was fourth in the 2013 Boston race, crossing the finish line a few hours before two explosions there killed three people and wounded more than 260. She led early last year, when she conceded to being overanxious in the aftermath of the bombings. \u201cEveryone knows that this is the one I want to win so badly,\u201d Flanagan said. \u201cThat\u2019s probably been one of my downfalls \u2014 that I want it too much.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The Boston race has been dominated by East Africans, with Kenya and Ethiopia taking 16 of the last 18 women\u2019s titles. Kenya and Ethiopia also won 24 of the 26 men\u2019s races before Keflezighi gave the United States its first victory since 1983. Now it could be the women\u2019s turn. Flanagan was fourth in the 2013 Boston race, crossing the finish line a few hours before two explosions there killed three people and wounded more than 260. She led early last year, when she conceded to being overanxious in the aftermath of the bombings. \u201cEveryone knows that this is the one I want to win so badly,\u201d Flanagan said. \u201cThat\u2019s probably been one of my downfalls \u2014 that I want it too much.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The Boston race has been dominated by East Africans, with Kenya and Ethiopia taking 16 of the last 18 women\u2019s titles.", "paragraph_id": "5d702a6bc8e4820a9b66d801"} +{"question": "Who is the chairwoman of the Federal Reserve?", "paragraph": "Markets started the day higher, propelled by a jump in energy stocks, but then quickly gave up the gains. A comment by the chairwoman of the Federal Reserve, Janet L. Yellen, suggesting that stocks were generally overvalued added to the selling pressure. Uncertainty over how quickly interest rates will climb also weighed on markets as yields on bonds continued to rise. Some market experts say they think the Fed will have to increase its short-term rate relatively soon to fight inflation. The yield on the 10-year United States Treasury note rose to 2.25 percent, its highest level in two months.", "answer": "Janet L. Yellen", "sentence": "A comment by the chairwoman of the Federal Reserve, Janet L. Yellen , suggesting that stocks were generally overvalued added to the selling pressure.", "paragraph_sentence": "Markets started the day higher, propelled by a jump in energy stocks, but then quickly gave up the gains. A comment by the chairwoman of the Federal Reserve, Janet L. Yellen , suggesting that stocks were generally overvalued added to the selling pressure. Uncertainty over how quickly interest rates will climb also weighed on markets as yields on bonds continued to rise. Some market experts say they think the Fed will have to increase its short-term rate relatively soon to fight inflation. The yield on the 10-year United States Treasury note rose to 2.25 percent, its highest level in two months.", "paragraph_answer": "Markets started the day higher, propelled by a jump in energy stocks, but then quickly gave up the gains. A comment by the chairwoman of the Federal Reserve, Janet L. Yellen , suggesting that stocks were generally overvalued added to the selling pressure. Uncertainty over how quickly interest rates will climb also weighed on markets as yields on bonds continued to rise. Some market experts say they think the Fed will have to increase its short-term rate relatively soon to fight inflation. The yield on the 10-year United States Treasury note rose to 2.25 percent, its highest level in two months.", "sentence_answer": "A comment by the chairwoman of the Federal Reserve, Janet L. Yellen , suggesting that stocks were generally overvalued added to the selling pressure.", "paragraph_id": "5d703a24c8e4820a9b66e1fd"} +{"question": "What was the average monthly payroll increase in 2013?", "paragraph": "In addition to announcing 211,000 new hires last month \u2014 a bit more than Wall Street had expected \u2014 the Labor Department also revised upward its earlier estimate of job creation in September and October by a total of 26,000 jobs. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent. The labor market strength evident in the November data removes the last major uncertainty before the Fed decision. \u201cThis is a green light from our perspective,\u201d said Phil Orlando, chief equity strategist at Federated Investors. Wall Street, which in the past has sold off after strong jobs data and the prospect of higher interest rates, greeted the report with enthusiasm, perhaps because it removes any remaining uncertainty about the Fed\u2019s plans. Stocks reversed Thursday\u2019s losses and rose more than 2 percent; bond yields fell slightly. The report on Friday echoes other recent positive data on job openings, new weekly claims for unemployment benefits and private payroll surveys, Mr. Orlando added. \u201cThis is a good number for liftoff,\u201d he said, referring to the expected move by the central bank, which has held rates near zero since December 2008. Over all, the Labor Department data painted a picture of an economy that is growing steadily and creating jobs at a healthy pace, even as wage gains remain subdued and many Americans are still stuck on the sidelines of the recovery. If hiring continues at a healthy pace next year, as most economists now predict, it could also blunt Republican criticism in the presidential campaign of Democratic economic policies, which have been a prominent target for the current crop of G.O.P. candidates. With an average monthly payroll increase of 210,000 so far this year, the 211,000 gain in November \u2014 though still subject to revision \u2014 has a metronome-like element of consistency. It is also near the average monthly increase of 199,000 in 2013 and 260,000 in 2014. \u201cFor a long time, I\u2019ve thought the labor market was in pretty good shape, and this just confirms that,\u201d said Scott Clemons, chief investment strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman in New York. After the release of the jobs report, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, Patrick T. Harker, added his voice to the chorus of Fed officials who said it was time for the central bank to raise interest rates.", "answer": "199,000", "sentence": "It is also near the average monthly increase of 199,000 in 2013 and 260,000 in 2014.", "paragraph_sentence": "In addition to announcing 211,000 new hires last month \u2014 a bit more than Wall Street had expected \u2014 the Labor Department also revised upward its earlier estimate of job creation in September and October by a total of 26,000 jobs. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent. The labor market strength evident in the November data removes the last major uncertainty before the Fed decision. \u201cThis is a green light from our perspective,\u201d said Phil Orlando, chief equity strategist at Federated Investors. Wall Street, which in the past has sold off after strong jobs data and the prospect of higher interest rates, greeted the report with enthusiasm, perhaps because it removes any remaining uncertainty about the Fed\u2019s plans. Stocks reversed Thursday\u2019s losses and rose more than 2 percent; bond yields fell slightly. The report on Friday echoes other recent positive data on job openings, new weekly claims for unemployment benefits and private payroll surveys, Mr. Orlando added. \u201cThis is a good number for liftoff,\u201d he said, referring to the expected move by the central bank, which has held rates near zero since December 2008. Over all, the Labor Department data painted a picture of an economy that is growing steadily and creating jobs at a healthy pace, even as wage gains remain subdued and many Americans are still stuck on the sidelines of the recovery. If hiring continues at a healthy pace next year, as most economists now predict, it could also blunt Republican criticism in the presidential campaign of Democratic economic policies, which have been a prominent target for the current crop of G.O.P. candidates. With an average monthly payroll increase of 210,000 so far this year, the 211,000 gain in November \u2014 though still subject to revision \u2014 has a metronome-like element of consistency. It is also near the average monthly increase of 199,000 in 2013 and 260,000 in 2014. \u201cFor a long time, I\u2019ve thought the labor market was in pretty good shape, and this just confirms that,\u201d said Scott Clemons, chief investment strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman in New York. After the release of the jobs report, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, Patrick T. Harker, added his voice to the chorus of Fed officials who said it was time for the central bank to raise interest rates.", "paragraph_answer": "In addition to announcing 211,000 new hires last month \u2014 a bit more than Wall Street had expected \u2014 the Labor Department also revised upward its earlier estimate of job creation in September and October by a total of 26,000 jobs. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent. The labor market strength evident in the November data removes the last major uncertainty before the Fed decision. \u201cThis is a green light from our perspective,\u201d said Phil Orlando, chief equity strategist at Federated Investors. Wall Street, which in the past has sold off after strong jobs data and the prospect of higher interest rates, greeted the report with enthusiasm, perhaps because it removes any remaining uncertainty about the Fed\u2019s plans. Stocks reversed Thursday\u2019s losses and rose more than 2 percent; bond yields fell slightly. The report on Friday echoes other recent positive data on job openings, new weekly claims for unemployment benefits and private payroll surveys, Mr. Orlando added. \u201cThis is a good number for liftoff,\u201d he said, referring to the expected move by the central bank, which has held rates near zero since December 2008. Over all, the Labor Department data painted a picture of an economy that is growing steadily and creating jobs at a healthy pace, even as wage gains remain subdued and many Americans are still stuck on the sidelines of the recovery. If hiring continues at a healthy pace next year, as most economists now predict, it could also blunt Republican criticism in the presidential campaign of Democratic economic policies, which have been a prominent target for the current crop of G.O.P. candidates. With an average monthly payroll increase of 210,000 so far this year, the 211,000 gain in November \u2014 though still subject to revision \u2014 has a metronome-like element of consistency. It is also near the average monthly increase of 199,000 in 2013 and 260,000 in 2014. \u201cFor a long time, I\u2019ve thought the labor market was in pretty good shape, and this just confirms that,\u201d said Scott Clemons, chief investment strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman in New York. After the release of the jobs report, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, Patrick T. Harker, added his voice to the chorus of Fed officials who said it was time for the central bank to raise interest rates.", "sentence_answer": "It is also near the average monthly increase of 199,000 in 2013 and 260,000 in 2014.", "paragraph_id": "5d702b41c8e4820a9b66d8bf"} +{"question": "Which cities started offering parental leave this year?", "paragraph": "Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees. \u201cWe always knew that we need national standards, but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave.", "answer": "several cities, including Boston and Seattle", "sentence": "Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees.", "paragraph_sentence": " Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees. \u201cWe always knew that we need national standards, but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave.", "paragraph_answer": "Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees. \u201cWe always knew that we need national standards, but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave.", "sentence_answer": "Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees.", "paragraph_id": "5d708a2dc8e4820a9b66f4d2"} +{"question": "At age 74, what did Pete Rose petition for?", "paragraph": "ROSE ON HIS BEST BEHAVIOR A product of working-class west-side Cincinnati, Pete Rose, baseball\u2019s career hits leader, was barred from the game in 1989 and finally acknowledged in 2004 that he bet on baseball. Now 74, Rose has petitioned for reinstatement, and there had been hopes locally that something might happen in time for the All-Star Game. Those hopes faded last month after ESPN said it obtained a notebook that shows Rose bet on baseball during his last season as an active player in 1986, not just afterward as manager.", "answer": "reinstatement", "sentence": "Now 74, Rose has petitioned for reinstatement , and there had been hopes locally that something might happen in time for the All-Star Game.", "paragraph_sentence": "ROSE ON HIS BEST BEHAVIOR A product of working-class west-side Cincinnati, Pete Rose, baseball\u2019s career hits leader, was barred from the game in 1989 and finally acknowledged in 2004 that he bet on baseball. Now 74, Rose has petitioned for reinstatement , and there had been hopes locally that something might happen in time for the All-Star Game. Those hopes faded last month after ESPN said it obtained a notebook that shows Rose bet on baseball during his last season as an active player in 1986, not just afterward as manager.", "paragraph_answer": "ROSE ON HIS BEST BEHAVIOR A product of working-class west-side Cincinnati, Pete Rose, baseball\u2019s career hits leader, was barred from the game in 1989 and finally acknowledged in 2004 that he bet on baseball. Now 74, Rose has petitioned for reinstatement , and there had been hopes locally that something might happen in time for the All-Star Game. Those hopes faded last month after ESPN said it obtained a notebook that shows Rose bet on baseball during his last season as an active player in 1986, not just afterward as manager.", "sentence_answer": "Now 74, Rose has petitioned for reinstatement , and there had been hopes locally that something might happen in time for the All-Star Game.", "paragraph_id": "5d7025bec8e4820a9b66d201"} +{"question": "What was the purpose of these reforms?", "paragraph": "In the wake of Thursday\u2019s attack, Mrs. Clinton made sure to acknowledge that \u201cgun ownership is part of the fabric of many American communities,\u201d before urging broad policies to address gun violence. \u201cWe must come together for common sense gun violence prevention reforms that keep weapons out of the hands of criminals and the violently unstable, while respecting responsible gun owners,\u201d she said in a statement that was unlikely to offer encouragement to proponents of stricter gun laws.", "answer": "keep weapons out of the hands of criminals", "sentence": "\u201cWe must come together for common sense gun violence prevention reforms that keep weapons out of the hands of criminals and the violently unstable, while respecting responsible gun owners,\u201d she said in a statement that was unlikely to offer encouragement to proponents of stricter gun laws.", "paragraph_sentence": "In the wake of Thursday\u2019s attack, Mrs. Clinton made sure to acknowledge that \u201cgun ownership is part of the fabric of many American communities,\u201d before urging broad policies to address gun violence. \u201cWe must come together for common sense gun violence prevention reforms that keep weapons out of the hands of criminals and the violently unstable, while respecting responsible gun owners,\u201d she said in a statement that was unlikely to offer encouragement to proponents of stricter gun laws. ", "paragraph_answer": "In the wake of Thursday\u2019s attack, Mrs. Clinton made sure to acknowledge that \u201cgun ownership is part of the fabric of many American communities,\u201d before urging broad policies to address gun violence. \u201cWe must come together for common sense gun violence prevention reforms that keep weapons out of the hands of criminals and the violently unstable, while respecting responsible gun owners,\u201d she said in a statement that was unlikely to offer encouragement to proponents of stricter gun laws.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe must come together for common sense gun violence prevention reforms that keep weapons out of the hands of criminals and the violently unstable, while respecting responsible gun owners,\u201d she said in a statement that was unlikely to offer encouragement to proponents of stricter gun laws.", "paragraph_id": "5d702a32c8e4820a9b66d7c1"} +{"question": "Which country has the political will to bail out financial institutions?", "paragraph": "Of course, the tricky part for China\u2019s government will be picking the winners and losers. As was his approach in the United States, Mr. Paulson advocates saving certain institutions, calling it \u201can unpleasant necessity\u201d and suggesting that inside China, unlike the United States, there is \u201cthe political will to bail out failing financial institutions.\u201d Also unlike the United States, it is not clear that the public will ever fully know the depths of a bank\u2019s problems. \u201cTransparency in China too often means the government having all the information,\u201d Mr. Paulson told me.", "answer": "China", "sentence": "Of course, the tricky part for China \u2019s government will be picking the winners and losers.", "paragraph_sentence": " Of course, the tricky part for China \u2019s government will be picking the winners and losers. As was his approach in the United States, Mr. Paulson advocates saving certain institutions, calling it \u201can unpleasant necessity\u201d and suggesting that inside China, unlike the United States, there is \u201cthe political will to bail out failing financial institutions.\u201d Also unlike the United States, it is not clear that the public will ever fully know the depths of a bank\u2019s problems. \u201cTransparency in China too often means the government having all the information,\u201d Mr. Paulson told me.", "paragraph_answer": "Of course, the tricky part for China \u2019s government will be picking the winners and losers. As was his approach in the United States, Mr. Paulson advocates saving certain institutions, calling it \u201can unpleasant necessity\u201d and suggesting that inside China, unlike the United States, there is \u201cthe political will to bail out failing financial institutions.\u201d Also unlike the United States, it is not clear that the public will ever fully know the depths of a bank\u2019s problems. \u201cTransparency in China too often means the government having all the information,\u201d Mr. Paulson told me.", "sentence_answer": "Of course, the tricky part for China \u2019s government will be picking the winners and losers.", "paragraph_id": "5d702c4ac8e4820a9b66d9e8"} +{"question": "What did the people of Bosso do when they heard gunfire?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe are in control of the situation,\u201d said the army officer, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly. \u201cAnybody who entered the town, nobody came out alive,\u201d the officer said. He would not say whether any troops or any civilians in Bosso had been killed. \u201cPeople heard gunfire and went home.\u201d Niger\u2019s army has troops based in Bosso, at the edge of the area of recent fighting with Boko Haram. An army detachment is always posted at the river\u2019s shallowest point, which can be easily crossed. Last week, officials in Bosso said they could hear Chadian planes bomb Boko Haram positions across the frontier. Niger\u2019s Parliament is scheduled to vote Monday on whether the country\u2019s troops will join those of Nigeria, Cameroon and Chad to take on the insurgents. Chad\u2019s troops have had notable successes over the past week in confronting Boko Haram along the Cameroon border, retaking at least one Nigerian town. But the extension of the fighting to Niger is a new phase in the war on Boko Haram. Wary of being drawn into the fight, Niger\u2019s government has been careful so far not to provoke the Islamists. Some analysts believe that the Islamists have heavily infiltrated Diffa, a regional capital in the country\u2019s far east.", "answer": "went home.", "sentence": "\u201cPeople heard gunfire and went home. \u201d Niger\u2019s army has troops based in Bosso, at the edge of the area of recent fighting with Boko Haram.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe are in control of the situation,\u201d said the army officer, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly. \u201cAnybody who entered the town, nobody came out alive,\u201d the officer said. He would not say whether any troops or any civilians in Bosso had been killed. \u201cPeople heard gunfire and went home. \u201d Niger\u2019s army has troops based in Bosso, at the edge of the area of recent fighting with Boko Haram. An army detachment is always posted at the river\u2019s shallowest point, which can be easily crossed. Last week, officials in Bosso said they could hear Chadian planes bomb Boko Haram positions across the frontier. Niger\u2019s Parliament is scheduled to vote Monday on whether the country\u2019s troops will join those of Nigeria, Cameroon and Chad to take on the insurgents. Chad\u2019s troops have had notable successes over the past week in confronting Boko Haram along the Cameroon border, retaking at least one Nigerian town. But the extension of the fighting to Niger is a new phase in the war on Boko Haram. Wary of being drawn into the fight, Niger\u2019s government has been careful so far not to provoke the Islamists. Some analysts believe that the Islamists have heavily infiltrated Diffa, a regional capital in the country\u2019s far east.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe are in control of the situation,\u201d said the army officer, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly. \u201cAnybody who entered the town, nobody came out alive,\u201d the officer said. He would not say whether any troops or any civilians in Bosso had been killed. \u201cPeople heard gunfire and went home. \u201d Niger\u2019s army has troops based in Bosso, at the edge of the area of recent fighting with Boko Haram. An army detachment is always posted at the river\u2019s shallowest point, which can be easily crossed. Last week, officials in Bosso said they could hear Chadian planes bomb Boko Haram positions across the frontier. Niger\u2019s Parliament is scheduled to vote Monday on whether the country\u2019s troops will join those of Nigeria, Cameroon and Chad to take on the insurgents. Chad\u2019s troops have had notable successes over the past week in confronting Boko Haram along the Cameroon border, retaking at least one Nigerian town. But the extension of the fighting to Niger is a new phase in the war on Boko Haram. Wary of being drawn into the fight, Niger\u2019s government has been careful so far not to provoke the Islamists. Some analysts believe that the Islamists have heavily infiltrated Diffa, a regional capital in the country\u2019s far east.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cPeople heard gunfire and went home. \u201d Niger\u2019s army has troops based in Bosso, at the edge of the area of recent fighting with Boko Haram.", "paragraph_id": "5d704f7dc8e4820a9b66eaea"} +{"question": "Who plays Ted in The Boy?", "paragraph": "9 P.M. (CUNY) WALLANDER: THE TRICKSTERS When a stable owner is found lifeless in his barn, Inspector Kurt Wallander (Krister Henriksson) is at a loss for suspects, since the man seemingly had no friends, no social life and no enemies. But a little sleuthing unearths something sinister, and with it a list of people who might have wanted the victim dead. What\u2019s Streaming Now THE BOY (2015) In the summer of 1989, a 9-year-old named Ted (Jared Breeze) is living with his father (David Morse) in a crumbling resort in the American West and collecting roadkill, whose demise he arranges for by depositing garbage on the highway. Then a drifter (Rainn Wilson) crashes his car into a large animal and is stranded at the motel, where he and Ted develop an ill-fated bond. \u201cAnd yet \u2018The Boy,\u2019 despite remarkable performances and gorgeous imagery, does not sufficiently flesh out its subject,\u201d Andy Webster wrote in The Times. (amazon.com, iTunes) THE OPEN MIND Alexander Heffner interviews Alberto Ibarg\u00fcen, the president and chief executive of the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, about disruption and innovation in contemporary media. (thirteen.org/openmind)", "answer": "Jared Breeze", "sentence": "In the summer of 1989, a 9-year-old named Ted ( Jared Breeze ) is living with his father (David Morse) in a crumbling resort in the American West and collecting roadkill, whose demise he arranges for by depositing garbage on the highway.", "paragraph_sentence": "9 P.M. (CUNY) WALLANDER: THE TRICKSTERS When a stable owner is found lifeless in his barn, Inspector Kurt Wallander (Krister Henriksson) is at a loss for suspects, since the man seemingly had no friends, no social life and no enemies. But a little sleuthing unearths something sinister, and with it a list of people who might have wanted the victim dead. What\u2019s Streaming Now THE BOY (2015) In the summer of 1989, a 9-year-old named Ted ( Jared Breeze ) is living with his father (David Morse) in a crumbling resort in the American West and collecting roadkill, whose demise he arranges for by depositing garbage on the highway. Then a drifter (Rainn Wilson) crashes his car into a large animal and is stranded at the motel, where he and Ted develop an ill-fated bond. \u201cAnd yet \u2018The Boy,\u2019 despite remarkable performances and gorgeous imagery, does not sufficiently flesh out its subject,\u201d Andy Webster wrote in The Times. (amazon.com, iTunes) THE OPEN MIND Alexander Heffner interviews Alberto Ibarg\u00fcen, the president and chief executive of the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, about disruption and innovation in contemporary media. (thirteen.org/openmind)", "paragraph_answer": "9 P.M. (CUNY) WALLANDER: THE TRICKSTERS When a stable owner is found lifeless in his barn, Inspector Kurt Wallander (Krister Henriksson) is at a loss for suspects, since the man seemingly had no friends, no social life and no enemies. But a little sleuthing unearths something sinister, and with it a list of people who might have wanted the victim dead. What\u2019s Streaming Now THE BOY (2015) In the summer of 1989, a 9-year-old named Ted ( Jared Breeze ) is living with his father (David Morse) in a crumbling resort in the American West and collecting roadkill, whose demise he arranges for by depositing garbage on the highway. Then a drifter (Rainn Wilson) crashes his car into a large animal and is stranded at the motel, where he and Ted develop an ill-fated bond. \u201cAnd yet \u2018The Boy,\u2019 despite remarkable performances and gorgeous imagery, does not sufficiently flesh out its subject,\u201d Andy Webster wrote in The Times. (amazon.com, iTunes) THE OPEN MIND Alexander Heffner interviews Alberto Ibarg\u00fcen, the president and chief executive of the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, about disruption and innovation in contemporary media. (thirteen.org/openmind)", "sentence_answer": "In the summer of 1989, a 9-year-old named Ted ( Jared Breeze ) is living with his father (David Morse) in a crumbling resort in the American West and collecting roadkill, whose demise he arranges for by depositing garbage on the highway.", "paragraph_id": "5d700bd9c8e4820a9b66b6cd"} +{"question": "what was the score of the Cavaliers vs Raptors game?", "paragraph": "Andrea Bargnani scored 25 points for the Knicks, who again played without Carmelo Anthony (knee surgery) and Jose Calderon (sore left Achilles\u2019 tendon) and have lost 10 of their last 12. THUNDER 123, 76ERS 118 Russell Westbrook set career highs with 49 points and 16 rebounds, and added 10 assists for his fourth consecutive triple-double, helping host Oklahoma City defeat Philadelphia in overtime. It was the most points by any player with a triple-double since Larry Bird also scored 49 in 1992. CAVALIERS 120, RAPTORS 112 LeBron James scored 29 points and matched a season high with 14 assists, Kevin Love had 22 points and 10 rebounds and visiting Cleveland held on to beat Toronto. Jonas Valanciunas scored 26 points and 11 rebounds, and DeMar DeRozan had 25 points for the Raptors, who lost for the sixth time in seven games.", "answer": "CAVALIERS 120, RAPTORS 112", "sentence": "CAVALIERS 120, RAPTORS 112 LeBron James scored 29 points and matched a season high with 14 assists, Kevin Love had 22 points and 10 rebounds and visiting Cleveland held on to beat Toronto.", "paragraph_sentence": "Andrea Bargnani scored 25 points for the Knicks, who again played without Carmelo Anthony (knee surgery) and Jose Calderon (sore left Achilles\u2019 tendon) and have lost 10 of their last 12. THUNDER 123, 76ERS 118 Russell Westbrook set career highs with 49 points and 16 rebounds, and added 10 assists for his fourth consecutive triple-double, helping host Oklahoma City defeat Philadelphia in overtime. It was the most points by any player with a triple-double since Larry Bird also scored 49 in 1992. CAVALIERS 120, RAPTORS 112 LeBron James scored 29 points and matched a season high with 14 assists, Kevin Love had 22 points and 10 rebounds and visiting Cleveland held on to beat Toronto. Jonas Valanciunas scored 26 points and 11 rebounds, and DeMar DeRozan had 25 points for the Raptors, who lost for the sixth time in seven games.", "paragraph_answer": "Andrea Bargnani scored 25 points for the Knicks, who again played without Carmelo Anthony (knee surgery) and Jose Calderon (sore left Achilles\u2019 tendon) and have lost 10 of their last 12. THUNDER 123, 76ERS 118 Russell Westbrook set career highs with 49 points and 16 rebounds, and added 10 assists for his fourth consecutive triple-double, helping host Oklahoma City defeat Philadelphia in overtime. It was the most points by any player with a triple-double since Larry Bird also scored 49 in 1992. CAVALIERS 120, RAPTORS 112 LeBron James scored 29 points and matched a season high with 14 assists, Kevin Love had 22 points and 10 rebounds and visiting Cleveland held on to beat Toronto. Jonas Valanciunas scored 26 points and 11 rebounds, and DeMar DeRozan had 25 points for the Raptors, who lost for the sixth time in seven games.", "sentence_answer": " CAVALIERS 120, RAPTORS 112 LeBron James scored 29 points and matched a season high with 14 assists, Kevin Love had 22 points and 10 rebounds and visiting Cleveland held on to beat Toronto.", "paragraph_id": "5d7007ebc8e4820a9b66aee4"} +{"question": "It's lowest since June 2010, to what amount did the euro fall against the dollar?", "paragraph": "The diverging paths of the two central banks prompted investors to put money into dollars, on the expectation that interest rates in the United States will rise and offer a better return than in Europe, where interest rates are falling. The euro fell to 1.20 against the dollar on Friday, its lowest since June 2010, while the yield, or market interest rate, on German two-year government bonds fell to a new low of minus 0.11 percent. The yield has been below zero since September; investors were willing to effectively pay the German government to keep their money safe. The larger picture is not merely that the dollar is gaining against the euro. Signs that the Fed is getting closer to raising its benchmark interest rate from zero have helped the United States currency to soar against its counterparts in Japan, Britain and in major emerging markets. Against a broad basket of currencies, the dollar has risen more than 13 percent since September to its highest level in almost six years.", "answer": "1.20", "sentence": "The euro fell to 1.20 against the dollar on Friday, its lowest since June 2010, while the yield, or market interest rate, on German two-year government bonds fell to a new low of minus 0.11 percent.", "paragraph_sentence": "The diverging paths of the two central banks prompted investors to put money into dollars, on the expectation that interest rates in the United States will rise and offer a better return than in Europe, where interest rates are falling. The euro fell to 1.20 against the dollar on Friday, its lowest since June 2010, while the yield, or market interest rate, on German two-year government bonds fell to a new low of minus 0.11 percent. The yield has been below zero since September; investors were willing to effectively pay the German government to keep their money safe. The larger picture is not merely that the dollar is gaining against the euro. Signs that the Fed is getting closer to raising its benchmark interest rate from zero have helped the United States currency to soar against its counterparts in Japan, Britain and in major emerging markets. Against a broad basket of currencies, the dollar has risen more than 13 percent since September to its highest level in almost six years.", "paragraph_answer": "The diverging paths of the two central banks prompted investors to put money into dollars, on the expectation that interest rates in the United States will rise and offer a better return than in Europe, where interest rates are falling. The euro fell to 1.20 against the dollar on Friday, its lowest since June 2010, while the yield, or market interest rate, on German two-year government bonds fell to a new low of minus 0.11 percent. The yield has been below zero since September; investors were willing to effectively pay the German government to keep their money safe. The larger picture is not merely that the dollar is gaining against the euro. Signs that the Fed is getting closer to raising its benchmark interest rate from zero have helped the United States currency to soar against its counterparts in Japan, Britain and in major emerging markets. Against a broad basket of currencies, the dollar has risen more than 13 percent since September to its highest level in almost six years.", "sentence_answer": "The euro fell to 1.20 against the dollar on Friday, its lowest since June 2010, while the yield, or market interest rate, on German two-year government bonds fell to a new low of minus 0.11 percent.", "paragraph_id": "5d6fb327c8e4820a9b66a7a2"} +{"question": "What type of approach does Mrs. Clinton use for her policies?", "paragraph": "\u201cA lot of what he says resonates with what you and I would call \u2018reasonable, thinking people,\u2019\u201d Mr. Rendell said. \u201cThat\u2019s the part that I think is important for Hillary or any Republican running, or Bernie Sanders, or anybody. That\u2019s the part that I think is important for them to realize.\u201d Many of Mrs. Clinton\u2019s advisers say they still doubt Mr. Trump will be the Republican nominee, but they have contemplated what it would mean for Mrs. Clinton, a policy wonk known for her 12-point plans to approach problems, to run against the visceral Mr. Trump, said several of those advisers who insisted on anonymity to discuss private conversations.", "answer": "12-point plans", "sentence": "Many of Mrs. Clinton\u2019s advisers say they still doubt Mr. Trump will be the Republican nominee, but they have contemplated what it would mean for Mrs. Clinton, a policy wonk known for her 12-point plans to approach problems, to run against the visceral Mr. Trump, said several of those advisers who insisted on anonymity to discuss private conversations.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cA lot of what he says resonates with what you and I would call \u2018reasonable, thinking people,\u2019\u201d Mr. Rendell said. \u201cThat\u2019s the part that I think is important for Hillary or any Republican running, or Bernie Sanders, or anybody. That\u2019s the part that I think is important for them to realize.\u201d Many of Mrs. Clinton\u2019s advisers say they still doubt Mr. Trump will be the Republican nominee, but they have contemplated what it would mean for Mrs. Clinton, a policy wonk known for her 12-point plans to approach problems, to run against the visceral Mr. Trump, said several of those advisers who insisted on anonymity to discuss private conversations. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cA lot of what he says resonates with what you and I would call \u2018reasonable, thinking people,\u2019\u201d Mr. Rendell said. \u201cThat\u2019s the part that I think is important for Hillary or any Republican running, or Bernie Sanders, or anybody. That\u2019s the part that I think is important for them to realize.\u201d Many of Mrs. Clinton\u2019s advisers say they still doubt Mr. Trump will be the Republican nominee, but they have contemplated what it would mean for Mrs. Clinton, a policy wonk known for her 12-point plans to approach problems, to run against the visceral Mr. Trump, said several of those advisers who insisted on anonymity to discuss private conversations.", "sentence_answer": "Many of Mrs. Clinton\u2019s advisers say they still doubt Mr. Trump will be the Republican nominee, but they have contemplated what it would mean for Mrs. Clinton, a policy wonk known for her 12-point plans to approach problems, to run against the visceral Mr. Trump, said several of those advisers who insisted on anonymity to discuss private conversations.", "paragraph_id": "5d7011e0c8e4820a9b66be56"} +{"question": "Who is Mara talking about?", "paragraph": "\u201cI don\u2019t think we\u2019re going to do anything until we actually see where he\u2019s at,\u201d Mara said. \u201cHe\u2019s a rare athlete who has played at a very high level before. He is a great kid, and we\u2019ve loved having him around here. He fits in well. \u201cI can only surmise that he\u2019s not receiving very good advice.\u201d The team could also negotiate a compromise contract for an amount based on how many games Pierre-Paul might play this season.", "answer": "Pierre-Paul", "sentence": "The team could also negotiate a compromise contract for an amount based on how many games Pierre-Paul might play this season.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI don\u2019t think we\u2019re going to do anything until we actually see where he\u2019s at,\u201d Mara said. \u201cHe\u2019s a rare athlete who has played at a very high level before. He is a great kid, and we\u2019ve loved having him around here. He fits in well. \u201cI can only surmise that he\u2019s not receiving very good advice.\u201d The team could also negotiate a compromise contract for an amount based on how many games Pierre-Paul might play this season. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI don\u2019t think we\u2019re going to do anything until we actually see where he\u2019s at,\u201d Mara said. \u201cHe\u2019s a rare athlete who has played at a very high level before. He is a great kid, and we\u2019ve loved having him around here. He fits in well. \u201cI can only surmise that he\u2019s not receiving very good advice.\u201d The team could also negotiate a compromise contract for an amount based on how many games Pierre-Paul might play this season.", "sentence_answer": "The team could also negotiate a compromise contract for an amount based on how many games Pierre-Paul might play this season.", "paragraph_id": "5d7024ecc8e4820a9b66d164"} +{"question": "Who is the co-author of Emily Post's Etiquette?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe problem with Instagram and Facebook is that they\u2019re being used by career-minded people outside the original targeted audience \u2014 the college crowd \u2014 Ms. Sternheimer said. \u201cEveryone is using it now, so smartphones are essentially monitoring our behavior,\u201d she said. \u201cPeople may be behaving better for fear of being captured doing something inappropriate without their consent.\u201d Ms. Sternheimer added that people are more careful about what they let others see, especially because they know that other employment opportunities can be hindered if they portray themselves negatively in either a work or social setting. If the web is monitoring, it\u2019s also educating us in good performance. \u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post, a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt. \u201cThe generation before the Internet watched movies and learned how to behave from them,\u201d she said, pointing to the John Hughes cult film \u201cSixteen Candles\u201d as one example. \u201cPeople acted a little drunk and goofy.\u201d", "answer": "Anna Post", "sentence": "\u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post , a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe problem with Instagram and Facebook is that they\u2019re being used by career-minded people outside the original targeted audience \u2014 the college crowd \u2014 Ms. Sternheimer said. \u201cEveryone is using it now, so smartphones are essentially monitoring our behavior,\u201d she said. \u201cPeople may be behaving better for fear of being captured doing something inappropriate without their consent.\u201d Ms. Sternheimer added that people are more careful about what they let others see, especially because they know that other employment opportunities can be hindered if they portray themselves negatively in either a work or social setting. If the web is monitoring, it\u2019s also educating us in good performance. \u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post , a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt. \u201cThe generation before the Internet watched movies and learned how to behave from them,\u201d she said, pointing to the John Hughes cult film \u201cSixteen Candles\u201d as one example. \u201cPeople acted a little drunk and goofy.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe problem with Instagram and Facebook is that they\u2019re being used by career-minded people outside the original targeted audience \u2014 the college crowd \u2014 Ms. Sternheimer said. \u201cEveryone is using it now, so smartphones are essentially monitoring our behavior,\u201d she said. \u201cPeople may be behaving better for fear of being captured doing something inappropriate without their consent.\u201d Ms. Sternheimer added that people are more careful about what they let others see, especially because they know that other employment opportunities can be hindered if they portray themselves negatively in either a work or social setting. If the web is monitoring, it\u2019s also educating us in good performance. \u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post , a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt. \u201cThe generation before the Internet watched movies and learned how to behave from them,\u201d she said, pointing to the John Hughes cult film \u201cSixteen Candles\u201d as one example. \u201cPeople acted a little drunk and goofy.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post , a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt.", "paragraph_id": "5d7016a8c8e4820a9b66c2c1"} +{"question": "Who gave Dr. Schatz the Distinguished Alumni Award?", "paragraph": "In 2009, the Mayo Clinic recognized Dr. Schatz with a Distinguished Alumni Award. A nominating letter praised his courage because \u201ccriticizing an investigation which was overseen by some of the leading figures in the American Public Health Service was an action that was, to say the very least, potentially harmful to his career.\u201d Irwin Jacob Schatz was born in St. Boniface, Manitoba, on Oct. 16, 1931, the son of Jacob Schatz and the former Reva Rechtman. His parents ran a kosher-style restaurant in Winnipeg. He earned undergraduate and medical degrees from the University of Manitoba and a fellowship from the Mayo Clinic. Besides his wife, the former Barbara Jane Binder, his survivors include his sons, Jacob, Edward, Stephen and Brian, who is a United States senator from Hawaii; nine grandchildren; and a sister, Bea Berger.", "answer": "In 2009, the Mayo Clinic recognized Dr. Schatz with a Distinguished Alumni Award.", "sentence": "In 2009, the Mayo Clinic recognized Dr. Schatz with a Distinguished Alumni Award. A nominating letter praised his courage because \u201ccriticizing an investigation which was overseen by some of the leading figures in the American Public Health Service was an action that was, to say the very least, potentially harmful to his career.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " In 2009, the Mayo Clinic recognized Dr. Schatz with a Distinguished Alumni Award. A nominating letter praised his courage because \u201ccriticizing an investigation which was overseen by some of the leading figures in the American Public Health Service was an action that was, to say the very least, potentially harmful to his career.\u201d Irwin Jacob Schatz was born in St. Boniface, Manitoba, on Oct. 16, 1931, the son of Jacob Schatz and the former Reva Rechtman. His parents ran a kosher-style restaurant in Winnipeg. He earned undergraduate and medical degrees from the University of Manitoba and a fellowship from the Mayo Clinic. Besides his wife, the former Barbara Jane Binder, his survivors include his sons, Jacob, Edward, Stephen and Brian, who is a United States senator from Hawaii; nine grandchildren; and a sister, Bea Berger.", "paragraph_answer": " In 2009, the Mayo Clinic recognized Dr. Schatz with a Distinguished Alumni Award. A nominating letter praised his courage because \u201ccriticizing an investigation which was overseen by some of the leading figures in the American Public Health Service was an action that was, to say the very least, potentially harmful to his career.\u201d Irwin Jacob Schatz was born in St. Boniface, Manitoba, on Oct. 16, 1931, the son of Jacob Schatz and the former Reva Rechtman. His parents ran a kosher-style restaurant in Winnipeg. He earned undergraduate and medical degrees from the University of Manitoba and a fellowship from the Mayo Clinic. Besides his wife, the former Barbara Jane Binder, his survivors include his sons, Jacob, Edward, Stephen and Brian, who is a United States senator from Hawaii; nine grandchildren; and a sister, Bea Berger.", "sentence_answer": " In 2009, the Mayo Clinic recognized Dr. Schatz with a Distinguished Alumni Award. A nominating letter praised his courage because \u201ccriticizing an investigation which was overseen by some of the leading figures in the American Public Health Service was an action that was, to say the very least, potentially harmful to his career.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d70224ac8e4820a9b66ce55"} +{"question": "What was the offensive license plate number in question?", "paragraph": "Last year, the crew fled Argentina after being attacked by local residents during the filming of an episode in which Mr. Clarkson drove a Porsche sports car with the license plate H982 FKL, which some took as a reference to the British victory over Argentina in the 1982 Falklands War. Mr. Clarkson and his team insisted \u2014 with a wink \u2014 that they had no idea what the license plate meant. But most observers saw it as a typical Clarkson ploy to seem both naughty and patriotic. In May 2014, in film not intended for broadcast, Mr. Clarkson seemed to use a racist term while reciting the \u201ceeny, meeny, miney, moe\u201d rhyme. He denied uttering an offensive word but acknowledged \u201cthat it sounds like I did.\u201d He has also been accused of racist comments aimed at Indians, Mexicans and Asians.", "answer": "H982 FKL", "sentence": "Last year, the crew fled Argentina after being attacked by local residents during the filming of an episode in which Mr. Clarkson drove a Porsche sports car with the license plate H982 FKL , which some took as a reference to the British victory over Argentina in the 1982 Falklands War.", "paragraph_sentence": " Last year, the crew fled Argentina after being attacked by local residents during the filming of an episode in which Mr. Clarkson drove a Porsche sports car with the license plate H982 FKL , which some took as a reference to the British victory over Argentina in the 1982 Falklands War. Mr. Clarkson and his team insisted \u2014 with a wink \u2014 that they had no idea what the license plate meant. But most observers saw it as a typical Clarkson ploy to seem both naughty and patriotic. In May 2014, in film not intended for broadcast, Mr. Clarkson seemed to use a racist term while reciting the \u201ceeny, meeny, miney, moe\u201d rhyme. He denied uttering an offensive word but acknowledged \u201cthat it sounds like I did.\u201d He has also been accused of racist comments aimed at Indians, Mexicans and Asians.", "paragraph_answer": "Last year, the crew fled Argentina after being attacked by local residents during the filming of an episode in which Mr. Clarkson drove a Porsche sports car with the license plate H982 FKL , which some took as a reference to the British victory over Argentina in the 1982 Falklands War. Mr. Clarkson and his team insisted \u2014 with a wink \u2014 that they had no idea what the license plate meant. But most observers saw it as a typical Clarkson ploy to seem both naughty and patriotic. In May 2014, in film not intended for broadcast, Mr. Clarkson seemed to use a racist term while reciting the \u201ceeny, meeny, miney, moe\u201d rhyme. He denied uttering an offensive word but acknowledged \u201cthat it sounds like I did.\u201d He has also been accused of racist comments aimed at Indians, Mexicans and Asians.", "sentence_answer": "Last year, the crew fled Argentina after being attacked by local residents during the filming of an episode in which Mr. Clarkson drove a Porsche sports car with the license plate H982 FKL , which some took as a reference to the British victory over Argentina in the 1982 Falklands War.", "paragraph_id": "5d70061dc8e4820a9b66aa89"} +{"question": "Who is Keith Brown?", "paragraph": "The local police department, however, announced on April 16 that an autopsy determined the cause to be \u201csynthetic cannabinoid intoxication.\u201d The increases in cases in Mississippi and Alabama demonstrate the challenge facing law enforcement officials. Last year, D.E.A. agents made about 40 arrests and seized more than 400 pounds of synthetic drugs in those states as part of a wider national operation. Yet supply chains clearly remain. \u201cIs it frustrating? Yes, but when you\u2019re in this business what you come to understand is that total eradication of a drug threat just isn\u2019t going to happen,\u201d said Keith Brown, the special agent in charge of the D.E.A.\u2019s New Orleans field division, which covers Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi. \u201cUntil we can control the demand there\u2019s going to be someone with supply.\u201d", "answer": "the special agent in charge of the D.E.A.\u2019s New Orleans field division", "sentence": "Yes, but when you\u2019re in this business what you come to understand is that total eradication of a drug threat just isn\u2019t going to happen,\u201d said Keith Brown, the special agent in charge of the D.E.A.\u2019s New Orleans field division , which covers Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi.", "paragraph_sentence": "The local police department, however, announced on April 16 that an autopsy determined the cause to be \u201csynthetic cannabinoid intoxication.\u201d The increases in cases in Mississippi and Alabama demonstrate the challenge facing law enforcement officials. Last year, D.E.A. agents made about 40 arrests and seized more than 400 pounds of synthetic drugs in those states as part of a wider national operation. Yet supply chains clearly remain. \u201cIs it frustrating? Yes, but when you\u2019re in this business what you come to understand is that total eradication of a drug threat just isn\u2019t going to happen,\u201d said Keith Brown, the special agent in charge of the D.E.A.\u2019s New Orleans field division , which covers Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi. \u201cUntil we can control the demand there\u2019s going to be someone with supply.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The local police department, however, announced on April 16 that an autopsy determined the cause to be \u201csynthetic cannabinoid intoxication.\u201d The increases in cases in Mississippi and Alabama demonstrate the challenge facing law enforcement officials. Last year, D.E.A. agents made about 40 arrests and seized more than 400 pounds of synthetic drugs in those states as part of a wider national operation. Yet supply chains clearly remain. \u201cIs it frustrating? Yes, but when you\u2019re in this business what you come to understand is that total eradication of a drug threat just isn\u2019t going to happen,\u201d said Keith Brown, the special agent in charge of the D.E.A.\u2019s New Orleans field division , which covers Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi. \u201cUntil we can control the demand there\u2019s going to be someone with supply.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Yes, but when you\u2019re in this business what you come to understand is that total eradication of a drug threat just isn\u2019t going to happen,\u201d said Keith Brown, the special agent in charge of the D.E.A.\u2019s New Orleans field division , which covers Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi.", "paragraph_id": "5d700de8c8e4820a9b66b99d"} +{"question": "Which company tapes a wresting even at the school campus?", "paragraph": "\u201cI didn\u2019t want to get in a class and just read books,\u201d Mr. Carmona Astor said. \u201cI wanted to go somewhere where you could immediately get your hands busy.\u201d Mr. Franko noted the opportunity for real-world education through on-campus partnerships. The professional wrestling company WWE tapes an online program called \u201cNXT\u201d at the university. A nationally syndicated morning program, \u201cThe Daily Buzz,\u201d is also taped on a Full Sail soundstage. \u201cThat show puts real-world pressure on students,\u201d Mr. Franko said. Full Sail has successful alumni. Gary A. Rizzo, a 1993 recording arts graduate, has been nominated for four sound-mixing Oscars, winning in 2011 for Christopher Nolan\u2019s \u201cInception.\u201d More than 100 graduates worked on movies that got at least one nomination at the most recent Oscars, Mr. Franko said.", "answer": "WWE", "sentence": "The professional wrestling company WWE tapes an online program called \u201cNXT\u201d at the university.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI didn\u2019t want to get in a class and just read books,\u201d Mr. Carmona Astor said. \u201cI wanted to go somewhere where you could immediately get your hands busy.\u201d Mr. Franko noted the opportunity for real-world education through on-campus partnerships. The professional wrestling company WWE tapes an online program called \u201cNXT\u201d at the university. A nationally syndicated morning program, \u201cThe Daily Buzz,\u201d is also taped on a Full Sail soundstage. \u201cThat show puts real-world pressure on students,\u201d Mr. Franko said. Full Sail has successful alumni. Gary A. Rizzo, a 1993 recording arts graduate, has been nominated for four sound-mixing Oscars, winning in 2011 for Christopher Nolan\u2019s \u201cInception.\u201d More than 100 graduates worked on movies that got at least one nomination at the most recent Oscars, Mr. Franko said.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI didn\u2019t want to get in a class and just read books,\u201d Mr. Carmona Astor said. \u201cI wanted to go somewhere where you could immediately get your hands busy.\u201d Mr. Franko noted the opportunity for real-world education through on-campus partnerships. The professional wrestling company WWE tapes an online program called \u201cNXT\u201d at the university. A nationally syndicated morning program, \u201cThe Daily Buzz,\u201d is also taped on a Full Sail soundstage. \u201cThat show puts real-world pressure on students,\u201d Mr. Franko said. Full Sail has successful alumni. Gary A. Rizzo, a 1993 recording arts graduate, has been nominated for four sound-mixing Oscars, winning in 2011 for Christopher Nolan\u2019s \u201cInception.\u201d More than 100 graduates worked on movies that got at least one nomination at the most recent Oscars, Mr. Franko said.", "sentence_answer": "The professional wrestling company WWE tapes an online program called \u201cNXT\u201d at the university.", "paragraph_id": "5d702b26c8e4820a9b66d898"} +{"question": "What time is \"The Dreamers\" on tonight on Starz Cinema?", "paragraph": "8:05 P.M. (Starz Cinema) THE DREAMERS (2004) Louis Garrel (top), Eva Green (center) and Michael Pitt (above) portray the points of a photogenic triangle in this drama from Bernardo Bertolucci (\u201cLast Tango in Paris\u201d) about an American who befriends French twins in Paris during the 1968 student riots. This adaptation of Gilbert Adair\u2019s novel \u201cThe Holy Innocents\u201d is \u201cdisarmingly sweet and completely enchanting,\u201d A. O. Scott wrote in The New York Times. \u201cThe sex in this movie is, as measured by the display of body parts and the amount of time the actors spend out of their clothes, more explicit than even the most notorious scenes in \u2018Last Tango,\u2019 \u201d he said. \u201cBut it is hard to imagine a voyeur more benevolent than Mr. Bertolucci, whose eager scrutiny of the eros of the young is, like Jeremy Irons\u2019s in \u2018Stealing Beauty,\u2019 less a matter of prurience than of an honest, nostalgic appreciation of natural human vitality.\u201d 8:30 P.M. (TV5Monde) ELLES \u00c9TAIENT EN GUERRE (1914-18) Nathalie Baye narrates this 2014 French documentary, which examines World War I from the perspective of Marie Curie, Edith Wharton, Mata Hari, Rosa Luxemburg and Louise Bodin.", "answer": "8:05 P.M.", "sentence": "8:05 P.M. (Starz Cinema)", "paragraph_sentence": " 8:05 P.M. (Starz Cinema) THE DREAMERS (2004) Louis Garrel (top), Eva Green (center) and Michael Pitt (above) portray the points of a photogenic triangle in this drama from Bernardo Bertolucci (\u201cLast Tango in Paris\u201d) about an American who befriends French twins in Paris during the 1968 student riots. This adaptation of Gilbert Adair\u2019s novel \u201cThe Holy Innocents\u201d is \u201cdisarmingly sweet and completely enchanting,\u201d A. O. Scott wrote in The New York Times. \u201cThe sex in this movie is, as measured by the display of body parts and the amount of time the actors spend out of their clothes, more explicit than even the most notorious scenes in \u2018Last Tango,\u2019 \u201d he said. \u201cBut it is hard to imagine a voyeur more benevolent than Mr. Bertolucci, whose eager scrutiny of the eros of the young is, like Jeremy Irons\u2019s in \u2018Stealing Beauty,\u2019 less a matter of prurience than of an honest, nostalgic appreciation of natural human vitality.\u201d 8:30 P.M. (TV5Monde) ELLES \u00c9TAIENT EN GUERRE (1914-18) Nathalie Baye narrates this 2014 French documentary, which examines World War I from the perspective of Marie Curie, Edith Wharton, Mata Hari, Rosa Luxemburg and Louise Bodin.", "paragraph_answer": " 8:05 P.M. (Starz Cinema) THE DREAMERS (2004) Louis Garrel (top), Eva Green (center) and Michael Pitt (above) portray the points of a photogenic triangle in this drama from Bernardo Bertolucci (\u201cLast Tango in Paris\u201d) about an American who befriends French twins in Paris during the 1968 student riots. This adaptation of Gilbert Adair\u2019s novel \u201cThe Holy Innocents\u201d is \u201cdisarmingly sweet and completely enchanting,\u201d A. O. Scott wrote in The New York Times. \u201cThe sex in this movie is, as measured by the display of body parts and the amount of time the actors spend out of their clothes, more explicit than even the most notorious scenes in \u2018Last Tango,\u2019 \u201d he said. \u201cBut it is hard to imagine a voyeur more benevolent than Mr. Bertolucci, whose eager scrutiny of the eros of the young is, like Jeremy Irons\u2019s in \u2018Stealing Beauty,\u2019 less a matter of prurience than of an honest, nostalgic appreciation of natural human vitality.\u201d 8:30 P.M. (TV5Monde) ELLES \u00c9TAIENT EN GUERRE (1914-18) Nathalie Baye narrates this 2014 French documentary, which examines World War I from the perspective of Marie Curie, Edith Wharton, Mata Hari, Rosa Luxemburg and Louise Bodin.", "sentence_answer": " 8:05 P.M. (Starz Cinema)", "paragraph_id": "5d7050dec8e4820a9b66eb63"} +{"question": "Who interviewed Gehry?", "paragraph": "When Goldberger describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated. Gehry says he opposed the name change. \u201cI didn\u2019t want to do it. You have to understand, I was super lefty, I was involved with liberal causes,\u201d Goldberger quotes him saying. Gehry felt it was \u201ca cop-out.\u201d But Anita, the woman he had recently married, insisted. She was Jewish too, but her maiden name of \u201cSnyder\u201d had been less telling, and she had no use for \u201cGoldberg.\u201d Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected. Frank, declaring his wife \u201cone tough operator,\u201d tells Goldberger: \u201cIf you knew Anita, you knew that I had to do it. I had no way out. I was in a corner.\u201d He invented the spelling \u201cGehry\u201d to simulate Goldberg by starting with G, maintaining a high-profile letter in the middle, and ending with a tail.", "answer": "Goldberger", "sentence": "When Goldberger describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated.", "paragraph_sentence": " When Goldberger describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated. Gehry says he opposed the name change. \u201cI didn\u2019t want to do it. You have to understand, I was super lefty, I was involved with liberal causes,\u201d Goldberger quotes him saying. Gehry felt it was \u201ca cop-out.\u201d But Anita, the woman he had recently married, insisted. She was Jewish too, but her maiden name of \u201cSnyder\u201d had been less telling, and she had no use for \u201cGoldberg.\u201d Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected. Frank, declaring his wife \u201cone tough operator,\u201d tells Goldberger: \u201cIf you knew Anita, you knew that I had to do it. I had no way out. I was in a corner.\u201d He invented the spelling \u201cGehry\u201d to simulate Goldberg by starting with G, maintaining a high-profile letter in the middle, and ending with a tail.", "paragraph_answer": "When Goldberger describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated. Gehry says he opposed the name change. \u201cI didn\u2019t want to do it. You have to understand, I was super lefty, I was involved with liberal causes,\u201d Goldberger quotes him saying. Gehry felt it was \u201ca cop-out.\u201d But Anita, the woman he had recently married, insisted. She was Jewish too, but her maiden name of \u201cSnyder\u201d had been less telling, and she had no use for \u201cGoldberg.\u201d Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected. Frank, declaring his wife \u201cone tough operator,\u201d tells Goldberger: \u201cIf you knew Anita, you knew that I had to do it. I had no way out. I was in a corner.\u201d He invented the spelling \u201cGehry\u201d to simulate Goldberg by starting with G, maintaining a high-profile letter in the middle, and ending with a tail.", "sentence_answer": "When Goldberger describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated.", "paragraph_id": "5d70101dc8e4820a9b66bc38"} +{"question": "Which country does not have the political will to bail out financial institutions?", "paragraph": "Of course, the tricky part for China\u2019s government will be picking the winners and losers. As was his approach in the United States, Mr. Paulson advocates saving certain institutions, calling it \u201can unpleasant necessity\u201d and suggesting that inside China, unlike the United States, there is \u201cthe political will to bail out failing financial institutions.\u201d Also unlike the United States, it is not clear that the public will ever fully know the depths of a bank\u2019s problems. \u201cTransparency in China too often means the government having all the information,\u201d Mr. Paulson told me.", "answer": "a bank\u2019s problems", "sentence": "Also unlike the United States, it is not clear that the public will ever fully know the depths of a bank\u2019s problems .", "paragraph_sentence": "Of course, the tricky part for China\u2019s government will be picking the winners and losers. As was his approach in the United States, Mr. Paulson advocates saving certain institutions, calling it \u201can unpleasant necessity\u201d and suggesting that inside China, unlike the United States, there is \u201cthe political will to bail out failing financial institutions.\u201d Also unlike the United States, it is not clear that the public will ever fully know the depths of a bank\u2019s problems . \u201cTransparency in China too often means the government having all the information,\u201d Mr. Paulson told me.", "paragraph_answer": "Of course, the tricky part for China\u2019s government will be picking the winners and losers. As was his approach in the United States, Mr. Paulson advocates saving certain institutions, calling it \u201can unpleasant necessity\u201d and suggesting that inside China, unlike the United States, there is \u201cthe political will to bail out failing financial institutions.\u201d Also unlike the United States, it is not clear that the public will ever fully know the depths of a bank\u2019s problems . \u201cTransparency in China too often means the government having all the information,\u201d Mr. Paulson told me.", "sentence_answer": "Also unlike the United States, it is not clear that the public will ever fully know the depths of a bank\u2019s problems .", "paragraph_id": "5d702c4ac8e4820a9b66d9e9"} +{"question": "How many seats in the Parliament did the smaller parties win?", "paragraph": "BANGKOK \u2014 Myanmar\u2019s election commission on Friday announced the final tally of the country\u2019s Nov. 8 landmark election, a rout by the opposition, led by the Nobel Peace Prize laureate Daw Aung San Suu Kyi. Her party, the National League for Democracy, won 390 seats compared with 42 for the governing party, a state-run television station reported in its Friday evening broadcast. The remaining 59 available seats in Parliament were won by smaller parties. One-quarter of the seats were not contested and are controlled by the military.", "answer": "59 available seats", "sentence": "The remaining 59 available seats in Parliament were won by smaller parties.", "paragraph_sentence": "BANGKOK \u2014 Myanmar\u2019s election commission on Friday announced the final tally of the country\u2019s Nov. 8 landmark election, a rout by the opposition, led by the Nobel Peace Prize laureate Daw Aung San Suu Kyi. Her party, the National League for Democracy, won 390 seats compared with 42 for the governing party, a state-run television station reported in its Friday evening broadcast. The remaining 59 available seats in Parliament were won by smaller parties. One-quarter of the seats were not contested and are controlled by the military.", "paragraph_answer": "BANGKOK \u2014 Myanmar\u2019s election commission on Friday announced the final tally of the country\u2019s Nov. 8 landmark election, a rout by the opposition, led by the Nobel Peace Prize laureate Daw Aung San Suu Kyi. Her party, the National League for Democracy, won 390 seats compared with 42 for the governing party, a state-run television station reported in its Friday evening broadcast. The remaining 59 available seats in Parliament were won by smaller parties. One-quarter of the seats were not contested and are controlled by the military.", "sentence_answer": "The remaining 59 available seats in Parliament were won by smaller parties.", "paragraph_id": "5d700771c8e4820a9b66ad9a"} +{"question": "What did the unearthed trove of documents show?", "paragraph": "As an accidental public service, this deed was little known until recently, when a trove of documents unearthed by several news organizations showed What Exxon Knew and When It Knew It. And it was reported Thursday that the New York attorney general is starting an investigation to determine whether the company lied about the risks of climate change.", "answer": "What Exxon Knew and When It Knew It", "sentence": "As an accidental public service, this deed was little known until recently, when a trove of documents unearthed by several news organizations showed What Exxon Knew and When It Knew It .", "paragraph_sentence": " As an accidental public service, this deed was little known until recently, when a trove of documents unearthed by several news organizations showed What Exxon Knew and When It Knew It . And it was reported Thursday that the New York attorney general is starting an investigation to determine whether the company lied about the risks of climate change.", "paragraph_answer": "As an accidental public service, this deed was little known until recently, when a trove of documents unearthed by several news organizations showed What Exxon Knew and When It Knew It . And it was reported Thursday that the New York attorney general is starting an investigation to determine whether the company lied about the risks of climate change.", "sentence_answer": "As an accidental public service, this deed was little known until recently, when a trove of documents unearthed by several news organizations showed What Exxon Knew and When It Knew It .", "paragraph_id": "5d702036c8e4820a9b66cbea"} +{"question": "Which gallery is the Photographic Moment show in?", "paragraph": "RAHWAY Union County Performing Arts Center \u201cHurlyburly,\u201d play by David Rabe and directed by Michael Burdick. July 10 through 19. $20. Union County Performing Arts Center, 1601 Irving Street. 732-499-8226; ucpac.org. WEST WINDSOR Kelsey Theater, West Windsor Campus, Mercer County Community College \u201cGuys and Dolls,\u201d with music and lyrics by Frank Loesser. July 10 through 19. $16 to $20. Kelsey Theater, West Windsor Campus, Mercer County Community College, 1200 Old Trenton Road. 609-570-3333; www.kelseytheatre.net. Museums and Galleries ASBURY PARK Heaven Gallery \u201cPhotographic Memoir,\u201d Tim Horn and Maribel Guerrero. Through June 28. Sundays, Mondays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Fridays, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Heaven Gallery, 721 Cookman Avenue. heavengallery.net; 732-774-4799. ASBURY PARK Palette Gallery/ArtsSpace Palette Gallery/ArtsSpace \u201cCritters,\u201d artworks. Through June 28. Palette Gallery/ArtsSpace, 716 Cookman Avenue. 201-981-2395. ASBURY PARK Parlor Gallery \u201cBeautiful Squalor,\u201d works by Max Kauffman and Jesse Reno. Through July 19. Wednesdays and Thursdays, noon to 7 p.m.; Fridays and Saturdays, noon to 9 p.m.; Sundays, noon to 6 p.m. Parlor Gallery, 717 Cookman Avenue. 732-869-0606; parlor-gallery.com. BRANCHBURG Raritan Valley Community College The 12th Annual Creativity Expo, featuring artworks by brain injury survivors at the art gallery. July 11 through 19. Reception: July 11, from noon to 4 p.m. $27 and $32. Raritan Valley Community College, Route 28 and Lamington Road. 908-526-1200; raritanval.edu. CLIFTON Clifton Arts Center \u201cA Humanist Vision: The Paintings and Drawings of Michael Lenson.\u201d Through July 25. $3. Wednesdays through Saturdays, 1 to 4 p.m. Clifton Arts Center, 900 Clifton Avenue. 973-472-5499; cliftonnj.org. CLINTON Hunterdon Art Museum \u201cThe Collage Journal: The First Decade,\u201d the Art of Peter Jacobs. Through Sept. 6. \u201cNew Works on Paper,\u201d solo show by Lisa Macchi, abstract expressionist works. Through Sept. 30. Sundays and Tuesdays through Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Hunterdon Museum of Art, 7 Lower Center Street. 908-735-8415; hunterdonartmuseum.org.", "answer": "Heaven Gallery", "sentence": "Museums and Galleries ASBURY PARK Heaven Gallery \u201cPhotographic Memoir,\u201d Tim Horn and Maribel Guerrero.", "paragraph_sentence": "RAHWAY Union County Performing Arts Center \u201cHurlyburly,\u201d play by David Rabe and directed by Michael Burdick. July 10 through 19. $20. Union County Performing Arts Center, 1601 Irving Street. 732-499-8226; ucpac.org. WEST WINDSOR Kelsey Theater, West Windsor Campus, Mercer County Community College \u201cGuys and Dolls,\u201d with music and lyrics by Frank Loesser. July 10 through 19. $16 to $20. Kelsey Theater, West Windsor Campus, Mercer County Community College, 1200 Old Trenton Road. 609-570-3333; www.kelseytheatre.net. Museums and Galleries ASBURY PARK Heaven Gallery \u201cPhotographic Memoir,\u201d Tim Horn and Maribel Guerrero. Through June 28. Sundays, Mondays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Fridays, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Heaven Gallery, 721 Cookman Avenue. heavengallery.net; 732-774-4799. ASBURY PARK Palette Gallery/ArtsSpace Palette Gallery/ArtsSpace \u201cCritters,\u201d artworks. Through June 28. Palette Gallery/ArtsSpace, 716 Cookman Avenue. 201-981-2395. ASBURY PARK Parlor Gallery \u201cBeautiful Squalor,\u201d works by Max Kauffman and Jesse Reno. Through July 19. Wednesdays and Thursdays, noon to 7 p.m.; Fridays and Saturdays, noon to 9 p.m.; Sundays, noon to 6 p.m. Parlor Gallery, 717 Cookman Avenue. 732-869-0606; parlor-gallery.com. BRANCHBURG Raritan Valley Community College The 12th Annual Creativity Expo, featuring artworks by brain injury survivors at the art gallery. July 11 through 19. Reception: July 11, from noon to 4 p.m. $27 and $32. Raritan Valley Community College, Route 28 and Lamington Road. 908-526-1200; raritanval.edu. CLIFTON Clifton Arts Center \u201cA Humanist Vision: The Paintings and Drawings of Michael Lenson.\u201d Through July 25. $3. Wednesdays through Saturdays, 1 to 4 p.m. Clifton Arts Center, 900 Clifton Avenue. 973-472-5499; cliftonnj.org. CLINTON Hunterdon Art Museum \u201cThe Collage Journal: The First Decade,\u201d the Art of Peter Jacobs. Through Sept. 6. \u201cNew Works on Paper,\u201d solo show by Lisa Macchi, abstract expressionist works. Through Sept. 30. Sundays and Tuesdays through Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Hunterdon Museum of Art, 7 Lower Center Street. 908-735-8415; hunterdonartmuseum.org.", "paragraph_answer": "RAHWAY Union County Performing Arts Center \u201cHurlyburly,\u201d play by David Rabe and directed by Michael Burdick. July 10 through 19. $20. Union County Performing Arts Center, 1601 Irving Street. 732-499-8226; ucpac.org. WEST WINDSOR Kelsey Theater, West Windsor Campus, Mercer County Community College \u201cGuys and Dolls,\u201d with music and lyrics by Frank Loesser. July 10 through 19. $16 to $20. Kelsey Theater, West Windsor Campus, Mercer County Community College, 1200 Old Trenton Road. 609-570-3333; www.kelseytheatre.net. Museums and Galleries ASBURY PARK Heaven Gallery \u201cPhotographic Memoir,\u201d Tim Horn and Maribel Guerrero. Through June 28. Sundays, Mondays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Fridays, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Heaven Gallery, 721 Cookman Avenue. heavengallery.net; 732-774-4799. ASBURY PARK Palette Gallery/ArtsSpace Palette Gallery/ArtsSpace \u201cCritters,\u201d artworks. Through June 28. Palette Gallery/ArtsSpace, 716 Cookman Avenue. 201-981-2395. ASBURY PARK Parlor Gallery \u201cBeautiful Squalor,\u201d works by Max Kauffman and Jesse Reno. Through July 19. Wednesdays and Thursdays, noon to 7 p.m.; Fridays and Saturdays, noon to 9 p.m.; Sundays, noon to 6 p.m. Parlor Gallery, 717 Cookman Avenue. 732-869-0606; parlor-gallery.com. BRANCHBURG Raritan Valley Community College The 12th Annual Creativity Expo, featuring artworks by brain injury survivors at the art gallery. July 11 through 19. Reception: July 11, from noon to 4 p.m. $27 and $32. Raritan Valley Community College, Route 28 and Lamington Road. 908-526-1200; raritanval.edu. CLIFTON Clifton Arts Center \u201cA Humanist Vision: The Paintings and Drawings of Michael Lenson.\u201d Through July 25. $3. Wednesdays through Saturdays, 1 to 4 p.m. Clifton Arts Center, 900 Clifton Avenue. 973-472-5499; cliftonnj.org. CLINTON Hunterdon Art Museum \u201cThe Collage Journal: The First Decade,\u201d the Art of Peter Jacobs. Through Sept. 6. \u201cNew Works on Paper,\u201d solo show by Lisa Macchi, abstract expressionist works. Through Sept. 30. Sundays and Tuesdays through Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Hunterdon Museum of Art, 7 Lower Center Street. 908-735-8415; hunterdonartmuseum.org.", "sentence_answer": "Museums and Galleries ASBURY PARK Heaven Gallery \u201cPhotographic Memoir,\u201d Tim Horn and Maribel Guerrero.", "paragraph_id": "5d700b12c8e4820a9b66b56c"} +{"question": "Who insisted on firing the woman who rightly accused Thomas of harassment?", "paragraph": "Dolan announced that Thomas, a Hall of Fame point guard, would serve as president of the W.N.B.A.\u2019s Liberty, the city\u2019s women\u2019s basketball team. \u201cWe believe Isiah belongs in basketball,\u201d Madison Square Garden officials said in a statement, \u201cand are grateful that he has committed his considerable talent to help the Liberty succeed.\u201d This statement is fine as far as it goes, particularly if you\u2019ve suffered catastrophic memory loss. Thomas and Dolan last roamed together in the corporate suites at the Garden in 2008. A year before that, a jury found that Thomas had sexually harassed a team executive in the crudest of terms. The executive, now known professionally as Anucha Browne, testified that Thomas had used misogynistic slurs. When she complained to top officials at the Garden, Dolan personally insisted on firing her. Who among us does not believe in repentance and second chances? I called to ask the Garden about Thomas and the boss. Have the two men repented? Do they have second thoughts? Or have they rethought their first thoughts? This email statement arrived in my inbox:", "answer": "Dolan personally insisted on firing her.", "sentence": "When she complained to top officials at the Garden, Dolan personally insisted on firing her. Who among us does not believe in repentance and second chances?", "paragraph_sentence": "Dolan announced that Thomas, a Hall of Fame point guard, would serve as president of the W.N.B.A.\u2019s Liberty, the city\u2019s women\u2019s basketball team. \u201cWe believe Isiah belongs in basketball,\u201d Madison Square Garden officials said in a statement, \u201cand are grateful that he has committed his considerable talent to help the Liberty succeed.\u201d This statement is fine as far as it goes, particularly if you\u2019ve suffered catastrophic memory loss. Thomas and Dolan last roamed together in the corporate suites at the Garden in 2008. A year before that, a jury found that Thomas had sexually harassed a team executive in the crudest of terms. The executive, now known professionally as Anucha Browne, testified that Thomas had used misogynistic slurs. When she complained to top officials at the Garden, Dolan personally insisted on firing her. Who among us does not believe in repentance and second chances? I called to ask the Garden about Thomas and the boss. Have the two men repented? Do they have second thoughts? Or have they rethought their first thoughts? This email statement arrived in my inbox:", "paragraph_answer": "Dolan announced that Thomas, a Hall of Fame point guard, would serve as president of the W.N.B.A.\u2019s Liberty, the city\u2019s women\u2019s basketball team. \u201cWe believe Isiah belongs in basketball,\u201d Madison Square Garden officials said in a statement, \u201cand are grateful that he has committed his considerable talent to help the Liberty succeed.\u201d This statement is fine as far as it goes, particularly if you\u2019ve suffered catastrophic memory loss. Thomas and Dolan last roamed together in the corporate suites at the Garden in 2008. A year before that, a jury found that Thomas had sexually harassed a team executive in the crudest of terms. The executive, now known professionally as Anucha Browne, testified that Thomas had used misogynistic slurs. When she complained to top officials at the Garden, Dolan personally insisted on firing her. Who among us does not believe in repentance and second chances? I called to ask the Garden about Thomas and the boss. Have the two men repented? Do they have second thoughts? Or have they rethought their first thoughts? This email statement arrived in my inbox:", "sentence_answer": "When she complained to top officials at the Garden, Dolan personally insisted on firing her. Who among us does not believe in repentance and second chances?", "paragraph_id": "5d7041a2c8e4820a9b66e5b6"} +{"question": "Is the writer in the majority of user opinions on this essay?", "paragraph": "I love the calm snarkiness of this essay, and it went right over the heads of some making comments here. If there is ever a moment where I am made to feel like a consumer, it is when I have already bought a ticket and am waiting to board. Everyone has been assigned literally several different levels of gold and silver status. It is hilarious and sad. I don\u2019t take it seriously since the costs of tickets is absurd anyway. Roger of Queens: As an infrequent flier with a status somewhere between lead and copper, I am quite pleased with the fact that there are people willing to pay $1,000 for a round trip from N.Y.C. to San Diego, in return for an extra few inches of legroom and a free cocktail. Thanks to their subsidy, I can make the same trip in the back of the plane for $400, which barely even covers my share of the fuel cost.", "answer": "it went right over the heads of some making comments here", "sentence": "I love the calm snarkiness of this essay, and it went right over the heads of some making comments here .", "paragraph_sentence": " I love the calm snarkiness of this essay, and it went right over the heads of some making comments here . If there is ever a moment where I am made to feel like a consumer, it is when I have already bought a ticket and am waiting to board. Everyone has been assigned literally several different levels of gold and silver status. It is hilarious and sad. I don\u2019t take it seriously since the costs of tickets is absurd anyway. Roger of Queens: As an infrequent flier with a status somewhere between lead and copper, I am quite pleased with the fact that there are people willing to pay $1,000 for a round trip from N.Y.C. to San Diego, in return for an extra few inches of legroom and a free cocktail. Thanks to their subsidy, I can make the same trip in the back of the plane for $400, which barely even covers my share of the fuel cost.", "paragraph_answer": "I love the calm snarkiness of this essay, and it went right over the heads of some making comments here . If there is ever a moment where I am made to feel like a consumer, it is when I have already bought a ticket and am waiting to board. Everyone has been assigned literally several different levels of gold and silver status. It is hilarious and sad. I don\u2019t take it seriously since the costs of tickets is absurd anyway. Roger of Queens: As an infrequent flier with a status somewhere between lead and copper, I am quite pleased with the fact that there are people willing to pay $1,000 for a round trip from N.Y.C. to San Diego, in return for an extra few inches of legroom and a free cocktail. Thanks to their subsidy, I can make the same trip in the back of the plane for $400, which barely even covers my share of the fuel cost.", "sentence_answer": "I love the calm snarkiness of this essay, and it went right over the heads of some making comments here .", "paragraph_id": "5d70313ec8e4820a9b66dd19"} +{"question": "What did Mr. Fox fail to mention in his statement?", "paragraph": "Instead, the statement said that Mr. Fox would \u201cmake his anticipated transition back to the private sector by the end of the month.\u201d Mr. Christie said that Joseph Bertoni, the department\u2019s deputy commissioner, would take over as acting commissioner. In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund. He said that serving as transportation commissioner twice had been \u201cthe best job I have ever had.\u201d He did not mention the federal investigation.", "answer": "the federal investigation", "sentence": "He did not mention the federal investigation .", "paragraph_sentence": "Instead, the statement said that Mr. Fox would \u201cmake his anticipated transition back to the private sector by the end of the month.\u201d Mr. Christie said that Joseph Bertoni, the department\u2019s deputy commissioner, would take over as acting commissioner. In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund. He said that serving as transportation commissioner twice had been \u201cthe best job I have ever had.\u201d He did not mention the federal investigation . ", "paragraph_answer": "Instead, the statement said that Mr. Fox would \u201cmake his anticipated transition back to the private sector by the end of the month.\u201d Mr. Christie said that Joseph Bertoni, the department\u2019s deputy commissioner, would take over as acting commissioner. In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund. He said that serving as transportation commissioner twice had been \u201cthe best job I have ever had.\u201d He did not mention the federal investigation .", "sentence_answer": "He did not mention the federal investigation .", "paragraph_id": "5d701d8ec8e4820a9b66c903"} +{"question": "Around how many residents are spread across three docks?", "paragraph": "$1,033 SETTING: This floating house is on Lake Union, a freshwater lake in the middle of Seattle. The neighborhood, Eastlake, is a mix of dockside and waterfront communities and conventional single-family houses and condos on land. This particular house is in the lake\u2019s southernmost floating house community, which has about 50 residences spread across three docks. Shops and restaurants are concentrated in and around Eastlake Avenue, not far from the water; downtown Seattle is about four miles away. A six-mile-long trail loops around the lake, stopping at pocket parks along the way.", "answer": "Eastlake Avenue", "sentence": "Shops and restaurants are concentrated in and around Eastlake Avenue , not far from the water; downtown Seattle is about four miles away.", "paragraph_sentence": "$1,033 SETTING: This floating house is on Lake Union, a freshwater lake in the middle of Seattle. The neighborhood, Eastlake, is a mix of dockside and waterfront communities and conventional single-family houses and condos on land. This particular house is in the lake\u2019s southernmost floating house community, which has about 50 residences spread across three docks. Shops and restaurants are concentrated in and around Eastlake Avenue , not far from the water; downtown Seattle is about four miles away. A six-mile-long trail loops around the lake, stopping at pocket parks along the way.", "paragraph_answer": "$1,033 SETTING: This floating house is on Lake Union, a freshwater lake in the middle of Seattle. The neighborhood, Eastlake, is a mix of dockside and waterfront communities and conventional single-family houses and condos on land. This particular house is in the lake\u2019s southernmost floating house community, which has about 50 residences spread across three docks. Shops and restaurants are concentrated in and around Eastlake Avenue , not far from the water; downtown Seattle is about four miles away. A six-mile-long trail loops around the lake, stopping at pocket parks along the way.", "sentence_answer": "Shops and restaurants are concentrated in and around Eastlake Avenue , not far from the water; downtown Seattle is about four miles away.", "paragraph_id": "5d70109fc8e4820a9b66bd14"} +{"question": "How many runs did the Phillies score against the Mets?", "paragraph": "Almost five years later, there is a different aura surrounding the Mets, who are guaranteed to enter September in first place after a 9-4 win Wednesday night against the Philadelphia Phillies. The victory, combined with a loss by the Washington Nationals, gave the Mets a six-and-a-half-game lead in the National League East. During their current six-game winning streak, they have scored 64 runs.", "answer": "4", "sentence": "Almost five years later, there is a different aura surrounding the Mets, who are guaranteed to enter September in first place after a 9- 4 win Wednesday night against the Philadelphia Phillies.", "paragraph_sentence": " Almost five years later, there is a different aura surrounding the Mets, who are guaranteed to enter September in first place after a 9- 4 win Wednesday night against the Philadelphia Phillies. The victory, combined with a loss by the Washington Nationals, gave the Mets a six-and-a-half-game lead in the National League East. During their current six-game winning streak, they have scored 64 runs.", "paragraph_answer": "Almost five years later, there is a different aura surrounding the Mets, who are guaranteed to enter September in first place after a 9- 4 win Wednesday night against the Philadelphia Phillies. The victory, combined with a loss by the Washington Nationals, gave the Mets a six-and-a-half-game lead in the National League East. During their current six-game winning streak, they have scored 64 runs.", "sentence_answer": "Almost five years later, there is a different aura surrounding the Mets, who are guaranteed to enter September in first place after a 9- 4 win Wednesday night against the Philadelphia Phillies.", "paragraph_id": "5d700f6bc8e4820a9b66bb84"} +{"question": "What surveillance technology was missing during the confrontation with Mr. Harrell?", "paragraph": "No one could say for sure what set off the confrontation with Mr. Harrell. There were no surveillance cameras in that area, according to inmates, and corrections officials acknowledged that there are only a few for the entire prison. James Miller, a spokesman for the corrections officers\u2019 union, the New York State Correctional Officers & Police Benevolent Association, said in an email last month that Mr. Harrell was \u201cacting violently and appeared delusional as a result of apparently ingesting drugs.\u201d While trying to subdue him, one guard had several ribs broken, Mr. Miller said. Officials have described abuse of K2 by inmates as a problem throughout the state prison system. On Monday, Mr. Miller wrote in an email that the union was \u201creviewing all the facts before rushing to judgment.\u201d", "answer": "surveillance cameras", "sentence": "There were no surveillance cameras in that area, according to inmates, and corrections officials acknowledged that there are only a few for the entire prison.", "paragraph_sentence": "No one could say for sure what set off the confrontation with Mr. Harrell. There were no surveillance cameras in that area, according to inmates, and corrections officials acknowledged that there are only a few for the entire prison. James Miller, a spokesman for the corrections officers\u2019 union, the New York State Correctional Officers & Police Benevolent Association, said in an email last month that Mr. Harrell was \u201cacting violently and appeared delusional as a result of apparently ingesting drugs.\u201d While trying to subdue him, one guard had several ribs broken, Mr. Miller said. Officials have described abuse of K2 by inmates as a problem throughout the state prison system. On Monday, Mr. Miller wrote in an email that the union was \u201creviewing all the facts before rushing to judgment.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "No one could say for sure what set off the confrontation with Mr. Harrell. There were no surveillance cameras in that area, according to inmates, and corrections officials acknowledged that there are only a few for the entire prison. James Miller, a spokesman for the corrections officers\u2019 union, the New York State Correctional Officers & Police Benevolent Association, said in an email last month that Mr. Harrell was \u201cacting violently and appeared delusional as a result of apparently ingesting drugs.\u201d While trying to subdue him, one guard had several ribs broken, Mr. Miller said. Officials have described abuse of K2 by inmates as a problem throughout the state prison system. On Monday, Mr. Miller wrote in an email that the union was \u201creviewing all the facts before rushing to judgment.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "There were no surveillance cameras in that area, according to inmates, and corrections officials acknowledged that there are only a few for the entire prison.", "paragraph_id": "5d701cf2c8e4820a9b66c867"} +{"question": "What age group is recommended for works \"Pseudopodia\" and \"Walklyndon\"?", "paragraph": "New York International Children\u2019s Film Festival (Saturday and Sunday) This celebration of young people\u2019s cinema has never shied away from challenging films, and that\u2019s certainly true this second weekend of the festival, which offers two features that examine the Holocaust: Dennis Bots\u2019s \u201cSecrets of War,\u201d about two Dutch schoolboys whose friendship is threatened by their parents\u2019 opposing views on the Nazis (Saturday, for ages 9 and older), and Nicolas Vanier\u2019s \u201cBelle and Sebastian,\u201d from France, in which a boy and a reviled stray dog become involved in a Resistance mission (Sunday, for ages 7 and older). Options also include the Japanese Pop artist Takashi Murakami\u2019s sci-fi fantasy, \u201cJellyfish Eyes\u201d (Saturday, for ages 9 and older) and several programs of short films, including two retrospectives of Aardman Animations. (Through March 22. Tickets may be available at the door for screenings listed as sold out.) At various locations; full schedule is on the website; 212-349-0330, gkids.com/fest2015. \u2018Pilobolus Rules!\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) Anyone can see a dance performed, but what about seeing it unperformed? In this program from the BAMkids series at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the renowned troupe Pilobolus will unspool four of its signature works \u2014 \u201cWalklyndon,\u201d \u201cPseudopodia,\u201d \u201cThe Transformation\u201d and \u201cAll Is Not Lost\u201d \u2014 so that children can gain insight into the creative process. Recommended for ages 6 through 11, the show promises to be hands-on and interactive. Saturday at 2 and 6 p.m., Sunday at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m., BAM Fisher, at the Fishman Space, 321 Ashland Place, near Lafayette Avenue, Fort Greene; 718-636-4100, bam.org/kids. \u2018The Pinkertonian Mystery\u2019 (Sunday) Young detectives should get their notebooks and magnifying glasses ready. The DiMenna Children\u2019s History Museum at the New-York Historical Society is asking them and their families to help solve a Victorian-era crime. Live In Theater, known for its interactive murder mysteries, will present the case, a premiere production that unfolds throughout the museum galleries. Young visitors will portray members of the Pinkerton National Detective Agency, out to capture a crook called El Diablo in 1875. (Also on April 12 and 26.) From 3 to 5 p.m., 170 Central Park West, at 77th Street, 212-873-3400, nyhistory.org. The Pop Ups (Sunday) The rock duo Jacob Stein and Jason Rabinowitz, otherwise known as the Pop Ups, are popping up again for a concert at the Jewish Museum. Featuring tunes from their Grammy-nominated children\u2019s album, \u201cAppetite for Construction,\u201d this interactive show features puppets and colorful props as well as music. It will take their intended audience \u2014 3- to 8-year-olds \u2014 on adventures involving treasure, mermaids, stars and the biggest crayons they\u2019ve ever seen. At 11:30 a.m., 1109 Fifth Avenue, at 92nd Street, 212-423-3337, thejewishmuseum.org. \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 11 a.m. and 1 p.m., 13th Street Repertory Theater, 50 West 13th Street, Greenwich Village, 212-352-3101, 13thstreetrep.org. \u2018Sing Back, Brooklyn! With Lloyd H. Miller\u2019 (Saturday) The Bronx, Queens, Manhattan and Staten Island are invited to sing back, too, in this free family program at the Brooklyn Historical Society. Lloyd H. Miller, a proud son of Brooklyn and leader of the band the Deedle Deedle Dees, known for its tunes celebrating science and history, hosts this event \u2014 with singalongs, stories and skits \u2014 the first Saturday of every month. March is Women\u2019s History Month, so you can guess this Saturday\u2019s theme. At 11 a.m., 128 Pierrepont Street, near Clinton Street, Brooklyn Heights, 718-222-4111, brooklynhistory.org.", "answer": "6 through 11", "sentence": "Recommended for ages 6 through 11 , the show promises to be hands-on and interactive.", "paragraph_sentence": "New York International Children\u2019s Film Festival (Saturday and Sunday) This celebration of young people\u2019s cinema has never shied away from challenging films, and that\u2019s certainly true this second weekend of the festival, which offers two features that examine the Holocaust: Dennis Bots\u2019s \u201cSecrets of War,\u201d about two Dutch schoolboys whose friendship is threatened by their parents\u2019 opposing views on the Nazis (Saturday, for ages 9 and older), and Nicolas Vanier\u2019s \u201cBelle and Sebastian,\u201d from France, in which a boy and a reviled stray dog become involved in a Resistance mission (Sunday, for ages 7 and older). Options also include the Japanese Pop artist Takashi Murakami\u2019s sci-fi fantasy, \u201cJellyfish Eyes\u201d (Saturday, for ages 9 and older) and several programs of short films, including two retrospectives of Aardman Animations. (Through March 22. Tickets may be available at the door for screenings listed as sold out.) At various locations; full schedule is on the website; 212-349-0330, gkids.com/fest2015. \u2018Pilobolus Rules!\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) Anyone can see a dance performed, but what about seeing it unperformed? In this program from the BAMkids series at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the renowned troupe Pilobolus will unspool four of its signature works \u2014 \u201cWalklyndon,\u201d \u201cPseudopodia,\u201d \u201cThe Transformation\u201d and \u201cAll Is Not Lost\u201d \u2014 so that children can gain insight into the creative process. Recommended for ages 6 through 11 , the show promises to be hands-on and interactive. Saturday at 2 and 6 p.m., Sunday at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m., BAM Fisher, at the Fishman Space, 321 Ashland Place, near Lafayette Avenue, Fort Greene; 718-636-4100, bam.org/kids. \u2018The Pinkertonian Mystery\u2019 (Sunday) Young detectives should get their notebooks and magnifying glasses ready. The DiMenna Children\u2019s History Museum at the New-York Historical Society is asking them and their families to help solve a Victorian-era crime. Live In Theater, known for its interactive murder mysteries, will present the case, a premiere production that unfolds throughout the museum galleries. Young visitors will portray members of the Pinkerton National Detective Agency, out to capture a crook called El Diablo in 1875. (Also on April 12 and 26.) From 3 to 5 p.m., 170 Central Park West, at 77th Street, 212-873-3400, nyhistory.org. The Pop Ups (Sunday) The rock duo Jacob Stein and Jason Rabinowitz, otherwise known as the Pop Ups, are popping up again for a concert at the Jewish Museum. Featuring tunes from their Grammy-nominated children\u2019s album, \u201cAppetite for Construction,\u201d this interactive show features puppets and colorful props as well as music. It will take their intended audience \u2014 3- to 8-year-olds \u2014 on adventures involving treasure, mermaids, stars and the biggest crayons they\u2019ve ever seen. At 11:30 a.m., 1109 Fifth Avenue, at 92nd Street, 212-423-3337, thejewishmuseum.org. \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 11 a.m. and 1 p.m., 13th Street Repertory Theater, 50 West 13th Street, Greenwich Village, 212-352-3101, 13thstreetrep.org. \u2018Sing Back, Brooklyn! With Lloyd H. Miller\u2019 (Saturday) The Bronx, Queens, Manhattan and Staten Island are invited to sing back, too, in this free family program at the Brooklyn Historical Society. Lloyd H. Miller, a proud son of Brooklyn and leader of the band the Deedle Deedle Dees, known for its tunes celebrating science and history, hosts this event \u2014 with singalongs, stories and skits \u2014 the first Saturday of every month. March is Women\u2019s History Month, so you can guess this Saturday\u2019s theme. At 11 a.m., 128 Pierrepont Street, near Clinton Street, Brooklyn Heights, 718-222-4111, brooklynhistory.org.", "paragraph_answer": "New York International Children\u2019s Film Festival (Saturday and Sunday) This celebration of young people\u2019s cinema has never shied away from challenging films, and that\u2019s certainly true this second weekend of the festival, which offers two features that examine the Holocaust: Dennis Bots\u2019s \u201cSecrets of War,\u201d about two Dutch schoolboys whose friendship is threatened by their parents\u2019 opposing views on the Nazis (Saturday, for ages 9 and older), and Nicolas Vanier\u2019s \u201cBelle and Sebastian,\u201d from France, in which a boy and a reviled stray dog become involved in a Resistance mission (Sunday, for ages 7 and older). Options also include the Japanese Pop artist Takashi Murakami\u2019s sci-fi fantasy, \u201cJellyfish Eyes\u201d (Saturday, for ages 9 and older) and several programs of short films, including two retrospectives of Aardman Animations. (Through March 22. Tickets may be available at the door for screenings listed as sold out.) At various locations; full schedule is on the website; 212-349-0330, gkids.com/fest2015. \u2018Pilobolus Rules!\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) Anyone can see a dance performed, but what about seeing it unperformed? In this program from the BAMkids series at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the renowned troupe Pilobolus will unspool four of its signature works \u2014 \u201cWalklyndon,\u201d \u201cPseudopodia,\u201d \u201cThe Transformation\u201d and \u201cAll Is Not Lost\u201d \u2014 so that children can gain insight into the creative process. Recommended for ages 6 through 11 , the show promises to be hands-on and interactive. Saturday at 2 and 6 p.m., Sunday at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m., BAM Fisher, at the Fishman Space, 321 Ashland Place, near Lafayette Avenue, Fort Greene; 718-636-4100, bam.org/kids. \u2018The Pinkertonian Mystery\u2019 (Sunday) Young detectives should get their notebooks and magnifying glasses ready. The DiMenna Children\u2019s History Museum at the New-York Historical Society is asking them and their families to help solve a Victorian-era crime. Live In Theater, known for its interactive murder mysteries, will present the case, a premiere production that unfolds throughout the museum galleries. Young visitors will portray members of the Pinkerton National Detective Agency, out to capture a crook called El Diablo in 1875. (Also on April 12 and 26.) From 3 to 5 p.m., 170 Central Park West, at 77th Street, 212-873-3400, nyhistory.org. The Pop Ups (Sunday) The rock duo Jacob Stein and Jason Rabinowitz, otherwise known as the Pop Ups, are popping up again for a concert at the Jewish Museum. Featuring tunes from their Grammy-nominated children\u2019s album, \u201cAppetite for Construction,\u201d this interactive show features puppets and colorful props as well as music. It will take their intended audience \u2014 3- to 8-year-olds \u2014 on adventures involving treasure, mermaids, stars and the biggest crayons they\u2019ve ever seen. At 11:30 a.m., 1109 Fifth Avenue, at 92nd Street, 212-423-3337, thejewishmuseum.org. \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 11 a.m. and 1 p.m., 13th Street Repertory Theater, 50 West 13th Street, Greenwich Village, 212-352-3101, 13thstreetrep.org. \u2018Sing Back, Brooklyn! With Lloyd H. Miller\u2019 (Saturday) The Bronx, Queens, Manhattan and Staten Island are invited to sing back, too, in this free family program at the Brooklyn Historical Society. Lloyd H. Miller, a proud son of Brooklyn and leader of the band the Deedle Deedle Dees, known for its tunes celebrating science and history, hosts this event \u2014 with singalongs, stories and skits \u2014 the first Saturday of every month. March is Women\u2019s History Month, so you can guess this Saturday\u2019s theme. At 11 a.m., 128 Pierrepont Street, near Clinton Street, Brooklyn Heights, 718-222-4111, brooklynhistory.org.", "sentence_answer": "Recommended for ages 6 through 11 , the show promises to be hands-on and interactive.", "paragraph_id": "5d70a39ec8e4820a9b66f68c"} +{"question": "Who wrote \"A Cure for Suicide\"?", "paragraph": "In Jesse Ball\u2019s elegant, spellbinding fifth novel, \u201cA Cure for Suicide,\u201d a man known only as the \u201cclaimant\u201d sits on a chair, which he has recently learned is called \u201cchair.\u201d He listens as a woman he knows as the \u201cexaminer\u201d tells him how a story works. The examiner has not yet given the claimant a name. The claimant must first learn how to listen to a story and tell a story in turn. \u201cIt isn\u2019t important that you understand what I say,\u201d the examiner tells him. \u201cIt is not very important that you are understood as long as you give the person the happiness of being told a story.\u201d", "answer": "Jesse Ball", "sentence": "In Jesse Ball \u2019s elegant, spellbinding fifth novel, \u201cA Cure for Suicide,\u201d a man known only as the \u201cclaimant\u201d sits on a chair, which he has recently learned is called \u201cchair.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " In Jesse Ball \u2019s elegant, spellbinding fifth novel, \u201cA Cure for Suicide,\u201d a man known only as the \u201cclaimant\u201d sits on a chair, which he has recently learned is called \u201cchair.\u201d He listens as a woman he knows as the \u201cexaminer\u201d tells him how a story works. The examiner has not yet given the claimant a name. The claimant must first learn how to listen to a story and tell a story in turn. \u201cIt isn\u2019t important that you understand what I say,\u201d the examiner tells him. \u201cIt is not very important that you are understood as long as you give the person the happiness of being told a story.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "In Jesse Ball \u2019s elegant, spellbinding fifth novel, \u201cA Cure for Suicide,\u201d a man known only as the \u201cclaimant\u201d sits on a chair, which he has recently learned is called \u201cchair.\u201d He listens as a woman he knows as the \u201cexaminer\u201d tells him how a story works. The examiner has not yet given the claimant a name. The claimant must first learn how to listen to a story and tell a story in turn. \u201cIt isn\u2019t important that you understand what I say,\u201d the examiner tells him. \u201cIt is not very important that you are understood as long as you give the person the happiness of being told a story.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In Jesse Ball \u2019s elegant, spellbinding fifth novel, \u201cA Cure for Suicide,\u201d a man known only as the \u201cclaimant\u201d sits on a chair, which he has recently learned is called \u201cchair.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d70068cc8e4820a9b66aba3"} +{"question": "Who filed the antitrust case?", "paragraph": "The antitrust case against Google filed by European Union regulators on Wednesday will inevitably draw comparisons to the long-running prosecution of Microsoft, in which regulators on both sides of the Atlantic pursued the software giant for anticompetitive behavior. But Margrethe Vestager, the European Union\u2019s competition commissioner, may not find the comparison entirely flattering. With more than a decade of hindsight, the theories supporting the case against Microsoft have all but fallen apart, and the pursuit of the company that makes Windows may suggest a reason for skepticism about this fight against Google: The tech marketplace is fluid and unpredictable. The giants that look most unbeatable today could falter in ways that may once have seemed unthinkable \u2014 and without a lot of help from the government.", "answer": "European Union regulators", "sentence": "The antitrust case against Google filed by European Union regulators on Wednesday will inevitably draw comparisons to the long-running prosecution of Microsoft, in which regulators on both sides of the Atlantic pursued the software giant for anticompetitive behavior.", "paragraph_sentence": " The antitrust case against Google filed by European Union regulators on Wednesday will inevitably draw comparisons to the long-running prosecution of Microsoft, in which regulators on both sides of the Atlantic pursued the software giant for anticompetitive behavior. But Margrethe Vestager, the European Union\u2019s competition commissioner, may not find the comparison entirely flattering. With more than a decade of hindsight, the theories supporting the case against Microsoft have all but fallen apart, and the pursuit of the company that makes Windows may suggest a reason for skepticism about this fight against Google: The tech marketplace is fluid and unpredictable. The giants that look most unbeatable today could falter in ways that may once have seemed unthinkable \u2014 and without a lot of help from the government.", "paragraph_answer": "The antitrust case against Google filed by European Union regulators on Wednesday will inevitably draw comparisons to the long-running prosecution of Microsoft, in which regulators on both sides of the Atlantic pursued the software giant for anticompetitive behavior. But Margrethe Vestager, the European Union\u2019s competition commissioner, may not find the comparison entirely flattering. With more than a decade of hindsight, the theories supporting the case against Microsoft have all but fallen apart, and the pursuit of the company that makes Windows may suggest a reason for skepticism about this fight against Google: The tech marketplace is fluid and unpredictable. The giants that look most unbeatable today could falter in ways that may once have seemed unthinkable \u2014 and without a lot of help from the government.", "sentence_answer": "The antitrust case against Google filed by European Union regulators on Wednesday will inevitably draw comparisons to the long-running prosecution of Microsoft, in which regulators on both sides of the Atlantic pursued the software giant for anticompetitive behavior.", "paragraph_id": "5d703c99c8e4820a9b66e351"} +{"question": "Where did the abduction take place?", "paragraph": "The International Committee of the Red Cross said that two of its staff members were abducted by gunmen as they drove to work on Tuesday in Sana, Yemen\u2019s capital. One of the workers, a Yemeni man, was later released, but the second, a Tunisian woman, was still being held, the group said in a statement. It was the latest in a series of attacks in Yemen against the Red Cross, one of the few international humanitarian organizations that has continued operations in Yemen since a civil war started in March. The Red Cross said it did not know who was responsible for the kidnappings.", "answer": "Sana", "sentence": "The International Committee of the Red Cross said that two of its staff members were abducted by gunmen as they drove to work on Tuesday in Sana , Yemen\u2019s capital.", "paragraph_sentence": " The International Committee of the Red Cross said that two of its staff members were abducted by gunmen as they drove to work on Tuesday in Sana , Yemen\u2019s capital. One of the workers, a Yemeni man, was later released, but the second, a Tunisian woman, was still being held, the group said in a statement. It was the latest in a series of attacks in Yemen against the Red Cross, one of the few international humanitarian organizations that has continued operations in Yemen since a civil war started in March. The Red Cross said it did not know who was responsible for the kidnappings.", "paragraph_answer": "The International Committee of the Red Cross said that two of its staff members were abducted by gunmen as they drove to work on Tuesday in Sana , Yemen\u2019s capital. One of the workers, a Yemeni man, was later released, but the second, a Tunisian woman, was still being held, the group said in a statement. It was the latest in a series of attacks in Yemen against the Red Cross, one of the few international humanitarian organizations that has continued operations in Yemen since a civil war started in March. The Red Cross said it did not know who was responsible for the kidnappings.", "sentence_answer": "The International Committee of the Red Cross said that two of its staff members were abducted by gunmen as they drove to work on Tuesday in Sana , Yemen\u2019s capital.", "paragraph_id": "5d702c14c8e4820a9b66d98e"} +{"question": "Who is noted in the article as a key veteran player for the Timberwolves?", "paragraph": "Towns\u2019s confidence was on full display. After he connected on a 17-foot jump shot toward the end of regulation, he bowed for the crowd. His night was punctuated by four interviews: one on the court with the in-house announcer, another with the local television broadcast team, a third with NBA TV (during which he did a solid impression of Shaquille O\u2019Neal, one of the hosts) and finally a small news conference for reporters in front of his locker. Karl Towns, his father, waited outside. He said he was extremely proud of his son, except for his two missed free throws. \u201cHe owes me 10 push-ups, and he knows it,\u201d Karl Towns said. As the Timberwolves continue to search for an offensive rhythm, Ricky Rubio, now one of the team\u2019s more experienced players, said he was getting a better feel for where and when Karl-Anthony Towns wanted the ball. Rubio declined to offer specifics.", "answer": "Ricky Rubio", "sentence": "As the Timberwolves continue to search for an offensive rhythm, Ricky Rubio , now one of the team\u2019s more experienced players, said he was getting a better feel for where and when Karl-Anthony Towns wanted the ball.", "paragraph_sentence": "Towns\u2019s confidence was on full display. After he connected on a 17-foot jump shot toward the end of regulation, he bowed for the crowd. His night was punctuated by four interviews: one on the court with the in-house announcer, another with the local television broadcast team, a third with NBA TV (during which he did a solid impression of Shaquille O\u2019Neal, one of the hosts) and finally a small news conference for reporters in front of his locker. Karl Towns, his father, waited outside. He said he was extremely proud of his son, except for his two missed free throws. \u201cHe owes me 10 push-ups, and he knows it,\u201d Karl Towns said. As the Timberwolves continue to search for an offensive rhythm, Ricky Rubio , now one of the team\u2019s more experienced players, said he was getting a better feel for where and when Karl-Anthony Towns wanted the ball. Rubio declined to offer specifics.", "paragraph_answer": "Towns\u2019s confidence was on full display. After he connected on a 17-foot jump shot toward the end of regulation, he bowed for the crowd. His night was punctuated by four interviews: one on the court with the in-house announcer, another with the local television broadcast team, a third with NBA TV (during which he did a solid impression of Shaquille O\u2019Neal, one of the hosts) and finally a small news conference for reporters in front of his locker. Karl Towns, his father, waited outside. He said he was extremely proud of his son, except for his two missed free throws. \u201cHe owes me 10 push-ups, and he knows it,\u201d Karl Towns said. As the Timberwolves continue to search for an offensive rhythm, Ricky Rubio , now one of the team\u2019s more experienced players, said he was getting a better feel for where and when Karl-Anthony Towns wanted the ball. Rubio declined to offer specifics.", "sentence_answer": "As the Timberwolves continue to search for an offensive rhythm, Ricky Rubio , now one of the team\u2019s more experienced players, said he was getting a better feel for where and when Karl-Anthony Towns wanted the ball.", "paragraph_id": "5d7007b4c8e4820a9b66ae71"} +{"question": "Who is Rob Manfred?", "paragraph": "Home-field advantage in the World Series has been tied to the outcome of the All-Star Game since 2003. Complain all you want, but nothing is likely to change. The new commissioner, Rob Manfred, is emphatically in favor of keeping the link between the sport\u2019s so-called jewel events. Maybe the answer is not to eliminate the link, but for those in uniform to take the game more seriously. The managers could strategize a little more. The hitters could work deeper counts. The pitchers could avoid any semblance of sentimentality; who can forget Adam Wainwright giving the retiring Derek Jeter a good pitch to hit last summer? Even so, compared with the N.F.L., N.B.A. and N.H.L. frolics, this All-Star event most closely resembles the competition in an actual game. The scores are familiar, and while Major League Baseball cannot help using silly caps \u2014 this year\u2019s have horizontal stripes across the front \u2014 at least the players still wear their regular uniforms for the game.", "answer": "The new commissioner", "sentence": "The new commissioner , Rob Manfred, is emphatically in favor of keeping the link between the sport\u2019s so-called jewel events.", "paragraph_sentence": "Home-field advantage in the World Series has been tied to the outcome of the All-Star Game since 2003. Complain all you want, but nothing is likely to change. The new commissioner , Rob Manfred, is emphatically in favor of keeping the link between the sport\u2019s so-called jewel events. Maybe the answer is not to eliminate the link, but for those in uniform to take the game more seriously. The managers could strategize a little more. The hitters could work deeper counts. The pitchers could avoid any semblance of sentimentality; who can forget Adam Wainwright giving the retiring Derek Jeter a good pitch to hit last summer? Even so, compared with the N.F.L., N.B.A. and N.H.L. frolics, this All-Star event most closely resembles the competition in an actual game. The scores are familiar, and while Major League Baseball cannot help using silly caps \u2014 this year\u2019s have horizontal stripes across the front \u2014 at least the players still wear their regular uniforms for the game.", "paragraph_answer": "Home-field advantage in the World Series has been tied to the outcome of the All-Star Game since 2003. Complain all you want, but nothing is likely to change. The new commissioner , Rob Manfred, is emphatically in favor of keeping the link between the sport\u2019s so-called jewel events. Maybe the answer is not to eliminate the link, but for those in uniform to take the game more seriously. The managers could strategize a little more. The hitters could work deeper counts. The pitchers could avoid any semblance of sentimentality; who can forget Adam Wainwright giving the retiring Derek Jeter a good pitch to hit last summer? Even so, compared with the N.F.L., N.B.A. and N.H.L. frolics, this All-Star event most closely resembles the competition in an actual game. The scores are familiar, and while Major League Baseball cannot help using silly caps \u2014 this year\u2019s have horizontal stripes across the front \u2014 at least the players still wear their regular uniforms for the game.", "sentence_answer": " The new commissioner , Rob Manfred, is emphatically in favor of keeping the link between the sport\u2019s so-called jewel events.", "paragraph_id": "5d704648c8e4820a9b66e824"} +{"question": "How many people died before the fishing boat discovered the child?", "paragraph": "Dramatic video, posted online on Friday by a Turkish newspaper, Hurriyet Daily News, showed a Turkish fishing boat saving a baby from drowning on Wednesday in the Aegean Sea off the resort town of Kusadasi, not far from the beach in Bodrum where the Syrian boy, Aylan Kurdi, was discovered, face down in the sand. According to the newspaper, which added English subtitles to video of the rescue, the 18-month-old baby, Mohammad Hasan, was discovered in the water along with 14 other migrants who floated for hours after their boat capsized. Fifteen other passengers reportedly drowned before the fishing boat happened on the party.", "answer": "Fifteen", "sentence": "Fifteen other passengers reportedly drowned before the fishing boat happened on the party.", "paragraph_sentence": "Dramatic video, posted online on Friday by a Turkish newspaper, Hurriyet Daily News, showed a Turkish fishing boat saving a baby from drowning on Wednesday in the Aegean Sea off the resort town of Kusadasi, not far from the beach in Bodrum where the Syrian boy, Aylan Kurdi, was discovered, face down in the sand. According to the newspaper, which added English subtitles to video of the rescue, the 18-month-old baby, Mohammad Hasan, was discovered in the water along with 14 other migrants who floated for hours after their boat capsized. Fifteen other passengers reportedly drowned before the fishing boat happened on the party. ", "paragraph_answer": "Dramatic video, posted online on Friday by a Turkish newspaper, Hurriyet Daily News, showed a Turkish fishing boat saving a baby from drowning on Wednesday in the Aegean Sea off the resort town of Kusadasi, not far from the beach in Bodrum where the Syrian boy, Aylan Kurdi, was discovered, face down in the sand. According to the newspaper, which added English subtitles to video of the rescue, the 18-month-old baby, Mohammad Hasan, was discovered in the water along with 14 other migrants who floated for hours after their boat capsized. Fifteen other passengers reportedly drowned before the fishing boat happened on the party.", "sentence_answer": " Fifteen other passengers reportedly drowned before the fishing boat happened on the party.", "paragraph_id": "5d7016f5c8e4820a9b66c318"} +{"question": "Whose name(s) was/were misstated in the obituary?", "paragraph": "An obituary on Thursday about the longtime Alvin Ailey dancer Dudley Williams, using information from Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, misstated the given name of his father and his brother. They are both Ivan, not Iban. The Times welcomes comments and suggestions, or complaints about errors that warrant correction. Messages on news coverage can be e-mailed to nytnews@nytimes.com or left toll-free at 1-888-NYT-NEWS (1-888-698-6397). Comments on editorials may be e-mailed to letters@nytimes.com or faxed to (212) 556-3622.", "answer": "his father and his brother", "sentence": "An obituary on Thursday about the longtime Alvin Ailey dancer Dudley Williams, using information from Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, misstated the given name of his father and his brother .", "paragraph_sentence": " An obituary on Thursday about the longtime Alvin Ailey dancer Dudley Williams, using information from Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, misstated the given name of his father and his brother . They are both Ivan, not Iban. The Times welcomes comments and suggestions, or complaints about errors that warrant correction. Messages on news coverage can be e-mailed to nytnews@nytimes.com or left toll-free at 1-888-NYT-NEWS (1-888-698-6397). Comments on editorials may be e-mailed to letters@nytimes.com or faxed to (212) 556-3622.", "paragraph_answer": "An obituary on Thursday about the longtime Alvin Ailey dancer Dudley Williams, using information from Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, misstated the given name of his father and his brother . They are both Ivan, not Iban. The Times welcomes comments and suggestions, or complaints about errors that warrant correction. Messages on news coverage can be e-mailed to nytnews@nytimes.com or left toll-free at 1-888-NYT-NEWS (1-888-698-6397). Comments on editorials may be e-mailed to letters@nytimes.com or faxed to (212) 556-3622.", "sentence_answer": "An obituary on Thursday about the longtime Alvin Ailey dancer Dudley Williams, using information from Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, misstated the given name of his father and his brother .", "paragraph_id": "5d701adcc8e4820a9b66c660"} +{"question": "What is the name of Strouse's screenplay?", "paragraph": "From its opening moments, \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d seems at odds with itself. It is realistic about New York place names yet disconnected from reality. Will, who is handsome in an appealingly scruffy way, is a faithful husband with a warm, self-deprecating sense of humor and an acute roving intelligence. Only a fool would trade him for Gary, a glum, pudgy blob. Although this cowering, monosyllabic marshmallow makes several more appearances in the film, Mr. Strouse\u2019s screenplay doesn\u2019t give him a single likable trait.", "answer": "People Places Things", "sentence": "From its opening moments, \u201c People Places Things \u201d seems at odds with itself.", "paragraph_sentence": " From its opening moments, \u201c People Places Things \u201d seems at odds with itself. It is realistic about New York place names yet disconnected from reality. Will, who is handsome in an appealingly scruffy way, is a faithful husband with a warm, self-deprecating sense of humor and an acute roving intelligence. Only a fool would trade him for Gary, a glum, pudgy blob. Although this cowering, monosyllabic marshmallow makes several more appearances in the film, Mr. Strouse\u2019s screenplay doesn\u2019t give him a single likable trait.", "paragraph_answer": "From its opening moments, \u201c People Places Things \u201d seems at odds with itself. It is realistic about New York place names yet disconnected from reality. Will, who is handsome in an appealingly scruffy way, is a faithful husband with a warm, self-deprecating sense of humor and an acute roving intelligence. Only a fool would trade him for Gary, a glum, pudgy blob. Although this cowering, monosyllabic marshmallow makes several more appearances in the film, Mr. Strouse\u2019s screenplay doesn\u2019t give him a single likable trait.", "sentence_answer": "From its opening moments, \u201c People Places Things \u201d seems at odds with itself.", "paragraph_id": "5d7079a3c8e4820a9b66f2f5"} +{"question": "Where will Dead on Live be playing?", "paragraph": "PIERMONT The Turning Point Doc Richmond\u2019s Jazz Jam. April 6 at 8 p.m. $5. Scott Sharrard and the Brick Yard Band, rock. April 10 at 9 p.m. $20. Catie Curtis, folk and rock. April 11 at 5 p.m. $20. Professor Louie and the Crowmatix, blues. April 11 at 8:30 p.m. $20. The Turning Point, 468 Piermont Avenue. 845-359-1089; turningpointcafe.com. PORT CHESTER The Capitol Theater Jeff Beck, rock. April 13 at 8 p.m. $65 to $250. The Capitol Theater, 149 Westchester Avenue. 914-937-4126; thecapitoltheatre.com. POUGHKEEPSIE Bardavon Opera House Dave Brubeck\u2019s \u201cAmerica,\u201d Hudson Valley Philharmonic. April 11 at 8 p.m. $20 to $54. Bardavon Opera House, 35 Market Street. 845-473-2072; bardavon.org. PURCHASE The Performing Arts Center, Purchase College Jack Quartet, classical. April 12 at 3 p.m. $42.50. The Performing Arts Center, Purchase College, 735 Anderson Hill Road. 914-251-6200; artscenter.org. TARRYTOWN Tarrytown Music Hall The Midtown Men, Broadway and pop. April 9 at 7:30 p.m. $50 to $150. Dead On Live, Grateful Dead tribute band. April 11 at 8 p.m. $30 and $35. Tarrytown Music Hall, 13 Main Street. 877-840-0457; tarrytownmusichall.org. TUCKAHOE Westchester Italian Cultural Center The Five O\u2019 Clock Piano Duo, contemporary Italian. April 11 at 5 p.m. $35 and $45. Westchester Italian Cultural Center, 1 Generoso Pope Place. 914-771-8700; wiccny.org.", "answer": "Tarrytown Music Hall", "sentence": "TARRYTOWN Tarrytown Music Hall The Midtown Men, Broadway and pop.", "paragraph_sentence": "PIERMONT The Turning Point Doc Richmond\u2019s Jazz Jam. April 6 at 8 p.m. $5. Scott Sharrard and the Brick Yard Band, rock. April 10 at 9 p.m. $20. Catie Curtis, folk and rock. April 11 at 5 p.m. $20. Professor Louie and the Crowmatix, blues. April 11 at 8:30 p.m. $20. The Turning Point, 468 Piermont Avenue. 845-359-1089; turningpointcafe.com. PORT CHESTER The Capitol Theater Jeff Beck, rock. April 13 at 8 p.m. $65 to $250. The Capitol Theater, 149 Westchester Avenue. 914-937-4126; thecapitoltheatre.com. POUGHKEEPSIE Bardavon Opera House Dave Brubeck\u2019s \u201cAmerica,\u201d Hudson Valley Philharmonic. April 11 at 8 p.m. $20 to $54. Bardavon Opera House, 35 Market Street. 845-473-2072; bardavon.org. PURCHASE The Performing Arts Center, Purchase College Jack Quartet, classical. April 12 at 3 p.m. $42.50. The Performing Arts Center, Purchase College, 735 Anderson Hill Road. 914-251-6200; artscenter.org. TARRYTOWN Tarrytown Music Hall The Midtown Men, Broadway and pop. April 9 at 7:30 p.m. $50 to $150. Dead On Live, Grateful Dead tribute band. April 11 at 8 p.m. $30 and $35. Tarrytown Music Hall, 13 Main Street. 877-840-0457; tarrytownmusichall.org. TUCKAHOE Westchester Italian Cultural Center The Five O\u2019 Clock Piano Duo, contemporary Italian. April 11 at 5 p.m. $35 and $45. Westchester Italian Cultural Center, 1 Generoso Pope Place. 914-771-8700; wiccny.org.", "paragraph_answer": "PIERMONT The Turning Point Doc Richmond\u2019s Jazz Jam. April 6 at 8 p.m. $5. Scott Sharrard and the Brick Yard Band, rock. April 10 at 9 p.m. $20. Catie Curtis, folk and rock. April 11 at 5 p.m. $20. Professor Louie and the Crowmatix, blues. April 11 at 8:30 p.m. $20. The Turning Point, 468 Piermont Avenue. 845-359-1089; turningpointcafe.com. PORT CHESTER The Capitol Theater Jeff Beck, rock. April 13 at 8 p.m. $65 to $250. The Capitol Theater, 149 Westchester Avenue. 914-937-4126; thecapitoltheatre.com. POUGHKEEPSIE Bardavon Opera House Dave Brubeck\u2019s \u201cAmerica,\u201d Hudson Valley Philharmonic. April 11 at 8 p.m. $20 to $54. Bardavon Opera House, 35 Market Street. 845-473-2072; bardavon.org. PURCHASE The Performing Arts Center, Purchase College Jack Quartet, classical. April 12 at 3 p.m. $42.50. The Performing Arts Center, Purchase College, 735 Anderson Hill Road. 914-251-6200; artscenter.org. TARRYTOWN Tarrytown Music Hall The Midtown Men, Broadway and pop. April 9 at 7:30 p.m. $50 to $150. Dead On Live, Grateful Dead tribute band. April 11 at 8 p.m. $30 and $35. Tarrytown Music Hall, 13 Main Street. 877-840-0457; tarrytownmusichall.org. TUCKAHOE Westchester Italian Cultural Center The Five O\u2019 Clock Piano Duo, contemporary Italian. April 11 at 5 p.m. $35 and $45. Westchester Italian Cultural Center, 1 Generoso Pope Place. 914-771-8700; wiccny.org.", "sentence_answer": "TARRYTOWN Tarrytown Music Hall The Midtown Men, Broadway and pop.", "paragraph_id": "5d7032aec8e4820a9b66ddeb"} +{"question": "How many innings did Hamels pitch?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt\u2019s different,\u201d Harvey said of the extra rest. He added: \u201cDealing with it is something you have to do. I don\u2019t think I did a very good job of that. I think we\u2019re all excited to go back to a five-day rotation. It is what it is.\u201d The Mets\u2019 offense did not help Harvey much; Hamels held them to one run and four hits in seven innings. But Harvey did not help himself. He came to bat in the fourth inning, with two outs and the bases loaded, and he struck out swinging. In the third, with Dilson Herrera on second and nobody out, Harvey struck out trying to lay down a sacrifice bunt. Over the final five innings, the Mets managed to reach base only twice. In the ninth, Daniel Murphy, another Rangers fan, led off with a single. The Mets did not show any more fight. Jonathan Papelbon, the Phillies\u2019 closer, retired the next three batters in order, striking out Lucas Duda and Kevin Plawecki, and getting Herrera to fly out easily to end the game.", "answer": "seven", "sentence": "The Mets\u2019 offense did not help Harvey much; Hamels held them to one run and four hits in seven innings.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s different,\u201d Harvey said of the extra rest. He added: \u201cDealing with it is something you have to do. I don\u2019t think I did a very good job of that. I think we\u2019re all excited to go back to a five-day rotation. It is what it is.\u201d The Mets\u2019 offense did not help Harvey much; Hamels held them to one run and four hits in seven innings. But Harvey did not help himself. He came to bat in the fourth inning, with two outs and the bases loaded, and he struck out swinging. In the third, with Dilson Herrera on second and nobody out, Harvey struck out trying to lay down a sacrifice bunt. Over the final five innings, the Mets managed to reach base only twice. In the ninth, Daniel Murphy, another Rangers fan, led off with a single. The Mets did not show any more fight. Jonathan Papelbon, the Phillies\u2019 closer, retired the next three batters in order, striking out Lucas Duda and Kevin Plawecki, and getting Herrera to fly out easily to end the game.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s different,\u201d Harvey said of the extra rest. He added: \u201cDealing with it is something you have to do. I don\u2019t think I did a very good job of that. I think we\u2019re all excited to go back to a five-day rotation. It is what it is.\u201d The Mets\u2019 offense did not help Harvey much; Hamels held them to one run and four hits in seven innings. But Harvey did not help himself. He came to bat in the fourth inning, with two outs and the bases loaded, and he struck out swinging. In the third, with Dilson Herrera on second and nobody out, Harvey struck out trying to lay down a sacrifice bunt. Over the final five innings, the Mets managed to reach base only twice. In the ninth, Daniel Murphy, another Rangers fan, led off with a single. The Mets did not show any more fight. Jonathan Papelbon, the Phillies\u2019 closer, retired the next three batters in order, striking out Lucas Duda and Kevin Plawecki, and getting Herrera to fly out easily to end the game.", "sentence_answer": "The Mets\u2019 offense did not help Harvey much; Hamels held them to one run and four hits in seven innings.", "paragraph_id": "5d7028b7c8e4820a9b66d66a"} +{"question": "What is April Heinrichs's former job?", "paragraph": "VANCOUVER, British Columbia \u2014 As a young girl in Colorado, April Heinrichs stuffed copies of Reader\u2019s Digest into her socks as shin guards and slept in her cleats. \u201cWhy not?\u201d Heinrichs said. She became a fierce, pioneering player and has assumed as many vital roles as a coach and futurist as anyone in women\u2019s soccer in the United States. Her current job, as technical director for the American women\u2019s national teams, is to find the next Mia Hamm or Abby Wambach and keep the United States in its customary spot among the best teams in the world. The United States trails only Germany in the FIFA world rankings, but the Americans have not won a Women\u2019s World Cup since 1999. And their chances in the current tournament seem uncertain as a final group match approaches, against Nigeria here Tuesday.", "answer": "coach", "sentence": "She became a fierce, pioneering player and has assumed as many vital roles as a coach and futurist as anyone in women\u2019s soccer in the United States.", "paragraph_sentence": "VANCOUVER, British Columbia \u2014 As a young girl in Colorado, April Heinrichs stuffed copies of Reader\u2019s Digest into her socks as shin guards and slept in her cleats. \u201cWhy not?\u201d Heinrichs said. She became a fierce, pioneering player and has assumed as many vital roles as a coach and futurist as anyone in women\u2019s soccer in the United States. Her current job, as technical director for the American women\u2019s national teams, is to find the next Mia Hamm or Abby Wambach and keep the United States in its customary spot among the best teams in the world. The United States trails only Germany in the FIFA world rankings, but the Americans have not won a Women\u2019s World Cup since 1999. And their chances in the current tournament seem uncertain as a final group match approaches, against Nigeria here Tuesday.", "paragraph_answer": "VANCOUVER, British Columbia \u2014 As a young girl in Colorado, April Heinrichs stuffed copies of Reader\u2019s Digest into her socks as shin guards and slept in her cleats. \u201cWhy not?\u201d Heinrichs said. She became a fierce, pioneering player and has assumed as many vital roles as a coach and futurist as anyone in women\u2019s soccer in the United States. Her current job, as technical director for the American women\u2019s national teams, is to find the next Mia Hamm or Abby Wambach and keep the United States in its customary spot among the best teams in the world. The United States trails only Germany in the FIFA world rankings, but the Americans have not won a Women\u2019s World Cup since 1999. And their chances in the current tournament seem uncertain as a final group match approaches, against Nigeria here Tuesday.", "sentence_answer": "She became a fierce, pioneering player and has assumed as many vital roles as a coach and futurist as anyone in women\u2019s soccer in the United States.", "paragraph_id": "5d700cfcc8e4820a9b66b889"} +{"question": "What year school s Trimble in?", "paragraph": "Dez Wells and Jake Layman each scored 14 for the Terrapins (22-5, 10-4 Big Ten), who were locked in a tie game with 5 minutes 38 seconds left before Trimble took over. After Wells made two free throws, Trimble narrowly beat the shot clock with a jump shot from the top of the key. Trimble, a freshman guard, connected again from 3-point range with 2:18 remaining for a 62-54 lead. ARIZONA 87, U.S.C. 57 Kaleb Tarczewski scored 15 points, Stanley Johnson added 13, and No. 7 Arizona routed visiting Southern California. Arizona (23-3, 11-2 Pacific-12) led the Trojans (10-16, 2-12) by 18 at halftime and cruised to its 35th straight home victory.", "answer": "freshman", "sentence": "Trimble, a freshman guard, connected again from 3-point range with 2:18 remaining for a 62-54 lead.", "paragraph_sentence": "Dez Wells and Jake Layman each scored 14 for the Terrapins (22-5, 10-4 Big Ten), who were locked in a tie game with 5 minutes 38 seconds left before Trimble took over. After Wells made two free throws, Trimble narrowly beat the shot clock with a jump shot from the top of the key. Trimble, a freshman guard, connected again from 3-point range with 2:18 remaining for a 62-54 lead. ARIZONA 87, U.S.C. 57 Kaleb Tarczewski scored 15 points, Stanley Johnson added 13, and No. 7 Arizona routed visiting Southern California. Arizona (23-3, 11-2 Pacific-12) led the Trojans (10-16, 2-12) by 18 at halftime and cruised to its 35th straight home victory.", "paragraph_answer": "Dez Wells and Jake Layman each scored 14 for the Terrapins (22-5, 10-4 Big Ten), who were locked in a tie game with 5 minutes 38 seconds left before Trimble took over. After Wells made two free throws, Trimble narrowly beat the shot clock with a jump shot from the top of the key. Trimble, a freshman guard, connected again from 3-point range with 2:18 remaining for a 62-54 lead. ARIZONA 87, U.S.C. 57 Kaleb Tarczewski scored 15 points, Stanley Johnson added 13, and No. 7 Arizona routed visiting Southern California. Arizona (23-3, 11-2 Pacific-12) led the Trojans (10-16, 2-12) by 18 at halftime and cruised to its 35th straight home victory.", "sentence_answer": "Trimble, a freshman guard, connected again from 3-point range with 2:18 remaining for a 62-54 lead.", "paragraph_id": "5d707b0dc8e4820a9b66f323"} +{"question": "Which division fled west, instead?", "paragraph": "BAN RAK THAI, Thailand \u2014 At night, traditional Chinese red lanterns illuminate the hotels, shop fronts and Yunnanese-style restaurants lining the main road in this highland village of just over 1,000 people. On one recent evening, as the mist rose off a nearby reservoir, the mellifluous voice of the popular Taiwanese singer Teresa Teng could be heard wafting out from one of the village\u2019s several tea shops. But this sleepy Chinese village is nestled in the lush backcountry of northwestern Thailand, one of several dozen such outposts, a quirk of the region\u2019s tumultuous human and political history. \u201cI may have a Thai ID, but I\u2019m Chinese,\u201d said Liang Zhengde, 47, a manager for his family\u2019s fruit farms. \u201cMy family is Chinese, and no matter where we go, we\u2019re still Chinese.\u201d The Liangs, like some 200 other families here, are the veterans or descendants of what is known as China\u2019s Lost Army, a unit of the Kuomintang\u2019s Nationalist Army, which lost to the Red Army of Mao Zedong in 1949. As most Nationalist soldiers fled east to Taiwan in the face of Communist advances, the Kuomintang\u2019s 93rd Division retreated west from the southwestern Chinese province of Yunnan into Myanmar, then known as Burma.", "answer": "Kuomintang\u2019s 93rd Division", "sentence": "As most Nationalist soldiers fled east to Taiwan in the face of Communist advances, the Kuomintang\u2019s 93rd Division retreated west from the southwestern Chinese province of Yunnan into Myanmar, then known as Burma.", "paragraph_sentence": "BAN RAK THAI, Thailand \u2014 At night, traditional Chinese red lanterns illuminate the hotels, shop fronts and Yunnanese-style restaurants lining the main road in this highland village of just over 1,000 people. On one recent evening, as the mist rose off a nearby reservoir, the mellifluous voice of the popular Taiwanese singer Teresa Teng could be heard wafting out from one of the village\u2019s several tea shops. But this sleepy Chinese village is nestled in the lush backcountry of northwestern Thailand, one of several dozen such outposts, a quirk of the region\u2019s tumultuous human and political history. \u201cI may have a Thai ID, but I\u2019m Chinese,\u201d said Liang Zhengde, 47, a manager for his family\u2019s fruit farms. \u201cMy family is Chinese, and no matter where we go, we\u2019re still Chinese.\u201d The Liangs, like some 200 other families here, are the veterans or descendants of what is known as China\u2019s Lost Army, a unit of the Kuomintang\u2019s Nationalist Army, which lost to the Red Army of Mao Zedong in 1949. As most Nationalist soldiers fled east to Taiwan in the face of Communist advances, the Kuomintang\u2019s 93rd Division retreated west from the southwestern Chinese province of Yunnan into Myanmar, then known as Burma. ", "paragraph_answer": "BAN RAK THAI, Thailand \u2014 At night, traditional Chinese red lanterns illuminate the hotels, shop fronts and Yunnanese-style restaurants lining the main road in this highland village of just over 1,000 people. On one recent evening, as the mist rose off a nearby reservoir, the mellifluous voice of the popular Taiwanese singer Teresa Teng could be heard wafting out from one of the village\u2019s several tea shops. But this sleepy Chinese village is nestled in the lush backcountry of northwestern Thailand, one of several dozen such outposts, a quirk of the region\u2019s tumultuous human and political history. \u201cI may have a Thai ID, but I\u2019m Chinese,\u201d said Liang Zhengde, 47, a manager for his family\u2019s fruit farms. \u201cMy family is Chinese, and no matter where we go, we\u2019re still Chinese.\u201d The Liangs, like some 200 other families here, are the veterans or descendants of what is known as China\u2019s Lost Army, a unit of the Kuomintang\u2019s Nationalist Army, which lost to the Red Army of Mao Zedong in 1949. As most Nationalist soldiers fled east to Taiwan in the face of Communist advances, the Kuomintang\u2019s 93rd Division retreated west from the southwestern Chinese province of Yunnan into Myanmar, then known as Burma.", "sentence_answer": "As most Nationalist soldiers fled east to Taiwan in the face of Communist advances, the Kuomintang\u2019s 93rd Division retreated west from the southwestern Chinese province of Yunnan into Myanmar, then known as Burma.", "paragraph_id": "5d702dbcc8e4820a9b66db24"} +{"question": "How much would these canals cost?", "paragraph": "The new groundwater law that the Legislature passed last year would give farmers stronger incentive to cooperate in such plans. In wet years, they might allow their fields to be flooded in the winter or early spring to recharge the groundwater, and they would then be entitled to pump a certain amount out in dry years. Now, urgent research is underway to figure out what soils and crops can tolerate deliberate flooding. To move floodwater around in the winter, new canals and other infrastructure may be needed in some areas, one potential use of some of the $2.7 billion in public money. If floods come this winter, Mr. Cameron will wish he were in a position to go beyond his 2011 experiment, capturing more water. But, like many farmers, he does not yet have the canals and gear in place to make that work, a big reason the farmers could be forced to watch millions of gallons of floodwater escape to the sea this winter.", "answer": "$2.7 billion", "sentence": "To move floodwater around in the winter, new canals and other infrastructure may be needed in some areas, one potential use of some of the $2.7 billion in public money.", "paragraph_sentence": "The new groundwater law that the Legislature passed last year would give farmers stronger incentive to cooperate in such plans. In wet years, they might allow their fields to be flooded in the winter or early spring to recharge the groundwater, and they would then be entitled to pump a certain amount out in dry years. Now, urgent research is underway to figure out what soils and crops can tolerate deliberate flooding. To move floodwater around in the winter, new canals and other infrastructure may be needed in some areas, one potential use of some of the $2.7 billion in public money. If floods come this winter, Mr. Cameron will wish he were in a position to go beyond his 2011 experiment, capturing more water. But, like many farmers, he does not yet have the canals and gear in place to make that work, a big reason the farmers could be forced to watch millions of gallons of floodwater escape to the sea this winter.", "paragraph_answer": "The new groundwater law that the Legislature passed last year would give farmers stronger incentive to cooperate in such plans. In wet years, they might allow their fields to be flooded in the winter or early spring to recharge the groundwater, and they would then be entitled to pump a certain amount out in dry years. Now, urgent research is underway to figure out what soils and crops can tolerate deliberate flooding. To move floodwater around in the winter, new canals and other infrastructure may be needed in some areas, one potential use of some of the $2.7 billion in public money. If floods come this winter, Mr. Cameron will wish he were in a position to go beyond his 2011 experiment, capturing more water. But, like many farmers, he does not yet have the canals and gear in place to make that work, a big reason the farmers could be forced to watch millions of gallons of floodwater escape to the sea this winter.", "sentence_answer": "To move floodwater around in the winter, new canals and other infrastructure may be needed in some areas, one potential use of some of the $2.7 billion in public money.", "paragraph_id": "5d700df0c8e4820a9b66b9a6"} +{"question": "What event was Mr. Watkins visiting New York for?", "paragraph": "The judge\u2019s ruling came after lengthy hearings, starting in February, during which Mr. Hincapie testified that a detective had beaten a confession out of him and a previously unknown witness, Mariluz Santana, came forward to swear she had not seen Mr. Hincapie on the subway platform when the murder happened. Mr. Watkins, a tourist from Utah visiting New York for the United States Open, was stabbed in the chest on Sept. 3, 1990, in a struggle with at least six young men who had tried to rob his family inside the Seventh Avenue subway station at 53rd Street. Some of the men later said they needed money to go dancing at the Roseland Ballroom. Mr. Hincapie, now 43, was arrested the next day and confessed to taking part. He was one of seven young men convicted of felony murder at two separate trials. Under state law, everyone who takes part in a mugging can be held responsible for murder if a victim dies.", "answer": "United States Open", "sentence": "Mr. Watkins, a tourist from Utah visiting New York for the United States Open , was stabbed in the chest on Sept. 3, 1990, in a struggle with at least six young men who had tried to rob his family inside the Seventh Avenue subway station at 53rd Street.", "paragraph_sentence": "The judge\u2019s ruling came after lengthy hearings, starting in February, during which Mr. Hincapie testified that a detective had beaten a confession out of him and a previously unknown witness, Mariluz Santana, came forward to swear she had not seen Mr. Hincapie on the subway platform when the murder happened. Mr. Watkins, a tourist from Utah visiting New York for the United States Open , was stabbed in the chest on Sept. 3, 1990, in a struggle with at least six young men who had tried to rob his family inside the Seventh Avenue subway station at 53rd Street. Some of the men later said they needed money to go dancing at the Roseland Ballroom. Mr. Hincapie, now 43, was arrested the next day and confessed to taking part. He was one of seven young men convicted of felony murder at two separate trials. Under state law, everyone who takes part in a mugging can be held responsible for murder if a victim dies.", "paragraph_answer": "The judge\u2019s ruling came after lengthy hearings, starting in February, during which Mr. Hincapie testified that a detective had beaten a confession out of him and a previously unknown witness, Mariluz Santana, came forward to swear she had not seen Mr. Hincapie on the subway platform when the murder happened. Mr. Watkins, a tourist from Utah visiting New York for the United States Open , was stabbed in the chest on Sept. 3, 1990, in a struggle with at least six young men who had tried to rob his family inside the Seventh Avenue subway station at 53rd Street. Some of the men later said they needed money to go dancing at the Roseland Ballroom. Mr. Hincapie, now 43, was arrested the next day and confessed to taking part. He was one of seven young men convicted of felony murder at two separate trials. Under state law, everyone who takes part in a mugging can be held responsible for murder if a victim dies.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Watkins, a tourist from Utah visiting New York for the United States Open , was stabbed in the chest on Sept. 3, 1990, in a struggle with at least six young men who had tried to rob his family inside the Seventh Avenue subway station at 53rd Street.", "paragraph_id": "5d70246fc8e4820a9b66d0a0"} +{"question": "What two individuals are to be married Sunday evening?", "paragraph": "Cheryl Yvette Dawson and Madifing Kaba are to be married Sunday evening at the Alger House, an event space in Manhattan. The Rev. Jill Flowers, who was ordained by the One Spirit Interfaith Seminary, is to officiate. Mrs. Kaba, 33, works in Manhattan as a senior manager specializing in small-merchants pricing strategy for American Express. She graduated from Duke and received an M.B.A. from Columbia. She is a daughter of Annette I. Dawson and Michael Dawson of Hollis, Queens. The bride\u2019s father retired as a mechanic who worked on trains for Metro-North in Manhattan. Her mother retired as an executive assistant at the Manhattan law firm Sidley Austin. Mr. Kaba, 42, is a management consultant in the banking and capital markets advisory group of PricewaterhouseCoopers in Manhattan. He graduated from the University of Illinois and received an M.B.A. and a master's in public policy from Carnegie Mellon University.", "answer": "Cheryl Yvette Dawson and Madifing Kaba", "sentence": "Cheryl Yvette Dawson and Madifing Kaba are to be married Sunday evening at the Alger House, an event space in Manhattan.", "paragraph_sentence": " Cheryl Yvette Dawson and Madifing Kaba are to be married Sunday evening at the Alger House, an event space in Manhattan. The Rev. Jill Flowers, who was ordained by the One Spirit Interfaith Seminary, is to officiate. Mrs. Kaba, 33, works in Manhattan as a senior manager specializing in small-merchants pricing strategy for American Express. She graduated from Duke and received an M.B.A. from Columbia. She is a daughter of Annette I. Dawson and Michael Dawson of Hollis, Queens. The bride\u2019s father retired as a mechanic who worked on trains for Metro-North in Manhattan. Her mother retired as an executive assistant at the Manhattan law firm Sidley Austin. Mr. Kaba, 42, is a management consultant in the banking and capital markets advisory group of PricewaterhouseCoopers in Manhattan. He graduated from the University of Illinois and received an M.B.A. and a master's in public policy from Carnegie Mellon University.", "paragraph_answer": " Cheryl Yvette Dawson and Madifing Kaba are to be married Sunday evening at the Alger House, an event space in Manhattan. The Rev. Jill Flowers, who was ordained by the One Spirit Interfaith Seminary, is to officiate. Mrs. Kaba, 33, works in Manhattan as a senior manager specializing in small-merchants pricing strategy for American Express. She graduated from Duke and received an M.B.A. from Columbia. She is a daughter of Annette I. Dawson and Michael Dawson of Hollis, Queens. The bride\u2019s father retired as a mechanic who worked on trains for Metro-North in Manhattan. Her mother retired as an executive assistant at the Manhattan law firm Sidley Austin. Mr. Kaba, 42, is a management consultant in the banking and capital markets advisory group of PricewaterhouseCoopers in Manhattan. He graduated from the University of Illinois and received an M.B.A. and a master's in public policy from Carnegie Mellon University.", "sentence_answer": " Cheryl Yvette Dawson and Madifing Kaba are to be married Sunday evening at the Alger House, an event space in Manhattan.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026abc8e4820a9b66d315"} +{"question": "What actress did a female facebook user remove from her IG after they posted a view that differed from her own?", "paragraph": "Ashlyn Knaur of Huntsville, Ala., recently unfollowed some friends after Mrs. Clinton\u2019s announcement. She also removed the actress Anne Hathaway from her Instagram feed after Ms. Hathaway shared a posting supportive of Mrs. Clinton. Julie Ruby of Normal, Ill., is on the brink of unfollowing her daughter\u2019s mother-in-law for negative comments regarding Mrs. Clinton. And John Thrasher of Cumberland, Md., lost touch with his father over his politics postings on Facebook. \u201cThe regular contact between us has been cut because of politics and social media,\u201d Mr. Thrasher said. Mike Massaroli, from Staten Island, says that his postings are often ignored and that he is occasionally unfollowed even by his fraternity brothers, who playfully cast him off as \u201cthe dude who is voting for Bernie Sanders\u201d for his frequent praise of the Vermont senator. In theory, Facebook\u2019s algorithm provides for an overall better experience on the site, ranking the number of posts likely to be ignored by the user lower in the news feed. But in the realm of politics, that sometimes has the unintended consequence of engineering the political discourse on Facebook toward the user\u2019s political leanings. \u201cThe fundamental principle underpinning news feed is the more you interact with specific types of content and content from specific places, the more likely you are to continue to see\u201d that kind of content, said Andy Stone, a spokesman for Facebook.", "answer": "Anne Hathaway", "sentence": "She also removed the actress Anne Hathaway from her Instagram feed after Ms. Hathaway shared a posting supportive of Mrs. Clinton.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ashlyn Knaur of Huntsville, Ala., recently unfollowed some friends after Mrs. Clinton\u2019s announcement. She also removed the actress Anne Hathaway from her Instagram feed after Ms. Hathaway shared a posting supportive of Mrs. Clinton. Julie Ruby of Normal, Ill., is on the brink of unfollowing her daughter\u2019s mother-in-law for negative comments regarding Mrs. Clinton. And John Thrasher of Cumberland, Md., lost touch with his father over his politics postings on Facebook. \u201cThe regular contact between us has been cut because of politics and social media,\u201d Mr. Thrasher said. Mike Massaroli, from Staten Island, says that his postings are often ignored and that he is occasionally unfollowed even by his fraternity brothers, who playfully cast him off as \u201cthe dude who is voting for Bernie Sanders\u201d for his frequent praise of the Vermont senator. In theory, Facebook\u2019s algorithm provides for an overall better experience on the site, ranking the number of posts likely to be ignored by the user lower in the news feed. But in the realm of politics, that sometimes has the unintended consequence of engineering the political discourse on Facebook toward the user\u2019s political leanings. \u201cThe fundamental principle underpinning news feed is the more you interact with specific types of content and content from specific places, the more likely you are to continue to see\u201d that kind of content, said Andy Stone, a spokesman for Facebook.", "paragraph_answer": "Ashlyn Knaur of Huntsville, Ala., recently unfollowed some friends after Mrs. Clinton\u2019s announcement. She also removed the actress Anne Hathaway from her Instagram feed after Ms. Hathaway shared a posting supportive of Mrs. Clinton. Julie Ruby of Normal, Ill., is on the brink of unfollowing her daughter\u2019s mother-in-law for negative comments regarding Mrs. Clinton. And John Thrasher of Cumberland, Md., lost touch with his father over his politics postings on Facebook. \u201cThe regular contact between us has been cut because of politics and social media,\u201d Mr. Thrasher said. Mike Massaroli, from Staten Island, says that his postings are often ignored and that he is occasionally unfollowed even by his fraternity brothers, who playfully cast him off as \u201cthe dude who is voting for Bernie Sanders\u201d for his frequent praise of the Vermont senator. In theory, Facebook\u2019s algorithm provides for an overall better experience on the site, ranking the number of posts likely to be ignored by the user lower in the news feed. But in the realm of politics, that sometimes has the unintended consequence of engineering the political discourse on Facebook toward the user\u2019s political leanings. \u201cThe fundamental principle underpinning news feed is the more you interact with specific types of content and content from specific places, the more likely you are to continue to see\u201d that kind of content, said Andy Stone, a spokesman for Facebook.", "sentence_answer": "She also removed the actress Anne Hathaway from her Instagram feed after Ms. Hathaway shared a posting supportive of Mrs. Clinton.", "paragraph_id": "5d702cb1c8e4820a9b66da2d"} +{"question": "At what level did Pierre-Paul played before?", "paragraph": "\u201cI don\u2019t think we\u2019re going to do anything until we actually see where he\u2019s at,\u201d Mara said. \u201cHe\u2019s a rare athlete who has played at a very high level before. He is a great kid, and we\u2019ve loved having him around here. He fits in well. \u201cI can only surmise that he\u2019s not receiving very good advice.\u201d The team could also negotiate a compromise contract for an amount based on how many games Pierre-Paul might play this season.", "answer": "very high", "sentence": "\u201cHe\u2019s a rare athlete who has played at a very high level before.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI don\u2019t think we\u2019re going to do anything until we actually see where he\u2019s at,\u201d Mara said. \u201cHe\u2019s a rare athlete who has played at a very high level before. He is a great kid, and we\u2019ve loved having him around here. He fits in well. \u201cI can only surmise that he\u2019s not receiving very good advice.\u201d The team could also negotiate a compromise contract for an amount based on how many games Pierre-Paul might play this season.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI don\u2019t think we\u2019re going to do anything until we actually see where he\u2019s at,\u201d Mara said. \u201cHe\u2019s a rare athlete who has played at a very high level before. He is a great kid, and we\u2019ve loved having him around here. He fits in well. \u201cI can only surmise that he\u2019s not receiving very good advice.\u201d The team could also negotiate a compromise contract for an amount based on how many games Pierre-Paul might play this season.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cHe\u2019s a rare athlete who has played at a very high level before.", "paragraph_id": "5d7024ecc8e4820a9b66d165"} +{"question": "What time span did uber and Lyft take to insert shared rides in 6 major USA cities?", "paragraph": "In the last 15 months, Uber and Lyft have introduced shared rides in Austin, Boston, New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Washington through UberPool and Lyft Line. Cars or vans sporting names like Split (sections of Washington only) Via (sections of Manhattan only) Bridj (rush hours in Boston and Washington) and Carma, which also runs in Chicago, Houston, San Diego and Seattle, also compete. Some ride-sharing apps are available internationally as well. \u201cThey\u2019re very specific to niche transportation needs,\u201d said Tony Dutzik, a senior policy analyst at the Frontier Group, a research company in Boston.", "answer": "15 months", "sentence": "In the last 15 months , Uber and Lyft have introduced shared rides in Austin, Boston, New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Washington through UberPool and Lyft Line.", "paragraph_sentence": " In the last 15 months , Uber and Lyft have introduced shared rides in Austin, Boston, New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Washington through UberPool and Lyft Line. Cars or vans sporting names like Split (sections of Washington only) Via (sections of Manhattan only) Bridj (rush hours in Boston and Washington) and Carma, which also runs in Chicago, Houston, San Diego and Seattle, also compete. Some ride-sharing apps are available internationally as well. \u201cThey\u2019re very specific to niche transportation needs,\u201d said Tony Dutzik, a senior policy analyst at the Frontier Group, a research company in Boston.", "paragraph_answer": "In the last 15 months , Uber and Lyft have introduced shared rides in Austin, Boston, New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Washington through UberPool and Lyft Line. Cars or vans sporting names like Split (sections of Washington only) Via (sections of Manhattan only) Bridj (rush hours in Boston and Washington) and Carma, which also runs in Chicago, Houston, San Diego and Seattle, also compete. Some ride-sharing apps are available internationally as well. \u201cThey\u2019re very specific to niche transportation needs,\u201d said Tony Dutzik, a senior policy analyst at the Frontier Group, a research company in Boston.", "sentence_answer": "In the last 15 months , Uber and Lyft have introduced shared rides in Austin, Boston, New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Washington through UberPool and Lyft Line.", "paragraph_id": "5d704bffc8e4820a9b66e9c5"} +{"question": "How much was the coupon Wayfair sent to Mr, Fisher?", "paragraph": "Wayfair thinks so. \u201cWe are highly focused on delivering an exceptional shopping experience to all of our customers,\u201d wrote a company spokeswoman, Jane Carpenter. \u201cUnfortunately, in this particular case, there was a mix-up in our delivery process and we did not meet our high standards in terms of experience and service.\u201d The company quickly arranged to pick up that patio furniture and sent Mr. Fisher a $250 coupon for future use. \u201cWe hope he will give us another chance,\u201d Ms. Carpenter wrote, \u201cto show him the top-notch shopping experience that more accurately represents Wayfair.\u201d Something you would consider, Mr. Fisher? \u201cI can\u2019t imagine buying anything more complicated than rugs from Wayfair at this point,\u201d he wrote \u2014 unaware, apparently, that to Wayfair, rugs are pretty complicated.", "answer": "$250", "sentence": "a $250 coupon for future use.", "paragraph_sentence": "Wayfair thinks so. \u201cWe are highly focused on delivering an exceptional shopping experience to all of our customers,\u201d wrote a company spokeswoman, Jane Carpenter. \u201cUnfortunately, in this particular case, there was a mix-up in our delivery process and we did not meet our high standards in terms of experience and service.\u201d The company quickly arranged to pick up that patio furniture and sent Mr. Fisher a $250 coupon for future use. \u201cWe hope he will give us another chance,\u201d Ms. Carpenter wrote, \u201cto show him the top-notch shopping experience that more accurately represents Wayfair.\u201d Something you would consider, Mr. Fisher? \u201cI can\u2019t imagine buying anything more complicated than rugs from Wayfair at this point,\u201d he wrote \u2014 unaware, apparently, that to Wayfair, rugs are pretty complicated.", "paragraph_answer": "Wayfair thinks so. \u201cWe are highly focused on delivering an exceptional shopping experience to all of our customers,\u201d wrote a company spokeswoman, Jane Carpenter. \u201cUnfortunately, in this particular case, there was a mix-up in our delivery process and we did not meet our high standards in terms of experience and service.\u201d The company quickly arranged to pick up that patio furniture and sent Mr. Fisher a $250 coupon for future use. \u201cWe hope he will give us another chance,\u201d Ms. Carpenter wrote, \u201cto show him the top-notch shopping experience that more accurately represents Wayfair.\u201d Something you would consider, Mr. Fisher? \u201cI can\u2019t imagine buying anything more complicated than rugs from Wayfair at this point,\u201d he wrote \u2014 unaware, apparently, that to Wayfair, rugs are pretty complicated.", "sentence_answer": "a $250 coupon for future use.", "paragraph_id": "5d702a54c8e4820a9b66d7f8"} +{"question": "What percentage of men had been in combat accordingg to Oleksandr l. Leshchenko", "paragraph": "The training aims to remold the Ukrainian units by increasing the responsibilities of noncommissioned officers, fixing a Soviet legacy of an officer-heavy infantry. Without sergeants paying attention, basic mistakes were being made, the trainers said. Capt. Nicholas Salimbene, an American trainer, noticed with alarm that the Ukrainians were carrying their rifles with the safeties off. \u201cIt\u2019s about the professionalism of the force,\u201d he said. \u201cWe want them to look like soldiers.\u201d \u201cYou see reports about the little green men,\u201d he said, referring to the Russian soldiers who invaded the Crimean Peninsula last year in unmarked uniforms, \u201cand they all walk around professionally, and carry their weapons professionally.\u201d The Ukrainians should, too, Captain Salimbene said. The United States is also providing advanced courses for military professionals known as forward observers \u2014 the ones who call in targets \u2014 to improve the accuracy of artillery fire, making it more lethal for the enemy and less so for civilians. Oleksandr I. Leshchenko, the deputy director for training in the National Guard, was somewhat skeptical about the value of the training, saying that \u201c99 percent\u201d of the men in the course had already been in combat.", "answer": "99 percent", "sentence": "Oleksandr I. Leshchenko, the deputy director for training in the National Guard, was somewhat skeptical about the value of the training, saying that \u201c 99 percent \u201d of the men in the course had already been in combat.", "paragraph_sentence": "The training aims to remold the Ukrainian units by increasing the responsibilities of noncommissioned officers, fixing a Soviet legacy of an officer-heavy infantry. Without sergeants paying attention, basic mistakes were being made, the trainers said. Capt. Nicholas Salimbene, an American trainer, noticed with alarm that the Ukrainians were carrying their rifles with the safeties off. \u201cIt\u2019s about the professionalism of the force,\u201d he said. \u201cWe want them to look like soldiers.\u201d \u201cYou see reports about the little green men,\u201d he said, referring to the Russian soldiers who invaded the Crimean Peninsula last year in unmarked uniforms, \u201cand they all walk around professionally, and carry their weapons professionally.\u201d The Ukrainians should, too, Captain Salimbene said. The United States is also providing advanced courses for military professionals known as forward observers \u2014 the ones who call in targets \u2014 to improve the accuracy of artillery fire, making it more lethal for the enemy and less so for civilians. Oleksandr I. Leshchenko, the deputy director for training in the National Guard, was somewhat skeptical about the value of the training, saying that \u201c 99 percent \u201d of the men in the course had already been in combat. ", "paragraph_answer": "The training aims to remold the Ukrainian units by increasing the responsibilities of noncommissioned officers, fixing a Soviet legacy of an officer-heavy infantry. Without sergeants paying attention, basic mistakes were being made, the trainers said. Capt. Nicholas Salimbene, an American trainer, noticed with alarm that the Ukrainians were carrying their rifles with the safeties off. \u201cIt\u2019s about the professionalism of the force,\u201d he said. \u201cWe want them to look like soldiers.\u201d \u201cYou see reports about the little green men,\u201d he said, referring to the Russian soldiers who invaded the Crimean Peninsula last year in unmarked uniforms, \u201cand they all walk around professionally, and carry their weapons professionally.\u201d The Ukrainians should, too, Captain Salimbene said. The United States is also providing advanced courses for military professionals known as forward observers \u2014 the ones who call in targets \u2014 to improve the accuracy of artillery fire, making it more lethal for the enemy and less so for civilians. Oleksandr I. Leshchenko, the deputy director for training in the National Guard, was somewhat skeptical about the value of the training, saying that \u201c 99 percent \u201d of the men in the course had already been in combat.", "sentence_answer": "Oleksandr I. Leshchenko, the deputy director for training in the National Guard, was somewhat skeptical about the value of the training, saying that \u201c 99 percent \u201d of the men in the course had already been in combat.", "paragraph_id": "5d702701c8e4820a9b66d495"} +{"question": "What is the first and last name of the leader of the Golden State Warriors?", "paragraph": "Ranking second to James on the team is Kyrie Irving, who rated at 25.1 in the one finals game he played before being injured. Of players still active, the next ranked, at 19.4, is Matthew Dellavedova, the undrafted Australian whose rate in the regular season was 12.6. That is a steep drop-off. Despite being the league\u2019s most valuable player and the clear leader of the Golden State Warriors, Stephen Curry has a far lower figure than James in the finals, 30.5. And he benefits from teammates who are more useful than Dellavedova, like Klay Thompson (24.5). More conventional statistics back up James\u2019s importance. He leads all players in the playoffs in minutes played, field goals made and attempted, and assists. In addition to those categories, he leads his own team in free throws made and attempted, defensive and total rebounds, steals, points and turnovers. Rare is the Cleveland offensive play that James does not take part in.", "answer": "Stephen Curry", "sentence": "Despite being the league\u2019s most valuable player and the clear leader of the Golden State Warriors, Stephen Curry has a far lower figure than James in the finals, 30.5.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ranking second to James on the team is Kyrie Irving, who rated at 25.1 in the one finals game he played before being injured. Of players still active, the next ranked, at 19.4, is Matthew Dellavedova, the undrafted Australian whose rate in the regular season was 12.6. That is a steep drop-off. Despite being the league\u2019s most valuable player and the clear leader of the Golden State Warriors, Stephen Curry has a far lower figure than James in the finals, 30.5. And he benefits from teammates who are more useful than Dellavedova, like Klay Thompson (24.5). More conventional statistics back up James\u2019s importance. He leads all players in the playoffs in minutes played, field goals made and attempted, and assists. In addition to those categories, he leads his own team in free throws made and attempted, defensive and total rebounds, steals, points and turnovers. Rare is the Cleveland offensive play that James does not take part in.", "paragraph_answer": "Ranking second to James on the team is Kyrie Irving, who rated at 25.1 in the one finals game he played before being injured. Of players still active, the next ranked, at 19.4, is Matthew Dellavedova, the undrafted Australian whose rate in the regular season was 12.6. That is a steep drop-off. Despite being the league\u2019s most valuable player and the clear leader of the Golden State Warriors, Stephen Curry has a far lower figure than James in the finals, 30.5. And he benefits from teammates who are more useful than Dellavedova, like Klay Thompson (24.5). More conventional statistics back up James\u2019s importance. He leads all players in the playoffs in minutes played, field goals made and attempted, and assists. In addition to those categories, he leads his own team in free throws made and attempted, defensive and total rebounds, steals, points and turnovers. Rare is the Cleveland offensive play that James does not take part in.", "sentence_answer": "Despite being the league\u2019s most valuable player and the clear leader of the Golden State Warriors, Stephen Curry has a far lower figure than James in the finals, 30.5.", "paragraph_id": "5d700778c8e4820a9b66adc0"} +{"question": "What happened to the Boko Haram fighters who attacked Bosso?", "paragraph": "Boko Haram fighters crossed the Komadougou River separating Nigeria from Niger and attacked Bosso, a remote town that is a local seat of government with an open-air market that has been sheltering thousands of refugees from the conflict. An army officer in Niger said the fighters were pushed back after at least three hours of combat. Speaking from Niamey, the capital, the officer said all the Boko Haram fighters who entered Bosso were killed. Other Niger government officials could not be reached on Friday afternoon, and phone lines to Bosso, on Niger\u2019s eastern edge, were not working.", "answer": "all the Boko Haram fighters who entered Bosso were killed", "sentence": "Speaking from Niamey, the capital, the officer said all the Boko Haram fighters who entered Bosso were killed .", "paragraph_sentence": "Boko Haram fighters crossed the Komadougou River separating Nigeria from Niger and attacked Bosso, a remote town that is a local seat of government with an open-air market that has been sheltering thousands of refugees from the conflict. An army officer in Niger said the fighters were pushed back after at least three hours of combat. Speaking from Niamey, the capital, the officer said all the Boko Haram fighters who entered Bosso were killed . Other Niger government officials could not be reached on Friday afternoon, and phone lines to Bosso, on Niger\u2019s eastern edge, were not working.", "paragraph_answer": "Boko Haram fighters crossed the Komadougou River separating Nigeria from Niger and attacked Bosso, a remote town that is a local seat of government with an open-air market that has been sheltering thousands of refugees from the conflict. An army officer in Niger said the fighters were pushed back after at least three hours of combat. Speaking from Niamey, the capital, the officer said all the Boko Haram fighters who entered Bosso were killed . Other Niger government officials could not be reached on Friday afternoon, and phone lines to Bosso, on Niger\u2019s eastern edge, were not working.", "sentence_answer": "Speaking from Niamey, the capital, the officer said all the Boko Haram fighters who entered Bosso were killed .", "paragraph_id": "5d704e74c8e4820a9b66eaa1"} +{"question": "Who was the visiting team?", "paragraph": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "answer": "Kings", "sentence": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings , and Quick stopped 31 shots.", "paragraph_sentence": " Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings , and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "paragraph_answer": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings , and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "sentence_answer": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings , and Quick stopped 31 shots.", "paragraph_id": "5d70550bc8e4820a9b66ecba"} +{"question": "What does the claimant accuse gravestones of being?", "paragraph": "With the simplicity of a fable and the drama of a psychological thriller, Ball tells a story about starting over from nothing, reconstructing life from its most basic elements. These acts of narrative deconstruction highlight his strength as a deeply questioning writer at home in fact as much as abstraction. In the \u00advillage\u2019s cemetery, Ball deconstructs death. Noting that gravestones are \u201cirrational\u201d because they prolong suffering while failing to bring back the dead, the claimant wonders: \u201cBut, if life is just that, just being reasonable, then there is nothing in it \u2014 nothing worthwhile. So, the yearning that we have to keep dead things living \u2014 or to make unreasonable things reasonable. That is why a person should live.\u201d", "answer": "irrational", "sentence": "Noting that gravestones are \u201c irrational \u201d because they prolong suffering while failing to bring back the dead, the claimant wonders: \u201cBut, if life is just that, just being reasonable, then there is nothing in it \u2014 nothing worthwhile.", "paragraph_sentence": "With the simplicity of a fable and the drama of a psychological thriller, Ball tells a story about starting over from nothing, reconstructing life from its most basic elements. These acts of narrative deconstruction highlight his strength as a deeply questioning writer at home in fact as much as abstraction. In the \u00advillage\u2019s cemetery, Ball deconstructs death. Noting that gravestones are \u201c irrational \u201d because they prolong suffering while failing to bring back the dead, the claimant wonders: \u201cBut, if life is just that, just being reasonable, then there is nothing in it \u2014 nothing worthwhile. So, the yearning that we have to keep dead things living \u2014 or to make unreasonable things reasonable. That is why a person should live.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "With the simplicity of a fable and the drama of a psychological thriller, Ball tells a story about starting over from nothing, reconstructing life from its most basic elements. These acts of narrative deconstruction highlight his strength as a deeply questioning writer at home in fact as much as abstraction. In the \u00advillage\u2019s cemetery, Ball deconstructs death. Noting that gravestones are \u201c irrational \u201d because they prolong suffering while failing to bring back the dead, the claimant wonders: \u201cBut, if life is just that, just being reasonable, then there is nothing in it \u2014 nothing worthwhile. So, the yearning that we have to keep dead things living \u2014 or to make unreasonable things reasonable. That is why a person should live.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Noting that gravestones are \u201c irrational \u201d because they prolong suffering while failing to bring back the dead, the claimant wonders: \u201cBut, if life is just that, just being reasonable, then there is nothing in it \u2014 nothing worthwhile.", "paragraph_id": "5d700702c8e4820a9b66aca7"} +{"question": "The new Penn & Teller show is in previews where?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe idea is to allow people to be swept up into a shared mood in a live performance\u201d without disruption, said Graham Dugoni, Yondr\u2019s founder. Some theaters wonder whether embracing the enemy is the shrewder way to go. Several performing arts organizations, including some in the classical music world, have designated \u201ctweet seats\u201d where use of social media during selected performances is encouraged. At the beginning of their new Broadway show, now in previews, the magicians Penn & Teller invite the audience to turn on their cellphones as part of a magic trick.", "answer": "Broadway", "sentence": "At the beginning of their new Broadway show, now in previews, the magicians Penn & Teller invite the audience to turn on their cellphones as part of a magic trick.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe idea is to allow people to be swept up into a shared mood in a live performance\u201d without disruption, said Graham Dugoni, Yondr\u2019s founder. Some theaters wonder whether embracing the enemy is the shrewder way to go. Several performing arts organizations, including some in the classical music world, have designated \u201ctweet seats\u201d where use of social media during selected performances is encouraged. At the beginning of their new Broadway show, now in previews, the magicians Penn & Teller invite the audience to turn on their cellphones as part of a magic trick. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe idea is to allow people to be swept up into a shared mood in a live performance\u201d without disruption, said Graham Dugoni, Yondr\u2019s founder. Some theaters wonder whether embracing the enemy is the shrewder way to go. Several performing arts organizations, including some in the classical music world, have designated \u201ctweet seats\u201d where use of social media during selected performances is encouraged. At the beginning of their new Broadway show, now in previews, the magicians Penn & Teller invite the audience to turn on their cellphones as part of a magic trick.", "sentence_answer": "At the beginning of their new Broadway show, now in previews, the magicians Penn & Teller invite the audience to turn on their cellphones as part of a magic trick.", "paragraph_id": "5d7024f5c8e4820a9b66d181"} +{"question": "Which aspect of the George Washington Bridge is under scrutiny?", "paragraph": "The United investigation grew out of the federal inquiry into the 2013 closing of lanes at the George Washington Bridge, and Mr. Fox is the latest high-ranking figure to leave his post amid those investigations. Last month, the chief executive of United, Jeff Smisek, resigned, as did two other top United executives who also attended the September 2011 dinner. People close to the investigation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because it is continuing, told The New York Times that prosecutors had been asking witnesses before a grand jury questions about Mr. Fox.", "answer": "the 2013 closing of lanes", "sentence": "The United investigation grew out of the federal inquiry into the 2013 closing of lanes at the George Washington Bridge, and Mr. Fox is the latest high-ranking figure to leave his post amid those investigations.", "paragraph_sentence": " The United investigation grew out of the federal inquiry into the 2013 closing of lanes at the George Washington Bridge, and Mr. Fox is the latest high-ranking figure to leave his post amid those investigations. Last month, the chief executive of United, Jeff Smisek, resigned, as did two other top United executives who also attended the September 2011 dinner. People close to the investigation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because it is continuing, told The New York Times that prosecutors had been asking witnesses before a grand jury questions about Mr. Fox.", "paragraph_answer": "The United investigation grew out of the federal inquiry into the 2013 closing of lanes at the George Washington Bridge, and Mr. Fox is the latest high-ranking figure to leave his post amid those investigations. Last month, the chief executive of United, Jeff Smisek, resigned, as did two other top United executives who also attended the September 2011 dinner. People close to the investigation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because it is continuing, told The New York Times that prosecutors had been asking witnesses before a grand jury questions about Mr. Fox.", "sentence_answer": "The United investigation grew out of the federal inquiry into the 2013 closing of lanes at the George Washington Bridge, and Mr. Fox is the latest high-ranking figure to leave his post amid those investigations.", "paragraph_id": "5d701845c8e4820a9b66c45b"} +{"question": "What was to receive a makeover?", "paragraph": "Some analysts said that Ms. Konstantopoulou, a stickler for rules, could prevent him from using the fast-track procedures that would be necessary to get the job done in time to satisfy European leaders. Portions of the plan must be passed by Wednesday, and more a week from Wednesday. Among the elements that must be dealt with this week are increases in the value added tax, including the end of a special tax status for the Greek islands; a makeover of the pension system; and the imposition of automatic spending cuts if the government misses budget targets. Ms. Konstantopoulou issued a statement saying she had no intention of resigning, even as Mr. Tsipras\u2019s allies talked of impeaching her.", "answer": "pension system", "sentence": "Among the elements that must be dealt with this week are increases in the value added tax, including the end of a special tax status for the Greek islands; a makeover of the pension system ; and the imposition of automatic spending cuts if the government misses budget targets.", "paragraph_sentence": "Some analysts said that Ms. Konstantopoulou, a stickler for rules, could prevent him from using the fast-track procedures that would be necessary to get the job done in time to satisfy European leaders. Portions of the plan must be passed by Wednesday, and more a week from Wednesday. Among the elements that must be dealt with this week are increases in the value added tax, including the end of a special tax status for the Greek islands; a makeover of the pension system ; and the imposition of automatic spending cuts if the government misses budget targets. Ms. Konstantopoulou issued a statement saying she had no intention of resigning, even as Mr. Tsipras\u2019s allies talked of impeaching her.", "paragraph_answer": "Some analysts said that Ms. Konstantopoulou, a stickler for rules, could prevent him from using the fast-track procedures that would be necessary to get the job done in time to satisfy European leaders. Portions of the plan must be passed by Wednesday, and more a week from Wednesday. Among the elements that must be dealt with this week are increases in the value added tax, including the end of a special tax status for the Greek islands; a makeover of the pension system ; and the imposition of automatic spending cuts if the government misses budget targets. Ms. Konstantopoulou issued a statement saying she had no intention of resigning, even as Mr. Tsipras\u2019s allies talked of impeaching her.", "sentence_answer": "Among the elements that must be dealt with this week are increases in the value added tax, including the end of a special tax status for the Greek islands; a makeover of the pension system ; and the imposition of automatic spending cuts if the government misses budget targets.", "paragraph_id": "5d70198dc8e4820a9b66c595"} +{"question": "What do banks and law firms want to share information about?", "paragraph": "The Citigroup team issued the report as other Wall Street banks are putting pressure on the legal profession to do more to prevent the theft of confidential client information. For nearly a year, banks and law firms have talked about forging a closer partnership to share some information about hacking incidents. Banks are also demanding more documentation from law firms about online security measures as a condition of retaining them for assignments.", "answer": "hacking incidents", "sentence": "For nearly a year, banks and law firms have talked about forging a closer partnership to share some information about hacking incidents .", "paragraph_sentence": "The Citigroup team issued the report as other Wall Street banks are putting pressure on the legal profession to do more to prevent the theft of confidential client information. For nearly a year, banks and law firms have talked about forging a closer partnership to share some information about hacking incidents . Banks are also demanding more documentation from law firms about online security measures as a condition of retaining them for assignments.", "paragraph_answer": "The Citigroup team issued the report as other Wall Street banks are putting pressure on the legal profession to do more to prevent the theft of confidential client information. For nearly a year, banks and law firms have talked about forging a closer partnership to share some information about hacking incidents . Banks are also demanding more documentation from law firms about online security measures as a condition of retaining them for assignments.", "sentence_answer": "For nearly a year, banks and law firms have talked about forging a closer partnership to share some information about hacking incidents .", "paragraph_id": "5d700544c8e4820a9b66a89d"} +{"question": "Was there turnout on Saturday when the results were announced?", "paragraph": "\u201cWhether it\u2019s weakening our defenses, raising taxes on jobs and earnings, racking up more debt and welfare or driving up the cost of living by printing money \u2014 Jeremy Corbyn\u2019s Labour Party will hurt working people,\u201d he said in a statement. More worrying for Mr. Corbyn will be internal critics. Steven Fielding, professor of political history at Nottingham University, said that the emphatic nature of Mr. Corbyn\u2019s victory made it likely that his opponents would keep quiet for some months, and hope for him to trip up. \u201cI think there will be some kind of cease-fire, and that they will see how it goes, assuming that in six to 12 months, Labour\u2019s opinion poll position will start to fall, and then they can start acting more assertively,\u201d Mr. Fielding said. Doing so more quickly might risk the wrath of the party supporters, many of whom have been energized by Mr. Corbyn\u2019s campaign, Mr. Fielding added. On Saturday they thronged the conference center where the results were announced, some cheering or chanting.", "answer": "they thronged the conference center where the results were announced", "sentence": "On Saturday they thronged the conference center where the results were announced , some cheering or chanting.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWhether it\u2019s weakening our defenses, raising taxes on jobs and earnings, racking up more debt and welfare or driving up the cost of living by printing money \u2014 Jeremy Corbyn\u2019s Labour Party will hurt working people,\u201d he said in a statement. More worrying for Mr. Corbyn will be internal critics. Steven Fielding, professor of political history at Nottingham University, said that the emphatic nature of Mr. Corbyn\u2019s victory made it likely that his opponents would keep quiet for some months, and hope for him to trip up. \u201cI think there will be some kind of cease-fire, and that they will see how it goes, assuming that in six to 12 months, Labour\u2019s opinion poll position will start to fall, and then they can start acting more assertively,\u201d Mr. Fielding said. Doing so more quickly might risk the wrath of the party supporters, many of whom have been energized by Mr. Corbyn\u2019s campaign, Mr. Fielding added. On Saturday they thronged the conference center where the results were announced , some cheering or chanting. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWhether it\u2019s weakening our defenses, raising taxes on jobs and earnings, racking up more debt and welfare or driving up the cost of living by printing money \u2014 Jeremy Corbyn\u2019s Labour Party will hurt working people,\u201d he said in a statement. More worrying for Mr. Corbyn will be internal critics. Steven Fielding, professor of political history at Nottingham University, said that the emphatic nature of Mr. Corbyn\u2019s victory made it likely that his opponents would keep quiet for some months, and hope for him to trip up. \u201cI think there will be some kind of cease-fire, and that they will see how it goes, assuming that in six to 12 months, Labour\u2019s opinion poll position will start to fall, and then they can start acting more assertively,\u201d Mr. Fielding said. Doing so more quickly might risk the wrath of the party supporters, many of whom have been energized by Mr. Corbyn\u2019s campaign, Mr. Fielding added. On Saturday they thronged the conference center where the results were announced , some cheering or chanting.", "sentence_answer": "On Saturday they thronged the conference center where the results were announced , some cheering or chanting.", "paragraph_id": "5d700585c8e4820a9b66a91e"} +{"question": "What is the size of the audience the Premier League has?", "paragraph": "That split is the same as the broadcasters now hold for the British rights to televise the Premier League, whose teams, including Manchester United, Liverpool and Arsenal, play in games that can attract a global audience of about three billion each week. The league is expected to receive at least an additional $3 billion when it sells the rights to international broadcasters, including those in the United States, later this year. The battle to broadcast the English soccer games had set Sky, which is partly owned by Rupert Murdoch\u2019s 21st Century Fox, against BT, the former British telecommunications monopoly that has aggressively expanded into live sports programming as a way to promote its array of cable television and Internet services.", "answer": "global audience of about three billion each week", "sentence": "That split is the same as the broadcasters now hold for the British rights to televise the Premier League, whose teams, including Manchester United, Liverpool and Arsenal, play in games that can attract a global audience of about three billion each week .", "paragraph_sentence": " That split is the same as the broadcasters now hold for the British rights to televise the Premier League, whose teams, including Manchester United, Liverpool and Arsenal, play in games that can attract a global audience of about three billion each week . The league is expected to receive at least an additional $3 billion when it sells the rights to international broadcasters, including those in the United States, later this year. The battle to broadcast the English soccer games had set Sky, which is partly owned by Rupert Murdoch\u2019s 21st Century Fox, against BT, the former British telecommunications monopoly that has aggressively expanded into live sports programming as a way to promote its array of cable television and Internet services.", "paragraph_answer": "That split is the same as the broadcasters now hold for the British rights to televise the Premier League, whose teams, including Manchester United, Liverpool and Arsenal, play in games that can attract a global audience of about three billion each week . The league is expected to receive at least an additional $3 billion when it sells the rights to international broadcasters, including those in the United States, later this year. The battle to broadcast the English soccer games had set Sky, which is partly owned by Rupert Murdoch\u2019s 21st Century Fox, against BT, the former British telecommunications monopoly that has aggressively expanded into live sports programming as a way to promote its array of cable television and Internet services.", "sentence_answer": "That split is the same as the broadcasters now hold for the British rights to televise the Premier League, whose teams, including Manchester United, Liverpool and Arsenal, play in games that can attract a global audience of about three billion each week .", "paragraph_id": "5d703938c8e4820a9b66e188"} +{"question": "Where was RBG located during 1962 and 1963?", "paragraph": "RBG: Justice O\u2019Connor once said: \u201cSuppose there had been no discrimination when we finished law school. We\u2019d be retired partners from large law firms today.\u201d She got her first job working for free for a county attorney, and she was very high in her class at Stanford. GS: The great thing about obstacles is that they cause you to identify with other groups of people who are facing obstacles. PG: When did you start thinking seriously about women\u2019s equality? RBG: When I was working on a book about civil procedure in Sweden, in 1962 and \u201963. GS: For which she learned Swedish. Is that not incredible?", "answer": "Sweden", "sentence": "RBG: When I was working on a book about civil procedure in Sweden , in 1962 and \u201963.", "paragraph_sentence": "RBG: Justice O\u2019Connor once said: \u201cSuppose there had been no discrimination when we finished law school. We\u2019d be retired partners from large law firms today.\u201d She got her first job working for free for a county attorney, and she was very high in her class at Stanford. GS: The great thing about obstacles is that they cause you to identify with other groups of people who are facing obstacles. PG: When did you start thinking seriously about women\u2019s equality? RBG: When I was working on a book about civil procedure in Sweden , in 1962 and \u201963. GS: For which she learned Swedish. Is that not incredible?", "paragraph_answer": "RBG: Justice O\u2019Connor once said: \u201cSuppose there had been no discrimination when we finished law school. We\u2019d be retired partners from large law firms today.\u201d She got her first job working for free for a county attorney, and she was very high in her class at Stanford. GS: The great thing about obstacles is that they cause you to identify with other groups of people who are facing obstacles. PG: When did you start thinking seriously about women\u2019s equality? RBG: When I was working on a book about civil procedure in Sweden , in 1962 and \u201963. GS: For which she learned Swedish. Is that not incredible?", "sentence_answer": "RBG: When I was working on a book about civil procedure in Sweden , in 1962 and \u201963.", "paragraph_id": "5d705db1c8e4820a9b66efa3"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d7008d5c8e4820a9b66b0fc"} +{"question": "what is an essential part of the business?", "paragraph": "Toys and games, a small but increasingly critical part of the business, provided a bright spot, growing nearly 15 percent in the last quarter. In a conference call with investors, Mr. Boire underscored this point by singling out coloring books and strong sales of Adele\u2019s new album \u201c25\u201d among the company\u2019s recent successes.", "answer": "Toys and games", "sentence": "Toys and games , a small but increasingly critical part of the business, provided a bright spot, growing nearly 15 percent in the last quarter.", "paragraph_sentence": " Toys and games , a small but increasingly critical part of the business, provided a bright spot, growing nearly 15 percent in the last quarter. In a conference call with investors, Mr. Boire underscored this point by singling out coloring books and strong sales of Adele\u2019s new album \u201c25\u201d among the company\u2019s recent successes.", "paragraph_answer": " Toys and games , a small but increasingly critical part of the business, provided a bright spot, growing nearly 15 percent in the last quarter. In a conference call with investors, Mr. Boire underscored this point by singling out coloring books and strong sales of Adele\u2019s new album \u201c25\u201d among the company\u2019s recent successes.", "sentence_answer": " Toys and games , a small but increasingly critical part of the business, provided a bright spot, growing nearly 15 percent in the last quarter.", "paragraph_id": "5d702220c8e4820a9b66ce2f"} +{"question": "How much increase did Full Sail see in the amount of applicants from 2012 to 2013?", "paragraph": "But the rapidly shifting film school landscape has led to what a business professor might refer to as marketplace confusion. Never have the film school options been so many, and never has there been greater bewilderment about where to go \u2014 or whether to go at all. \u201cYou practically need a degree just to sort through it,\u201d said Reed Martin, author of \u201cThe Reel Truth,\u201d a guide for aspiring filmmakers. A lot of the confusion seems to be centered on the hard-charging for-profits that have stepped in to pick up spillover from more selective traditional schools. Full Sail, which offered its first bachelor\u2019s degree programs in 2003 and master\u2019s programs in 2007, says it received 2,800 film-related applicants last year, a 47 percent increase over 2013. Other major for-profit schools, almost all of which practice open enrollment, include the Los Angeles Film School and the New York Film Academy.", "answer": "47 percent", "sentence": "Full Sail, which offered its first bachelor\u2019s degree programs in 2003 and master\u2019s programs in 2007, says it received 2,800 film-related applicants last year, a 47 percent increase over 2013.", "paragraph_sentence": "But the rapidly shifting film school landscape has led to what a business professor might refer to as marketplace confusion. Never have the film school options been so many, and never has there been greater bewilderment about where to go \u2014 or whether to go at all. \u201cYou practically need a degree just to sort through it,\u201d said Reed Martin, author of \u201cThe Reel Truth,\u201d a guide for aspiring filmmakers. A lot of the confusion seems to be centered on the hard-charging for-profits that have stepped in to pick up spillover from more selective traditional schools. Full Sail, which offered its first bachelor\u2019s degree programs in 2003 and master\u2019s programs in 2007, says it received 2,800 film-related applicants last year, a 47 percent increase over 2013. Other major for-profit schools, almost all of which practice open enrollment, include the Los Angeles Film School and the New York Film Academy.", "paragraph_answer": "But the rapidly shifting film school landscape has led to what a business professor might refer to as marketplace confusion. Never have the film school options been so many, and never has there been greater bewilderment about where to go \u2014 or whether to go at all. \u201cYou practically need a degree just to sort through it,\u201d said Reed Martin, author of \u201cThe Reel Truth,\u201d a guide for aspiring filmmakers. A lot of the confusion seems to be centered on the hard-charging for-profits that have stepped in to pick up spillover from more selective traditional schools. Full Sail, which offered its first bachelor\u2019s degree programs in 2003 and master\u2019s programs in 2007, says it received 2,800 film-related applicants last year, a 47 percent increase over 2013. Other major for-profit schools, almost all of which practice open enrollment, include the Los Angeles Film School and the New York Film Academy.", "sentence_answer": "Full Sail, which offered its first bachelor\u2019s degree programs in 2003 and master\u2019s programs in 2007, says it received 2,800 film-related applicants last year, a 47 percent increase over 2013.", "paragraph_id": "5d70290cc8e4820a9b66d6d8"} +{"question": "Who is the neurosurgeon that was preparing for the brain surgery?", "paragraph": "Each time Ben Carson prepared to cut into a human brain, the neurosurgeon, who was the first to separate twins conjoined at the head, said a prayer. He would scrub his hands, close his eyes and ask for God\u2019s help. \u201cLord, you be the neurosurgeon,\u201d he has described himself thinking. \u201cI\u2019ll be the hands.\u201d Since packing up his scalpel and becoming a Republican presidential candidate, Mr. Carson has not shied from talking about his Christian faith and sprinkling policy pronouncements with prayer as he travels the country talking to voters in his blunt but soft-spoken style. So far it has worked \u2014 he has overtaken Donald J. Trump in a new national poll of Republicans and is beating him in Iowa, the crucial caucus state. But Mr. Carson\u2019s religion has been cast in a harsher light in recent days, as Mr. Trump, whose support among evangelicals is falling, suggested that the doctor is not a mainstream Christian because he is a member of the Seventh-day Adventist denomination.", "answer": "Ben Carson", "sentence": "Each time Ben Carson prepared to cut into a human brain, the neurosurgeon, who was the first to separate twins conjoined at the head, said a prayer.", "paragraph_sentence": " Each time Ben Carson prepared to cut into a human brain, the neurosurgeon, who was the first to separate twins conjoined at the head, said a prayer. He would scrub his hands, close his eyes and ask for God\u2019s help. \u201cLord, you be the neurosurgeon,\u201d he has described himself thinking. \u201cI\u2019ll be the hands.\u201d Since packing up his scalpel and becoming a Republican presidential candidate, Mr. Carson has not shied from talking about his Christian faith and sprinkling policy pronouncements with prayer as he travels the country talking to voters in his blunt but soft-spoken style. So far it has worked \u2014 he has overtaken Donald J. Trump in a new national poll of Republicans and is beating him in Iowa, the crucial caucus state. But Mr. Carson\u2019s religion has been cast in a harsher light in recent days, as Mr. Trump, whose support among evangelicals is falling, suggested that the doctor is not a mainstream Christian because he is a member of the Seventh-day Adventist denomination.", "paragraph_answer": "Each time Ben Carson prepared to cut into a human brain, the neurosurgeon, who was the first to separate twins conjoined at the head, said a prayer. He would scrub his hands, close his eyes and ask for God\u2019s help. \u201cLord, you be the neurosurgeon,\u201d he has described himself thinking. \u201cI\u2019ll be the hands.\u201d Since packing up his scalpel and becoming a Republican presidential candidate, Mr. Carson has not shied from talking about his Christian faith and sprinkling policy pronouncements with prayer as he travels the country talking to voters in his blunt but soft-spoken style. So far it has worked \u2014 he has overtaken Donald J. Trump in a new national poll of Republicans and is beating him in Iowa, the crucial caucus state. But Mr. Carson\u2019s religion has been cast in a harsher light in recent days, as Mr. Trump, whose support among evangelicals is falling, suggested that the doctor is not a mainstream Christian because he is a member of the Seventh-day Adventist denomination.", "sentence_answer": "Each time Ben Carson prepared to cut into a human brain, the neurosurgeon, who was the first to separate twins conjoined at the head, said a prayer.", "paragraph_id": "5d702a34c8e4820a9b66d7c7"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d7008c9c8e4820a9b66b0e5"} +{"question": "Which former Prime Minister did Hugh White advise?", "paragraph": "SYDNEY, Australia \u2014 When Malcolm Turnbull was sworn in on Tuesday, he did not only become Australia\u2019s 29th prime minister \u2014 he also became its fourth in just over two years. His three immediate predecessors were ousted by their own parties, including Tony Abbott, who was forced out Monday in a leadership challenge led by Mr. Turnbull. Now that Mr. Turnbull, a wealthy lawyer and former investment banker, has the country\u2019s top job, his main challenge is clear, said Hugh White, an intelligence analyst who from 1985 to 1991 advised Prime Minister Bob Hawke and Defense Minister Kim Beazley.", "answer": "Bob Hawke", "sentence": "Now that Mr. Turnbull, a wealthy lawyer and former investment banker, has the country\u2019s top job, his main challenge is clear, said Hugh White, an intelligence analyst who from 1985 to 1991 advised Prime Minister Bob Hawke and Defense Minister Kim Beazley.", "paragraph_sentence": "SYDNEY, Australia \u2014 When Malcolm Turnbull was sworn in on Tuesday, he did not only become Australia\u2019s 29th prime minister \u2014 he also became its fourth in just over two years. His three immediate predecessors were ousted by their own parties, including Tony Abbott, who was forced out Monday in a leadership challenge led by Mr. Turnbull. Now that Mr. Turnbull, a wealthy lawyer and former investment banker, has the country\u2019s top job, his main challenge is clear, said Hugh White, an intelligence analyst who from 1985 to 1991 advised Prime Minister Bob Hawke and Defense Minister Kim Beazley. ", "paragraph_answer": "SYDNEY, Australia \u2014 When Malcolm Turnbull was sworn in on Tuesday, he did not only become Australia\u2019s 29th prime minister \u2014 he also became its fourth in just over two years. His three immediate predecessors were ousted by their own parties, including Tony Abbott, who was forced out Monday in a leadership challenge led by Mr. Turnbull. Now that Mr. Turnbull, a wealthy lawyer and former investment banker, has the country\u2019s top job, his main challenge is clear, said Hugh White, an intelligence analyst who from 1985 to 1991 advised Prime Minister Bob Hawke and Defense Minister Kim Beazley.", "sentence_answer": "Now that Mr. Turnbull, a wealthy lawyer and former investment banker, has the country\u2019s top job, his main challenge is clear, said Hugh White, an intelligence analyst who from 1985 to 1991 advised Prime Minister Bob Hawke and Defense Minister Kim Beazley.", "paragraph_id": "5d700c28c8e4820a9b66b710"} +{"question": "Senator Mark Warner represents which state?", "paragraph": "Democratic and Republican lawmakers have been unsparing in their criticism of the personnel agency\u2019s handling of the data breach and its aftermath \u2014 and its habit of periodically revising upward the amount of information that was lost. Government officials have not been able to explain publicly why it took more than a year to discover that information was leaving its systems at a tremendous rate. Senator Mark Warner, Democrat of Virginia, said in a statement on Wednesday that \u201cthe massive new number of employees\u2019 fingerprints that was breached is shocking.\u201d He continued, \u201cAnd it does little to instill confidence in O.P.M. that it took them so long to detect that the number was so much larger than originally thought.\u201d He called for \u201clifetime identity protection coverage\u201d for the affected employees and contractors. But that assumes there was a financial motive to the theft; officials say it seems more likely that it was a national security motive.", "answer": "Virginia", "sentence": "Senator Mark Warner, Democrat of Virginia , said in a statement on Wednesday that \u201cthe massive new number of employees\u2019 fingerprints that was breached is shocking.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Democratic and Republican lawmakers have been unsparing in their criticism of the personnel agency\u2019s handling of the data breach and its aftermath \u2014 and its habit of periodically revising upward the amount of information that was lost. Government officials have not been able to explain publicly why it took more than a year to discover that information was leaving its systems at a tremendous rate. Senator Mark Warner, Democrat of Virginia , said in a statement on Wednesday that \u201cthe massive new number of employees\u2019 fingerprints that was breached is shocking.\u201d He continued, \u201cAnd it does little to instill confidence in O.P.M. that it took them so long to detect that the number was so much larger than originally thought.\u201d He called for \u201clifetime identity protection coverage\u201d for the affected employees and contractors. But that assumes there was a financial motive to the theft; officials say it seems more likely that it was a national security motive.", "paragraph_answer": "Democratic and Republican lawmakers have been unsparing in their criticism of the personnel agency\u2019s handling of the data breach and its aftermath \u2014 and its habit of periodically revising upward the amount of information that was lost. Government officials have not been able to explain publicly why it took more than a year to discover that information was leaving its systems at a tremendous rate. Senator Mark Warner, Democrat of Virginia , said in a statement on Wednesday that \u201cthe massive new number of employees\u2019 fingerprints that was breached is shocking.\u201d He continued, \u201cAnd it does little to instill confidence in O.P.M. that it took them so long to detect that the number was so much larger than originally thought.\u201d He called for \u201clifetime identity protection coverage\u201d for the affected employees and contractors. But that assumes there was a financial motive to the theft; officials say it seems more likely that it was a national security motive.", "sentence_answer": "Senator Mark Warner, Democrat of Virginia , said in a statement on Wednesday that \u201cthe massive new number of employees\u2019 fingerprints that was breached is shocking.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d700d0dc8e4820a9b66b89d"} +{"question": "What did Intuit put in place so that electronic filings could continue?", "paragraph": "Intuit said the suspension, which it lifted Friday, didn\u2019t affect federal returns. Intuit said that its systems weren\u2019t breached, but that information used to file the fraudulent returns was stolen or obtained elsewhere. It\u2019s unclear just how many bogus state returns were actually processed. The Utah State Tax Commission said on Thursday that it had identified 28 fraudulent returns and flagged about 8,000 as potentially fraudulent; it said 18 other states were also affected. The Minnesota Department of Revenue stopped accepting electronic filings from TurboTax on Thursday and resumed accepting them Saturday afternoon, after TurboTax put new security measures in place.", "answer": "new security measures", "sentence": "The Minnesota Department of Revenue stopped accepting electronic filings from TurboTax on Thursday and resumed accepting them Saturday afternoon, after TurboTax put new security measures in place.", "paragraph_sentence": "Intuit said the suspension, which it lifted Friday, didn\u2019t affect federal returns. Intuit said that its systems weren\u2019t breached, but that information used to file the fraudulent returns was stolen or obtained elsewhere. It\u2019s unclear just how many bogus state returns were actually processed. The Utah State Tax Commission said on Thursday that it had identified 28 fraudulent returns and flagged about 8,000 as potentially fraudulent; it said 18 other states were also affected. The Minnesota Department of Revenue stopped accepting electronic filings from TurboTax on Thursday and resumed accepting them Saturday afternoon, after TurboTax put new security measures in place. ", "paragraph_answer": "Intuit said the suspension, which it lifted Friday, didn\u2019t affect federal returns. Intuit said that its systems weren\u2019t breached, but that information used to file the fraudulent returns was stolen or obtained elsewhere. It\u2019s unclear just how many bogus state returns were actually processed. The Utah State Tax Commission said on Thursday that it had identified 28 fraudulent returns and flagged about 8,000 as potentially fraudulent; it said 18 other states were also affected. The Minnesota Department of Revenue stopped accepting electronic filings from TurboTax on Thursday and resumed accepting them Saturday afternoon, after TurboTax put new security measures in place.", "sentence_answer": "The Minnesota Department of Revenue stopped accepting electronic filings from TurboTax on Thursday and resumed accepting them Saturday afternoon, after TurboTax put new security measures in place.", "paragraph_id": "5d70403cc8e4820a9b66e4fa"} +{"question": "What university studied attitudes towards global warming?", "paragraph": "Misinformation about climate change is distressingly common in the United States \u2014 a 2014 Yale study found that 35 percent of Americans believe that global warming is caused mostly by natural phenomena rather than human activity, and 34 percent think there is a lot of disagreement among scientists about whether global warming is even happening. (In fact, an overwhelming majority of scientists agree that climate change is here and that it is caused by humans.) One way to stop the spread of this misinformation is to teach children about climate change.", "answer": "Yale", "sentence": "Misinformation about climate change is distressingly common in the United States \u2014 a 2014 Yale study found that 35 percent of Americans believe that global warming is caused mostly by natural phenomena rather than human activity, and 34 percent think there is a lot of disagreement among scientists about whether global warming is even happening.", "paragraph_sentence": " Misinformation about climate change is distressingly common in the United States \u2014 a 2014 Yale study found that 35 percent of Americans believe that global warming is caused mostly by natural phenomena rather than human activity, and 34 percent think there is a lot of disagreement among scientists about whether global warming is even happening. (In fact, an overwhelming majority of scientists agree that climate change is here and that it is caused by humans.) One way to stop the spread of this misinformation is to teach children about climate change.", "paragraph_answer": "Misinformation about climate change is distressingly common in the United States \u2014 a 2014 Yale study found that 35 percent of Americans believe that global warming is caused mostly by natural phenomena rather than human activity, and 34 percent think there is a lot of disagreement among scientists about whether global warming is even happening. (In fact, an overwhelming majority of scientists agree that climate change is here and that it is caused by humans.) One way to stop the spread of this misinformation is to teach children about climate change.", "sentence_answer": "Misinformation about climate change is distressingly common in the United States \u2014 a 2014 Yale study found that 35 percent of Americans believe that global warming is caused mostly by natural phenomena rather than human activity, and 34 percent think there is a lot of disagreement among scientists about whether global warming is even happening.", "paragraph_id": "5d700f06c8e4820a9b66bb17"} +{"question": "What two countries had a large amount of Myanmar artwork?", "paragraph": "In 1962, Myanmar \u2014 which was called Burma and is wedged high up in Southeast Asia between India and China \u2014 closed its doors to the world and threw away the keys for almost 40 years. Under surveillance-obsessed military rule, little from outside could get in, and little from inside could get out, including art. There was Myanmar art in the West \u2014 England and Germany had made out like the colonial bandits they were \u2014 but very little in the United States. Finally, in the early 2000s, Myanmar re-established cautious international contact and began to advertise, in the interest of tourism, its cultural riches. Loans of art became possible, among the first a big one to the Metropolitan Museum for \u201cLost Kingdoms: Hindu-Buddhist Sculpture of Early Southeast Asia\u201d last year. Even then, at the last minute, promised pieces were held back, though extraordinary things came through, the largest being a monumental stone stele, carved on both sides with mysterious, apparently non-Buddhist figures and dating from around the fourth century.", "answer": "England and Germany", "sentence": "There was Myanmar art in the West \u2014 England and Germany had made out like the colonial bandits they were \u2014 but very little in the United States.", "paragraph_sentence": "In 1962, Myanmar \u2014 which was called Burma and is wedged high up in Southeast Asia between India and China \u2014 closed its doors to the world and threw away the keys for almost 40 years. Under surveillance-obsessed military rule, little from outside could get in, and little from inside could get out, including art. There was Myanmar art in the West \u2014 England and Germany had made out like the colonial bandits they were \u2014 but very little in the United States. Finally, in the early 2000s, Myanmar re-established cautious international contact and began to advertise, in the interest of tourism, its cultural riches. Loans of art became possible, among the first a big one to the Metropolitan Museum for \u201cLost Kingdoms: Hindu-Buddhist Sculpture of Early Southeast Asia\u201d last year. Even then, at the last minute, promised pieces were held back, though extraordinary things came through, the largest being a monumental stone stele, carved on both sides with mysterious, apparently non-Buddhist figures and dating from around the fourth century.", "paragraph_answer": "In 1962, Myanmar \u2014 which was called Burma and is wedged high up in Southeast Asia between India and China \u2014 closed its doors to the world and threw away the keys for almost 40 years. Under surveillance-obsessed military rule, little from outside could get in, and little from inside could get out, including art. There was Myanmar art in the West \u2014 England and Germany had made out like the colonial bandits they were \u2014 but very little in the United States. Finally, in the early 2000s, Myanmar re-established cautious international contact and began to advertise, in the interest of tourism, its cultural riches. Loans of art became possible, among the first a big one to the Metropolitan Museum for \u201cLost Kingdoms: Hindu-Buddhist Sculpture of Early Southeast Asia\u201d last year. Even then, at the last minute, promised pieces were held back, though extraordinary things came through, the largest being a monumental stone stele, carved on both sides with mysterious, apparently non-Buddhist figures and dating from around the fourth century.", "sentence_answer": "There was Myanmar art in the West \u2014 England and Germany had made out like the colonial bandits they were \u2014 but very little in the United States.", "paragraph_id": "5d7027c8c8e4820a9b66d583"} +{"question": "What is likely to happen if Mr. Cameron decides to support Britain keeping it's position in the EU?", "paragraph": "And angry or disappointed party legislators are a great danger for small parliamentary majorities. In 1992, for example, Prime Minister John Major, also a Conservative, had a larger majority than Mr. Cameron does now, but saw it shrink steadily as the party fought over Europe and the Maastricht Treaty on further integration. Times are different, argued Alan Duncan, a Conservative legislator, saying that his colleagues would be careful not to undermine the victory Mr. Cameron has brought them. Still, if Mr. Cameron, as expected after negotiations with Brussels, decides to support Britain\u2019s staying in the European Union, it is very likely that a sizable number of Tory backbenchers will oppose him and campaign to leave Europe.", "answer": "a sizable number of Tory backbenchers will oppose him", "sentence": "Still, if Mr. Cameron, as expected after negotiations with Brussels, decides to support Britain\u2019s staying in the European Union, it is very likely that a sizable number of Tory backbenchers will oppose him and campaign to leave Europe.", "paragraph_sentence": "And angry or disappointed party legislators are a great danger for small parliamentary majorities. In 1992, for example, Prime Minister John Major, also a Conservative, had a larger majority than Mr. Cameron does now, but saw it shrink steadily as the party fought over Europe and the Maastricht Treaty on further integration. Times are different, argued Alan Duncan, a Conservative legislator, saying that his colleagues would be careful not to undermine the victory Mr. Cameron has brought them. Still, if Mr. Cameron, as expected after negotiations with Brussels, decides to support Britain\u2019s staying in the European Union, it is very likely that a sizable number of Tory backbenchers will oppose him and campaign to leave Europe. ", "paragraph_answer": "And angry or disappointed party legislators are a great danger for small parliamentary majorities. In 1992, for example, Prime Minister John Major, also a Conservative, had a larger majority than Mr. Cameron does now, but saw it shrink steadily as the party fought over Europe and the Maastricht Treaty on further integration. Times are different, argued Alan Duncan, a Conservative legislator, saying that his colleagues would be careful not to undermine the victory Mr. Cameron has brought them. Still, if Mr. Cameron, as expected after negotiations with Brussels, decides to support Britain\u2019s staying in the European Union, it is very likely that a sizable number of Tory backbenchers will oppose him and campaign to leave Europe.", "sentence_answer": "Still, if Mr. Cameron, as expected after negotiations with Brussels, decides to support Britain\u2019s staying in the European Union, it is very likely that a sizable number of Tory backbenchers will oppose him and campaign to leave Europe.", "paragraph_id": "5d7042e0c8e4820a9b66e671"} +{"question": "Who was accused of sleeping with Stan Wawrinka's girlfriend?", "paragraph": "\u201cI\u2019m not a guy that needs too many matches before I play in a Grand Slam, so it\u2019s almost good preparation for me to go into the U.S. Open,\u201d said Kyrgios, an Australian who was unseeded. \u201cRest \u2014 I think it\u2019s probably a good thing for me at the moment.\u201d Kyrgios\u2019s early exit will at least allow him to avoid the vitriol that has been directed his way since Wednesday night, when he was heard telling Stan Wawrinka that a fellow Australian player, Thanasi Kokkinakis, had slept with Wawrinka\u2019s girlfriend, Donna Vekic, a player on the WTA Tour.", "answer": "Thanasi Kokkinakis", "sentence": "Kyrgios\u2019s early exit will at least allow him to avoid the vitriol that has been directed his way since Wednesday night, when he was heard telling Stan Wawrinka that a fellow Australian player, Thanasi Kokkinakis , had slept with Wawrinka\u2019s girlfriend, Donna Vekic, a player on the WTA Tour.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI\u2019m not a guy that needs too many matches before I play in a Grand Slam, so it\u2019s almost good preparation for me to go into the U.S. Open,\u201d said Kyrgios, an Australian who was unseeded. \u201cRest \u2014 I think it\u2019s probably a good thing for me at the moment.\u201d Kyrgios\u2019s early exit will at least allow him to avoid the vitriol that has been directed his way since Wednesday night, when he was heard telling Stan Wawrinka that a fellow Australian player, Thanasi Kokkinakis , had slept with Wawrinka\u2019s girlfriend, Donna Vekic, a player on the WTA Tour. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI\u2019m not a guy that needs too many matches before I play in a Grand Slam, so it\u2019s almost good preparation for me to go into the U.S. Open,\u201d said Kyrgios, an Australian who was unseeded. \u201cRest \u2014 I think it\u2019s probably a good thing for me at the moment.\u201d Kyrgios\u2019s early exit will at least allow him to avoid the vitriol that has been directed his way since Wednesday night, when he was heard telling Stan Wawrinka that a fellow Australian player, Thanasi Kokkinakis , had slept with Wawrinka\u2019s girlfriend, Donna Vekic, a player on the WTA Tour.", "sentence_answer": "Kyrgios\u2019s early exit will at least allow him to avoid the vitriol that has been directed his way since Wednesday night, when he was heard telling Stan Wawrinka that a fellow Australian player, Thanasi Kokkinakis , had slept with Wawrinka\u2019s girlfriend, Donna Vekic, a player on the WTA Tour.", "paragraph_id": "5d70879bc8e4820a9b66f46b"} +{"question": "What apps have similar features?", "paragraph": "Apple\u2019s iMessage has an audio-chat feature that allows you to send voice messages to friends on the same platform as text messages. Many apps have similar features, including WhatsApp and WeChat. Then there is the actual phone, which I\u2019m told is the basis of these app-filled devices we all have. If you really want to hear someone\u2019s voice, you can simply call her.", "answer": "WhatsApp and WeChat", "sentence": "Many apps have similar features, including WhatsApp and WeChat .", "paragraph_sentence": "Apple\u2019s iMessage has an audio-chat feature that allows you to send voice messages to friends on the same platform as text messages. Many apps have similar features, including WhatsApp and WeChat . Then there is the actual phone, which I\u2019m told is the basis of these app-filled devices we all have. If you really want to hear someone\u2019s voice, you can simply call her.", "paragraph_answer": "Apple\u2019s iMessage has an audio-chat feature that allows you to send voice messages to friends on the same platform as text messages. Many apps have similar features, including WhatsApp and WeChat . Then there is the actual phone, which I\u2019m told is the basis of these app-filled devices we all have. If you really want to hear someone\u2019s voice, you can simply call her.", "sentence_answer": "Many apps have similar features, including WhatsApp and WeChat .", "paragraph_id": "5d70464ac8e4820a9b66e82e"} +{"question": "What organization is celebrating American International Pictures with a 13-film retrospective?", "paragraph": "American International Pictures, Part 2 (through Sunday) Anthology Film Archives continues its tribute to the influential, no-budget production house American International Pictures, where the movies\u2019 titles and posters often got hashed out before the scripts were written. The subtitle for this 13-film retrospective is \u201cBikers, Drugs and Rock \u2018n\u2019 Roll,\u201d and an impressive number of the titles manage to check all three of those boxes. Two films with a more narrow focus are the chintzy hostage melodrama \u201cRock All Night,\u201d with its marvelous tagline \u201cSome Have to Dance \u2026 Some Have to Kill!,\u201d and \u201cMachine-Gun Kelly,\u201d starring Charles Bronson. No fewer than seven of Anthology\u2019s offerings come from Roger Corman, who directed and/or produced some 40 films for the company in 15 years \u2014 and even worked as an (uncredited) stunt driver on one of them. 32-34 Second Avenue, at Second Street, East Village, 212-505-5181, anthologyfilmarchives.org. (Eric Grode)", "answer": "Anthology Film Archives", "sentence": "American International Pictures, Part 2 (through Sunday) Anthology Film Archives continues its tribute to the influential, no-budget production house American International Pictures, where the movies\u2019 titles and posters often got hashed out before the scripts were written.", "paragraph_sentence": " American International Pictures, Part 2 (through Sunday) Anthology Film Archives continues its tribute to the influential, no-budget production house American International Pictures, where the movies\u2019 titles and posters often got hashed out before the scripts were written. The subtitle for this 13-film retrospective is \u201cBikers, Drugs and Rock \u2018n\u2019 Roll,\u201d and an impressive number of the titles manage to check all three of those boxes. Two films with a more narrow focus are the chintzy hostage melodrama \u201cRock All Night,\u201d with its marvelous tagline \u201cSome Have to Dance \u2026 Some Have to Kill!,\u201d and \u201cMachine-Gun Kelly,\u201d starring Charles Bronson. No fewer than seven of Anthology\u2019s offerings come from Roger Corman, who directed and/or produced some 40 films for the company in 15 years \u2014 and even worked as an (uncredited) stunt driver on one of them. 32-34 Second Avenue, at Second Street, East Village, 212-505-5181, anthologyfilmarchives.org. (Eric Grode)", "paragraph_answer": "American International Pictures, Part 2 (through Sunday) Anthology Film Archives continues its tribute to the influential, no-budget production house American International Pictures, where the movies\u2019 titles and posters often got hashed out before the scripts were written. The subtitle for this 13-film retrospective is \u201cBikers, Drugs and Rock \u2018n\u2019 Roll,\u201d and an impressive number of the titles manage to check all three of those boxes. Two films with a more narrow focus are the chintzy hostage melodrama \u201cRock All Night,\u201d with its marvelous tagline \u201cSome Have to Dance \u2026 Some Have to Kill!,\u201d and \u201cMachine-Gun Kelly,\u201d starring Charles Bronson. No fewer than seven of Anthology\u2019s offerings come from Roger Corman, who directed and/or produced some 40 films for the company in 15 years \u2014 and even worked as an (uncredited) stunt driver on one of them. 32-34 Second Avenue, at Second Street, East Village, 212-505-5181, anthologyfilmarchives.org. (Eric Grode)", "sentence_answer": "American International Pictures, Part 2 (through Sunday) Anthology Film Archives continues its tribute to the influential, no-budget production house American International Pictures, where the movies\u2019 titles and posters often got hashed out before the scripts were written.", "paragraph_id": "5d702bd6c8e4820a9b66d969"} +{"question": "Who else was identified as being filmed during this arrest?", "paragraph": "A New York City police officer who arrested a man as he tried to film him and other officers with a cellphone camera was charged on Tuesday with official misconduct and lying on a criminal complaint.", "answer": "other officers", "sentence": "A New York City police officer who arrested a man as he tried to film him and other officers with a cellphone camera was charged on Tuesday with official misconduct and lying on a criminal complaint.", "paragraph_sentence": " A New York City police officer who arrested a man as he tried to film him and other officers with a cellphone camera was charged on Tuesday with official misconduct and lying on a criminal complaint. ", "paragraph_answer": "A New York City police officer who arrested a man as he tried to film him and other officers with a cellphone camera was charged on Tuesday with official misconduct and lying on a criminal complaint.", "sentence_answer": "A New York City police officer who arrested a man as he tried to film him and other officers with a cellphone camera was charged on Tuesday with official misconduct and lying on a criminal complaint.", "paragraph_id": "5d70179cc8e4820a9b66c394"} +{"question": "which of investments do fund analysts think is the most dangerous?", "paragraph": "\u201cWhen the market is pricing assets that low, you should worry,\u201d he said. Mutual fund analysts say that the Third Avenue fund is perhaps the riskiest of the many high-yield funds that investors have been piling into in recent years. Mr. Lapointe and his team of analysts acted more like private equity investors, taking large stakes in companies that were either already bankrupt or emerging from bankruptcy. Unlike most funds that hold bonds that can be bought and sold, albeit with some difficulty, private equity funds are not required to pay back investors on demand \u2014 it is a must for mutual funds.", "answer": "Third Avenue fund", "sentence": "Mutual fund analysts say that the Third Avenue fund is perhaps the riskiest of the many high-yield funds that investors have been piling into in recent years.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWhen the market is pricing assets that low, you should worry,\u201d he said. Mutual fund analysts say that the Third Avenue fund is perhaps the riskiest of the many high-yield funds that investors have been piling into in recent years. Mr. Lapointe and his team of analysts acted more like private equity investors, taking large stakes in companies that were either already bankrupt or emerging from bankruptcy. Unlike most funds that hold bonds that can be bought and sold, albeit with some difficulty, private equity funds are not required to pay back investors on demand \u2014 it is a must for mutual funds.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWhen the market is pricing assets that low, you should worry,\u201d he said. Mutual fund analysts say that the Third Avenue fund is perhaps the riskiest of the many high-yield funds that investors have been piling into in recent years. Mr. Lapointe and his team of analysts acted more like private equity investors, taking large stakes in companies that were either already bankrupt or emerging from bankruptcy. Unlike most funds that hold bonds that can be bought and sold, albeit with some difficulty, private equity funds are not required to pay back investors on demand \u2014 it is a must for mutual funds.", "sentence_answer": "Mutual fund analysts say that the Third Avenue fund is perhaps the riskiest of the many high-yield funds that investors have been piling into in recent years.", "paragraph_id": "5d702653c8e4820a9b66d28a"} +{"question": "Who named their genitalia?", "paragraph": "The Bookends feature (Sept. 27) asks, \u201cWhy read books considered obscene?\u201d One answer is that last year\u2019s pornography can be this year\u2019s literature. One of the most glorious moments in D.H. Lawrence\u2019s \u201cLady Chatterley\u2019s Lover,\u201d once a banned book, occurs when Connie and Mellors adorn their genitalia with flowers. They name them Sir John and Lady Jane, raising anatomy to the level of aristocracy. Only prudes would find such an incident, which is both innocent and erotic, offensive. And only the self-righteous would find the novel obscene. BERNARD F. DICK", "answer": "Connie and Mellors", "sentence": "One of the most glorious moments in D.H. Lawrence\u2019s \u201cLady Chatterley\u2019s Lover,\u201d once a banned book, occurs when Connie and Mellors adorn their genitalia with flowers.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Bookends feature (Sept. 27) asks, \u201cWhy read books considered obscene?\u201d One answer is that last year\u2019s pornography can be this year\u2019s literature. One of the most glorious moments in D.H. Lawrence\u2019s \u201cLady Chatterley\u2019s Lover,\u201d once a banned book, occurs when Connie and Mellors adorn their genitalia with flowers. They name them Sir John and Lady Jane, raising anatomy to the level of aristocracy. Only prudes would find such an incident, which is both innocent and erotic, offensive. And only the self-righteous would find the novel obscene. BERNARD F. DICK", "paragraph_answer": "The Bookends feature (Sept. 27) asks, \u201cWhy read books considered obscene?\u201d One answer is that last year\u2019s pornography can be this year\u2019s literature. One of the most glorious moments in D.H. Lawrence\u2019s \u201cLady Chatterley\u2019s Lover,\u201d once a banned book, occurs when Connie and Mellors adorn their genitalia with flowers. They name them Sir John and Lady Jane, raising anatomy to the level of aristocracy. Only prudes would find such an incident, which is both innocent and erotic, offensive. And only the self-righteous would find the novel obscene. BERNARD F. DICK", "sentence_answer": "One of the most glorious moments in D.H. Lawrence\u2019s \u201cLady Chatterley\u2019s Lover,\u201d once a banned book, occurs when Connie and Mellors adorn their genitalia with flowers.", "paragraph_id": "5d701d16c8e4820a9b66c897"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d7008e6c8e4820a9b66b10f"} +{"question": "After clicking the right tab, you click what icon?", "paragraph": "If you bought a song in the iTunes Store on your work computer, open iTunes on your home computer, click Sign In (or on your account name) at the top of the window and select Purchased from the menu. Click the Not In My Library tab to see the songs not on that machine, and then click the cloud-shaped Download icon to copy the files to the iTunes library on that Mac or PC. (Apple\u2019s iTunes Match and Apple Music services can also make all your music easily available on all your devices, but are subscription-based and cost money.)", "answer": "the cloud-shaped Download icon", "sentence": "Click the Not In My Library tab to see the songs not on that machine, and then click the cloud-shaped Download icon to copy the files to the iTunes library on that Mac or PC.", "paragraph_sentence": "If you bought a song in the iTunes Store on your work computer, open iTunes on your home computer, click Sign In (or on your account name) at the top of the window and select Purchased from the menu. Click the Not In My Library tab to see the songs not on that machine, and then click the cloud-shaped Download icon to copy the files to the iTunes library on that Mac or PC. (Apple\u2019s iTunes Match and Apple Music services can also make all your music easily available on all your devices, but are subscription-based and cost money.)", "paragraph_answer": "If you bought a song in the iTunes Store on your work computer, open iTunes on your home computer, click Sign In (or on your account name) at the top of the window and select Purchased from the menu. Click the Not In My Library tab to see the songs not on that machine, and then click the cloud-shaped Download icon to copy the files to the iTunes library on that Mac or PC. (Apple\u2019s iTunes Match and Apple Music services can also make all your music easily available on all your devices, but are subscription-based and cost money.)", "sentence_answer": "Click the Not In My Library tab to see the songs not on that machine, and then click the cloud-shaped Download icon to copy the files to the iTunes library on that Mac or PC.", "paragraph_id": "5d70230bc8e4820a9b66cf2c"} +{"question": "What did the couple do when the train passed through?", "paragraph": "The less expensive safety measures \u2014 automatic gates, lights, bells and signs \u2014 are largely in place in the New York region. A challenge is creating crossings that can overcome the lesser impulses of human nature in a part of the country where many people do not see patience as a virtue. In Brentwood, N.Y., on Monday, a couple on foot watched as the safety gate at the Washington Avenue crossing, one of the most dangerous in the region, lowered in front of them, its bells sounding and lights flashing. After one Long Island Rail Road train passed through, heading east, the man and woman ducked underneath the crossing gate. The man glanced toward the train receding in the distance and suddenly jumped back. \u201cThere\u2019s another train coming!\u201d he yelled.", "answer": "ducked underneath the crossing gate", "sentence": "After one Long Island Rail Road train passed through, heading east, the man and woman ducked underneath the crossing gate .", "paragraph_sentence": "The less expensive safety measures \u2014 automatic gates, lights, bells and signs \u2014 are largely in place in the New York region. A challenge is creating crossings that can overcome the lesser impulses of human nature in a part of the country where many people do not see patience as a virtue. In Brentwood, N.Y., on Monday, a couple on foot watched as the safety gate at the Washington Avenue crossing, one of the most dangerous in the region, lowered in front of them, its bells sounding and lights flashing. After one Long Island Rail Road train passed through, heading east, the man and woman ducked underneath the crossing gate . The man glanced toward the train receding in the distance and suddenly jumped back. \u201cThere\u2019s another train coming!\u201d he yelled.", "paragraph_answer": "The less expensive safety measures \u2014 automatic gates, lights, bells and signs \u2014 are largely in place in the New York region. A challenge is creating crossings that can overcome the lesser impulses of human nature in a part of the country where many people do not see patience as a virtue. In Brentwood, N.Y., on Monday, a couple on foot watched as the safety gate at the Washington Avenue crossing, one of the most dangerous in the region, lowered in front of them, its bells sounding and lights flashing. After one Long Island Rail Road train passed through, heading east, the man and woman ducked underneath the crossing gate . The man glanced toward the train receding in the distance and suddenly jumped back. \u201cThere\u2019s another train coming!\u201d he yelled.", "sentence_answer": "After one Long Island Rail Road train passed through, heading east, the man and woman ducked underneath the crossing gate .", "paragraph_id": "5d704fe3c8e4820a9b66eb0f"} +{"question": "Who is the new general manager for the Cubs?", "paragraph": "This belief is not born of the syrupy, early April optimism that is bred into Cubs fans. That was beaten out of me long ago, either by so many years as a sportswriter or by Larry Himes\u2019s stint as general manager. (For the uninitiated, he is the one who let Greg Maddux leave.) Instead, there are plenty of perfectly plausible, rational reasons this is really going to be the Cubs\u2019 year. The new manager, Joe Maddon, won\u2019t treat the 107-year wait for a championship as a 107-ton weight. Jon Lester is a war horse of a pitcher, Anthony Rizzo is a franchise cornerstone, and Kris Bryant looks like a star in waiting.", "answer": "Joe Maddon", "sentence": "The new manager, Joe Maddon , won\u2019t treat the 107-year wait for a championship as a 107-ton weight.", "paragraph_sentence": "This belief is not born of the syrupy, early April optimism that is bred into Cubs fans. That was beaten out of me long ago, either by so many years as a sportswriter or by Larry Himes\u2019s stint as general manager. (For the uninitiated, he is the one who let Greg Maddux leave.) Instead, there are plenty of perfectly plausible, rational reasons this is really going to be the Cubs\u2019 year. The new manager, Joe Maddon , won\u2019t treat the 107-year wait for a championship as a 107-ton weight. Jon Lester is a war horse of a pitcher, Anthony Rizzo is a franchise cornerstone, and Kris Bryant looks like a star in waiting.", "paragraph_answer": "This belief is not born of the syrupy, early April optimism that is bred into Cubs fans. That was beaten out of me long ago, either by so many years as a sportswriter or by Larry Himes\u2019s stint as general manager. (For the uninitiated, he is the one who let Greg Maddux leave.) Instead, there are plenty of perfectly plausible, rational reasons this is really going to be the Cubs\u2019 year. The new manager, Joe Maddon , won\u2019t treat the 107-year wait for a championship as a 107-ton weight. Jon Lester is a war horse of a pitcher, Anthony Rizzo is a franchise cornerstone, and Kris Bryant looks like a star in waiting.", "sentence_answer": "The new manager, Joe Maddon , won\u2019t treat the 107-year wait for a championship as a 107-ton weight.", "paragraph_id": "5d70059bc8e4820a9b66a953"} +{"question": "Which type of medal was awarded to Steinem?", "paragraph": "Justice Ginsburg was appointed by President Jimmy Carter to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 1980. In 1993, President Bill Clinton elevated her to the Supreme Court, making her the court\u2019s second female justice, following Sandra Day O\u2019Connor. (Justice Ginsburg is the subject of a tribute biography, \u201cNotorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg,\u201d by Irin Carmon and Shana Knizhnik.) Meanwhile, Ms. Steinem was an editor at Ms. for nearly 20 years, becoming the public face of the women\u2019s movement. (She continues at the magazine as an adviser.) She has traveled extensively, speaking out for women\u2019s and human rights, winning numerous awards for her work in media and advocacy, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013. Her new book, \u201cMy Life on the Road,\u201d was published last month.", "answer": "Presidential Medal of Freedom", "sentence": "She has traveled extensively, speaking out for women\u2019s and human rights, winning numerous awards for her work in media and advocacy, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013.", "paragraph_sentence": "Justice Ginsburg was appointed by President Jimmy Carter to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 1980. In 1993, President Bill Clinton elevated her to the Supreme Court, making her the court\u2019s second female justice, following Sandra Day O\u2019Connor. (Justice Ginsburg is the subject of a tribute biography, \u201cNotorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg,\u201d by Irin Carmon and Shana Knizhnik.) Meanwhile, Ms. Steinem was an editor at Ms. for nearly 20 years, becoming the public face of the women\u2019s movement. (She continues at the magazine as an adviser.) She has traveled extensively, speaking out for women\u2019s and human rights, winning numerous awards for her work in media and advocacy, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013. Her new book, \u201cMy Life on the Road,\u201d was published last month.", "paragraph_answer": "Justice Ginsburg was appointed by President Jimmy Carter to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 1980. In 1993, President Bill Clinton elevated her to the Supreme Court, making her the court\u2019s second female justice, following Sandra Day O\u2019Connor. (Justice Ginsburg is the subject of a tribute biography, \u201cNotorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg,\u201d by Irin Carmon and Shana Knizhnik.) Meanwhile, Ms. Steinem was an editor at Ms. for nearly 20 years, becoming the public face of the women\u2019s movement. (She continues at the magazine as an adviser.) She has traveled extensively, speaking out for women\u2019s and human rights, winning numerous awards for her work in media and advocacy, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013. Her new book, \u201cMy Life on the Road,\u201d was published last month.", "sentence_answer": "She has traveled extensively, speaking out for women\u2019s and human rights, winning numerous awards for her work in media and advocacy, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013.", "paragraph_id": "5d705a8bc8e4820a9b66ee66"} +{"question": "What are the conflicting reports about the missing soliders?", "paragraph": "What happened to more than 150 soldiers who had been in the hospital, along with several dozen civilians, was unclear. The state news agency, SANA, said they were \u201creunited with their comrades,\u201d while insurgent groups contended that many had been captured or killed. There were also competing versions of what prompted their flight. State news media portrayed it as a planned escape carried out with the help of air and artillery strikes in \u201ca successful tactical operation.\u201d Insurgents said the troops fled when they heard the sounds of their opponents digging a tunnel underneath the hospital to blow it up. A video had been posted online earlier of a fighter called Abu Mosaab, who is known for tunneling under government positions, and a commander with his group, Ahrar al-Sham, issued a statement saying: \u201cThe psychological war might have a bigger impact than traditional war. This is what Allah bestowed on us by leaking the news of Abu Mosaab\u2019s arrival to Jisr al-Shughour.\u201d", "answer": "SANA, said they were \u201creunited with their comrades,\u201d while insurgent groups contended that many had been captured or killed", "sentence": "The state news agency, SANA, said they were \u201creunited with their comrades,\u201d while insurgent groups contended that many had been captured or killed .", "paragraph_sentence": "What happened to more than 150 soldiers who had been in the hospital, along with several dozen civilians, was unclear. The state news agency, SANA, said they were \u201creunited with their comrades,\u201d while insurgent groups contended that many had been captured or killed . There were also competing versions of what prompted their flight. State news media portrayed it as a planned escape carried out with the help of air and artillery strikes in \u201ca successful tactical operation.\u201d Insurgents said the troops fled when they heard the sounds of their opponents digging a tunnel underneath the hospital to blow it up. A video had been posted online earlier of a fighter called Abu Mosaab, who is known for tunneling under government positions, and a commander with his group, Ahrar al-Sham, issued a statement saying: \u201cThe psychological war might have a bigger impact than traditional war. This is what Allah bestowed on us by leaking the news of Abu Mosaab\u2019s arrival to Jisr al-Shughour.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "What happened to more than 150 soldiers who had been in the hospital, along with several dozen civilians, was unclear. The state news agency, SANA, said they were \u201creunited with their comrades,\u201d while insurgent groups contended that many had been captured or killed . There were also competing versions of what prompted their flight. State news media portrayed it as a planned escape carried out with the help of air and artillery strikes in \u201ca successful tactical operation.\u201d Insurgents said the troops fled when they heard the sounds of their opponents digging a tunnel underneath the hospital to blow it up. A video had been posted online earlier of a fighter called Abu Mosaab, who is known for tunneling under government positions, and a commander with his group, Ahrar al-Sham, issued a statement saying: \u201cThe psychological war might have a bigger impact than traditional war. This is what Allah bestowed on us by leaking the news of Abu Mosaab\u2019s arrival to Jisr al-Shughour.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The state news agency, SANA, said they were \u201creunited with their comrades,\u201d while insurgent groups contended that many had been captured or killed .", "paragraph_id": "5d70267fc8e4820a9b66d2d4"} +{"question": "What are more American's doing to improve their lives both materialistically and educationally?", "paragraph": "Nearly all of the October gain came from the category that covers auto and student loans, while credit card borrowing edged up a mere $200 million. The increase suggests that more Americans are borrowing to improve their educational skills and upgrade their cars and trucks, instead of relying on debt to fund their daily shopping and emergency expenses. Many economists expect that consumer spending will be relatively healthy in the coming months because of strong job gains that have bolstered auto and home sales for much of 2015. Yet a struggling global economy has tempered United States growth as the year draws to an end. The Labor Department reported last week that employers added 211,000 jobs in November and 298,000 in October. The unemployment rate held steady at 5 percent last month. The report showed evidence that workers who were pushed to the sidelines during the recession and sluggish six-year recovery were filtering back into the job market. The overall economy has advanced despite a waning global economy. A stronger dollar, slowing growth in China, a recession in Japan and a struggling Europe have been a drag on United States manufacturing, hurting overall growth. United States gross domestic product \u2014 aided by consumer spending \u2014 advanced at an annual rate of 2.1 percent in the July-September quarter, down from a 3.9 percent rate in the prior quarter. The deceleration is expected to continue. The Atlanta Fed forecasts that growth will slip in the final three months of 2015 to an annual rate of 1.5 percent. The private forecasting firm Macroeconomic Advisers estimates that the rate will be 1.7 percent.", "answer": "borrowing", "sentence": "Nearly all of the October gain came from the category that covers auto and student loans, while credit card borrowing edged up a mere $200 million.", "paragraph_sentence": " Nearly all of the October gain came from the category that covers auto and student loans, while credit card borrowing edged up a mere $200 million. The increase suggests that more Americans are borrowing to improve their educational skills and upgrade their cars and trucks, instead of relying on debt to fund their daily shopping and emergency expenses. Many economists expect that consumer spending will be relatively healthy in the coming months because of strong job gains that have bolstered auto and home sales for much of 2015. Yet a struggling global economy has tempered United States growth as the year draws to an end. The Labor Department reported last week that employers added 211,000 jobs in November and 298,000 in October. The unemployment rate held steady at 5 percent last month. The report showed evidence that workers who were pushed to the sidelines during the recession and sluggish six-year recovery were filtering back into the job market. The overall economy has advanced despite a waning global economy. A stronger dollar, slowing growth in China, a recession in Japan and a struggling Europe have been a drag on United States manufacturing, hurting overall growth. United States gross domestic product \u2014 aided by consumer spending \u2014 advanced at an annual rate of 2.1 percent in the July-September quarter, down from a 3.9 percent rate in the prior quarter. The deceleration is expected to continue. The Atlanta Fed forecasts that growth will slip in the final three months of 2015 to an annual rate of 1.5 percent. The private forecasting firm Macroeconomic Advisers estimates that the rate will be 1.7 percent.", "paragraph_answer": "Nearly all of the October gain came from the category that covers auto and student loans, while credit card borrowing edged up a mere $200 million. The increase suggests that more Americans are borrowing to improve their educational skills and upgrade their cars and trucks, instead of relying on debt to fund their daily shopping and emergency expenses. Many economists expect that consumer spending will be relatively healthy in the coming months because of strong job gains that have bolstered auto and home sales for much of 2015. Yet a struggling global economy has tempered United States growth as the year draws to an end. The Labor Department reported last week that employers added 211,000 jobs in November and 298,000 in October. The unemployment rate held steady at 5 percent last month. The report showed evidence that workers who were pushed to the sidelines during the recession and sluggish six-year recovery were filtering back into the job market. The overall economy has advanced despite a waning global economy. A stronger dollar, slowing growth in China, a recession in Japan and a struggling Europe have been a drag on United States manufacturing, hurting overall growth. United States gross domestic product \u2014 aided by consumer spending \u2014 advanced at an annual rate of 2.1 percent in the July-September quarter, down from a 3.9 percent rate in the prior quarter. The deceleration is expected to continue. The Atlanta Fed forecasts that growth will slip in the final three months of 2015 to an annual rate of 1.5 percent. The private forecasting firm Macroeconomic Advisers estimates that the rate will be 1.7 percent.", "sentence_answer": "Nearly all of the October gain came from the category that covers auto and student loans, while credit card borrowing edged up a mere $200 million.", "paragraph_id": "5d7022eec8e4820a9b66cef0"} +{"question": "What device is monitoring our behavior?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe problem with Instagram and Facebook is that they\u2019re being used by career-minded people outside the original targeted audience \u2014 the college crowd \u2014 Ms. Sternheimer said. \u201cEveryone is using it now, so smartphones are essentially monitoring our behavior,\u201d she said. \u201cPeople may be behaving better for fear of being captured doing something inappropriate without their consent.\u201d Ms. Sternheimer added that people are more careful about what they let others see, especially because they know that other employment opportunities can be hindered if they portray themselves negatively in either a work or social setting. If the web is monitoring, it\u2019s also educating us in good performance. \u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post, a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt. \u201cThe generation before the Internet watched movies and learned how to behave from them,\u201d she said, pointing to the John Hughes cult film \u201cSixteen Candles\u201d as one example. \u201cPeople acted a little drunk and goofy.\u201d", "answer": "smartphones", "sentence": "\u201cEveryone is using it now, so smartphones are essentially monitoring our behavior,\u201d she said.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe problem with Instagram and Facebook is that they\u2019re being used by career-minded people outside the original targeted audience \u2014 the college crowd \u2014 Ms. Sternheimer said. \u201cEveryone is using it now, so smartphones are essentially monitoring our behavior,\u201d she said. \u201cPeople may be behaving better for fear of being captured doing something inappropriate without their consent.\u201d Ms. Sternheimer added that people are more careful about what they let others see, especially because they know that other employment opportunities can be hindered if they portray themselves negatively in either a work or social setting. If the web is monitoring, it\u2019s also educating us in good performance. \u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post, a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt. \u201cThe generation before the Internet watched movies and learned how to behave from them,\u201d she said, pointing to the John Hughes cult film \u201cSixteen Candles\u201d as one example. \u201cPeople acted a little drunk and goofy.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe problem with Instagram and Facebook is that they\u2019re being used by career-minded people outside the original targeted audience \u2014 the college crowd \u2014 Ms. Sternheimer said. \u201cEveryone is using it now, so smartphones are essentially monitoring our behavior,\u201d she said. \u201cPeople may be behaving better for fear of being captured doing something inappropriate without their consent.\u201d Ms. Sternheimer added that people are more careful about what they let others see, especially because they know that other employment opportunities can be hindered if they portray themselves negatively in either a work or social setting. If the web is monitoring, it\u2019s also educating us in good performance. \u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post, a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt. \u201cThe generation before the Internet watched movies and learned how to behave from them,\u201d she said, pointing to the John Hughes cult film \u201cSixteen Candles\u201d as one example. \u201cPeople acted a little drunk and goofy.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cEveryone is using it now, so smartphones are essentially monitoring our behavior,\u201d she said.", "paragraph_id": "5d7016a8c8e4820a9b66c2c4"} +{"question": "What did Stephane Charbonnier feel strongly about free expression?", "paragraph": "The editors, journalists and cartoonists of Charlie Hebdo reveled in controversy and relished hitting nerves. The magazine\u2019s editorial director, St\u00e9phane Charbonnier, who was killed in the attack, had scoffed at any suggestion that the magazine should tone down its trademark satire to appease anyone. For him, free expression was nothing without the right to offend. And Charlie Hebdo has been an equal-opportunity offender: Muslims, Jews and Christians \u2014 not to mention politicians of all stripes \u2014 have been targets of buffoonish, vulgar caricatures and cartoons that push every hot button with glee.", "answer": "free expression was nothing without the right to offend.", "sentence": "For him, free expression was nothing without the right to offend. And Charlie Hebdo has been an equal-opportunity offender: Muslims, Jews and Christians \u2014 not to mention politicians of all stripes \u2014 have been targets of buffoonish, vulgar caricatures and cartoons that push every hot button with glee.", "paragraph_sentence": "The editors, journalists and cartoonists of Charlie Hebdo reveled in controversy and relished hitting nerves. The magazine\u2019s editorial director, St\u00e9phane Charbonnier, who was killed in the attack, had scoffed at any suggestion that the magazine should tone down its trademark satire to appease anyone. For him, free expression was nothing without the right to offend. And Charlie Hebdo has been an equal-opportunity offender: Muslims, Jews and Christians \u2014 not to mention politicians of all stripes \u2014 have been targets of buffoonish, vulgar caricatures and cartoons that push every hot button with glee. ", "paragraph_answer": "The editors, journalists and cartoonists of Charlie Hebdo reveled in controversy and relished hitting nerves. The magazine\u2019s editorial director, St\u00e9phane Charbonnier, who was killed in the attack, had scoffed at any suggestion that the magazine should tone down its trademark satire to appease anyone. For him, free expression was nothing without the right to offend. And Charlie Hebdo has been an equal-opportunity offender: Muslims, Jews and Christians \u2014 not to mention politicians of all stripes \u2014 have been targets of buffoonish, vulgar caricatures and cartoons that push every hot button with glee.", "sentence_answer": "For him, free expression was nothing without the right to offend. And Charlie Hebdo has been an equal-opportunity offender: Muslims, Jews and Christians \u2014 not to mention politicians of all stripes \u2014 have been targets of buffoonish, vulgar caricatures and cartoons that push every hot button with glee.", "paragraph_id": "5d701fe7c8e4820a9b66cb93"} +{"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", "paragraph_id": "5d700b31c8e4820a9b66b5a6"} +{"question": "When was the recapitalization finished?", "paragraph": "A. There are a couple of things that we are looking at here in the city, but it\u2019s too early to speak about right now. My biggest challenge in 2015 is to find assets to buy. Just before the Christmas break we just finished a recapitalization. We bought Prudential out of 28 West 44th Street \u2014 the Club Row Building. We owned the building with them for three years and they were closing down a fund and they needed to exit the fund and we wanted to stay in the building. Q. Where else do you get the capital to make your investments?", "answer": "Just before the Christmas break", "sentence": "Just before the Christmas break we just finished a recapitalization.", "paragraph_sentence": "A. There are a couple of things that we are looking at here in the city, but it\u2019s too early to speak about right now. My biggest challenge in 2015 is to find assets to buy. Just before the Christmas break we just finished a recapitalization. We bought Prudential out of 28 West 44th Street \u2014 the Club Row Building. We owned the building with them for three years and they were closing down a fund and they needed to exit the fund and we wanted to stay in the building. Q. Where else do you get the capital to make your investments?", "paragraph_answer": "A. There are a couple of things that we are looking at here in the city, but it\u2019s too early to speak about right now. My biggest challenge in 2015 is to find assets to buy. Just before the Christmas break we just finished a recapitalization. We bought Prudential out of 28 West 44th Street \u2014 the Club Row Building. We owned the building with them for three years and they were closing down a fund and they needed to exit the fund and we wanted to stay in the building. Q. Where else do you get the capital to make your investments?", "sentence_answer": " Just before the Christmas break we just finished a recapitalization.", "paragraph_id": "5d703d6ec8e4820a9b66e39c"} +{"question": "Who was battling insurgents?", "paragraph": "BEIRUT, Lebanon \u2014 Scores of Syrian government soldiers and civilians besieged by insurgents for nearly a month in a hospital in northern Syria fled on Friday in a dramatic exit that both the army and its opponents promptly claimed as a victory. Videos posted by each side showed lines of uniformed soldiers trotting away across a field as what sounded like rifle and artillery fire echoed in the background; the government claimed that they reached safety, while insurgents claimed that many were killed or captured.", "answer": "Syrian government soldiers and civilians", "sentence": "BEIRUT, Lebanon \u2014 Scores of Syrian government soldiers and civilians besieged by insurgents for nearly a month in a hospital in northern Syria fled on Friday in a dramatic exit that both the army and its opponents promptly claimed as a victory.", "paragraph_sentence": " BEIRUT, Lebanon \u2014 Scores of Syrian government soldiers and civilians besieged by insurgents for nearly a month in a hospital in northern Syria fled on Friday in a dramatic exit that both the army and its opponents promptly claimed as a victory. Videos posted by each side showed lines of uniformed soldiers trotting away across a field as what sounded like rifle and artillery fire echoed in the background; the government claimed that they reached safety, while insurgents claimed that many were killed or captured.", "paragraph_answer": "BEIRUT, Lebanon \u2014 Scores of Syrian government soldiers and civilians besieged by insurgents for nearly a month in a hospital in northern Syria fled on Friday in a dramatic exit that both the army and its opponents promptly claimed as a victory. Videos posted by each side showed lines of uniformed soldiers trotting away across a field as what sounded like rifle and artillery fire echoed in the background; the government claimed that they reached safety, while insurgents claimed that many were killed or captured.", "sentence_answer": "BEIRUT, Lebanon \u2014 Scores of Syrian government soldiers and civilians besieged by insurgents for nearly a month in a hospital in northern Syria fled on Friday in a dramatic exit that both the army and its opponents promptly claimed as a victory.", "paragraph_id": "5d70226ec8e4820a9b66ce79"} +{"question": "What makes his/her to blush ?", "paragraph": "But although there are occasional, unprintable mishearings that make me blush, a vast majority do not admit any simple Freudian interpretation. In almost all of my mishearings, however, there is a similar overall sound, a similar acoustic gestalt, linking what is said and what is heard. Syntax is always preserved, but this does not help; mishearings are likely to capsize meaning, to overwhelm it with phonologically similar but meaningless or absurd sound forms, even though the general form of a sentence is preserved.", "answer": "occasional, unprintable mishearings", "sentence": "But although there are occasional, unprintable mishearings that make me blush, a vast majority do not admit any simple Freudian interpretation.", "paragraph_sentence": " But although there are occasional, unprintable mishearings that make me blush, a vast majority do not admit any simple Freudian interpretation. In almost all of my mishearings, however, there is a similar overall sound, a similar acoustic gestalt, linking what is said and what is heard. Syntax is always preserved, but this does not help; mishearings are likely to capsize meaning, to overwhelm it with phonologically similar but meaningless or absurd sound forms, even though the general form of a sentence is preserved.", "paragraph_answer": "But although there are occasional, unprintable mishearings that make me blush, a vast majority do not admit any simple Freudian interpretation. In almost all of my mishearings, however, there is a similar overall sound, a similar acoustic gestalt, linking what is said and what is heard. Syntax is always preserved, but this does not help; mishearings are likely to capsize meaning, to overwhelm it with phonologically similar but meaningless or absurd sound forms, even though the general form of a sentence is preserved.", "sentence_answer": "But although there are occasional, unprintable mishearings that make me blush, a vast majority do not admit any simple Freudian interpretation.", "paragraph_id": "5d7024dfc8e4820a9b66d151"} +{"question": "How long ago was the civil rights movement that the American rabbis compared to the current environmental movement in their letter calling for action?", "paragraph": "Perhaps the biggest question now is whether rising concern about the environment among religious groups will translate into stronger political demands that governments find ways to reduce the cost of low-carbon energy supplies, improve their reliability and speed their deployment. This month, more than 350 American rabbis issued a letter of their own, declaring that the time for action was at hand. \u201cThe hope is that over and over in our history, when our country faced the need for profound change, it has been our communities of moral commitment, religious covenant and spiritual search that have arisen to meet the need,\u201d the rabbis declared. \u201cSo it was 50 years ago during the civil rights movement, and so it must be today.\u201d", "answer": "50 years ago", "sentence": "\u201cSo it was 50 years ago during the civil rights movement, and so it must be today.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Perhaps the biggest question now is whether rising concern about the environment among religious groups will translate into stronger political demands that governments find ways to reduce the cost of low-carbon energy supplies, improve their reliability and speed their deployment. This month, more than 350 American rabbis issued a letter of their own, declaring that the time for action was at hand. \u201cThe hope is that over and over in our history, when our country faced the need for profound change, it has been our communities of moral commitment, religious covenant and spiritual search that have arisen to meet the need,\u201d the rabbis declared. \u201cSo it was 50 years ago during the civil rights movement, and so it must be today.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Perhaps the biggest question now is whether rising concern about the environment among religious groups will translate into stronger political demands that governments find ways to reduce the cost of low-carbon energy supplies, improve their reliability and speed their deployment. This month, more than 350 American rabbis issued a letter of their own, declaring that the time for action was at hand. \u201cThe hope is that over and over in our history, when our country faced the need for profound change, it has been our communities of moral commitment, religious covenant and spiritual search that have arisen to meet the need,\u201d the rabbis declared. \u201cSo it was 50 years ago during the civil rights movement, and so it must be today.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cSo it was 50 years ago during the civil rights movement, and so it must be today.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d706064c8e4820a9b66f032"} +{"question": "Does the Cambodian govenment oppose the case against Ao An?", "paragraph": "The decade-old United Nations-backed tribunal has delivered guilty verdicts to only three defendants. The case against Ao An is strongly opposed by the Cambodian government, the police and the national investigating judge, who have been unwilling to cooperate with the tribunal. Experts say high-profile figures in present-day Cambodian politics fear that they could be implicated in the defendants\u2019 testimony. Any legal challenge could further delay the tribunal, which has already been criticized for its slow progress.", "answer": "The case against Ao An is strongly opposed by the Cambodian government", "sentence": "The case against Ao An is strongly opposed by the Cambodian government , the police and the national investigating judge, who have been unwilling to cooperate with the tribunal.", "paragraph_sentence": "The decade-old United Nations-backed tribunal has delivered guilty verdicts to only three defendants. The case against Ao An is strongly opposed by the Cambodian government , the police and the national investigating judge, who have been unwilling to cooperate with the tribunal. Experts say high-profile figures in present-day Cambodian politics fear that they could be implicated in the defendants\u2019 testimony. Any legal challenge could further delay the tribunal, which has already been criticized for its slow progress.", "paragraph_answer": "The decade-old United Nations-backed tribunal has delivered guilty verdicts to only three defendants. The case against Ao An is strongly opposed by the Cambodian government , the police and the national investigating judge, who have been unwilling to cooperate with the tribunal. Experts say high-profile figures in present-day Cambodian politics fear that they could be implicated in the defendants\u2019 testimony. Any legal challenge could further delay the tribunal, which has already been criticized for its slow progress.", "sentence_answer": " The case against Ao An is strongly opposed by the Cambodian government , the police and the national investigating judge, who have been unwilling to cooperate with the tribunal.", "paragraph_id": "5d7006a3c8e4820a9b66abe4"} +{"question": "Who argued that bond E.T.F.s are good for the markets in general?", "paragraph": "The Institute of International Finance, a trade group that represents global banks, also released a letter on Wednesday that warned of the huge buildup of assets in the bond market. The institute\u2019s views on the topic tend to reflect its main constituency, investment banks, which have complained that excessive regulation has hindered their ability to provide liquidity in the market. BlackRock has argued that bond E.T.F.s, and its increasing size, are healthful for the markets in general and that in a low interest rate environment it is to be expected that long-term investors like insurance companies and pension funds invest in higher yielding securities to lock in better returns. Moreover, the industry has said that firms like BlackRock do not invest their own capital in these types of securities \u2014 as investment banks did before the crisis \u2014 and do not rely on leverage to bolster returns.", "answer": "BlackRock", "sentence": "BlackRock has argued that bond E.T.F.s, and its increasing size, are healthful for the markets in general and that in a low interest rate environment it is to be expected that long-term investors like insurance companies and pension funds invest in higher yielding securities to lock in better returns.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Institute of International Finance, a trade group that represents global banks, also released a letter on Wednesday that warned of the huge buildup of assets in the bond market. The institute\u2019s views on the topic tend to reflect its main constituency, investment banks, which have complained that excessive regulation has hindered their ability to provide liquidity in the market. BlackRock has argued that bond E.T.F.s, and its increasing size, are healthful for the markets in general and that in a low interest rate environment it is to be expected that long-term investors like insurance companies and pension funds invest in higher yielding securities to lock in better returns. Moreover, the industry has said that firms like BlackRock do not invest their own capital in these types of securities \u2014 as investment banks did before the crisis \u2014 and do not rely on leverage to bolster returns.", "paragraph_answer": "The Institute of International Finance, a trade group that represents global banks, also released a letter on Wednesday that warned of the huge buildup of assets in the bond market. The institute\u2019s views on the topic tend to reflect its main constituency, investment banks, which have complained that excessive regulation has hindered their ability to provide liquidity in the market. BlackRock has argued that bond E.T.F.s, and its increasing size, are healthful for the markets in general and that in a low interest rate environment it is to be expected that long-term investors like insurance companies and pension funds invest in higher yielding securities to lock in better returns. Moreover, the industry has said that firms like BlackRock do not invest their own capital in these types of securities \u2014 as investment banks did before the crisis \u2014 and do not rely on leverage to bolster returns.", "sentence_answer": " BlackRock has argued that bond E.T.F.s, and its increasing size, are healthful for the markets in general and that in a low interest rate environment it is to be expected that long-term investors like insurance companies and pension funds invest in higher yielding securities to lock in better returns.", "paragraph_id": "5d702138c8e4820a9b66cd05"} +{"question": "Who has a Junkie ghost?", "paragraph": "Speaking of children, Alex and John are reunited when Alex confesses that both she and Holden are in danger from the Countess unless the pack of rabid vampire children Alex inadvertently created are dealt with. After luring the children into the hotel\u2019s dungeon (where Ramona Royale is still lurking) the Lowes tumble into bed, much to Sally\u2019s murderous fury. \u201cWhat we have is an addict\u2019s high,\u201d John explains to Sarah Paulson\u2019s junkie ghost. \u201cIn the moment, it seems like it\u2019s never ends. But it always ends.\u201d Alex, John and Holden leave the Cortez, hopefully to retrieve daughter Scarlett, as forgotten by them as by the show\u2019s writers. But what will happen when Alex discovers John has spent the past five years slaughtering people to appease a ghost? Or when John realizes there\u2019s something different about his wife? But sure, cancel the divorce papers, romance is for optimists! The Countess, meanwhile, threatens the ghost of Will Drake, her former fianc\u00e9 and current owner of the Cortez: \u201cI don\u2019t kill children,\u201d she explains after reminding Drake that his young son, her legal ward, is his sole heir, \u201cbut I could make him a blood relative.\u201d Keeping his son uninfected might just be Will Drake\u2019s unfinished business.", "answer": "Sarah Paulson", "sentence": "\u201cWhat we have is an addict\u2019s high,\u201d John explains to Sarah Paulson \u2019s junkie ghost.", "paragraph_sentence": "Speaking of children, Alex and John are reunited when Alex confesses that both she and Holden are in danger from the Countess unless the pack of rabid vampire children Alex inadvertently created are dealt with. After luring the children into the hotel\u2019s dungeon (where Ramona Royale is still lurking) the Lowes tumble into bed, much to Sally\u2019s murderous fury. \u201cWhat we have is an addict\u2019s high,\u201d John explains to Sarah Paulson \u2019s junkie ghost. \u201cIn the moment, it seems like it\u2019s never ends. But it always ends.\u201d Alex, John and Holden leave the Cortez, hopefully to retrieve daughter Scarlett, as forgotten by them as by the show\u2019s writers. But what will happen when Alex discovers John has spent the past five years slaughtering people to appease a ghost? Or when John realizes there\u2019s something different about his wife? But sure, cancel the divorce papers, romance is for optimists! The Countess, meanwhile, threatens the ghost of Will Drake, her former fianc\u00e9 and current owner of the Cortez: \u201cI don\u2019t kill children,\u201d she explains after reminding Drake that his young son, her legal ward, is his sole heir, \u201cbut I could make him a blood relative.\u201d Keeping his son uninfected might just be Will Drake\u2019s unfinished business.", "paragraph_answer": "Speaking of children, Alex and John are reunited when Alex confesses that both she and Holden are in danger from the Countess unless the pack of rabid vampire children Alex inadvertently created are dealt with. After luring the children into the hotel\u2019s dungeon (where Ramona Royale is still lurking) the Lowes tumble into bed, much to Sally\u2019s murderous fury. \u201cWhat we have is an addict\u2019s high,\u201d John explains to Sarah Paulson \u2019s junkie ghost. \u201cIn the moment, it seems like it\u2019s never ends. But it always ends.\u201d Alex, John and Holden leave the Cortez, hopefully to retrieve daughter Scarlett, as forgotten by them as by the show\u2019s writers. But what will happen when Alex discovers John has spent the past five years slaughtering people to appease a ghost? Or when John realizes there\u2019s something different about his wife? But sure, cancel the divorce papers, romance is for optimists! The Countess, meanwhile, threatens the ghost of Will Drake, her former fianc\u00e9 and current owner of the Cortez: \u201cI don\u2019t kill children,\u201d she explains after reminding Drake that his young son, her legal ward, is his sole heir, \u201cbut I could make him a blood relative.\u201d Keeping his son uninfected might just be Will Drake\u2019s unfinished business.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWhat we have is an addict\u2019s high,\u201d John explains to Sarah Paulson \u2019s junkie ghost.", "paragraph_id": "5d703d64c8e4820a9b66e38b"} +{"question": "Which candidate does May have concerns about when it comes to Putin?", "paragraph": "\u201cI like Ben Carson because he\u2019s not government, and I\u2019m tired of government,\u201d said Doug May, 70, a retired chief information officer in Bluffton, S.C. Mr. May added, referring to the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin: \u201cWhat worries me the most about Donald Trump is what he would do if put into a situation where he is sitting down with Putin. With his mouth, I have no idea what he would say to people.\u201d Democratic voters seem more enthusiastic about Mrs. Clinton as the party\u2019s possible nominee than Republicans do about Mr. Trump. Forty-eight percent of Democrats said they would support her enthusiastically, and 35 percent of Republicans said the same of Mr. Trump.", "answer": "Donald Trump", "sentence": "Mr. May added, referring to the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin: \u201cWhat worries me the most about Donald Trump is what he would do if put into a situation where he is sitting down with Putin.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI like Ben Carson because he\u2019s not government, and I\u2019m tired of government,\u201d said Doug May, 70, a retired chief information officer in Bluffton, S.C. Mr. May added, referring to the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin: \u201cWhat worries me the most about Donald Trump is what he would do if put into a situation where he is sitting down with Putin. With his mouth, I have no idea what he would say to people.\u201d Democratic voters seem more enthusiastic about Mrs. Clinton as the party\u2019s possible nominee than Republicans do about Mr. Trump. Forty-eight percent of Democrats said they would support her enthusiastically, and 35 percent of Republicans said the same of Mr. Trump.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI like Ben Carson because he\u2019s not government, and I\u2019m tired of government,\u201d said Doug May, 70, a retired chief information officer in Bluffton, S.C. Mr. May added, referring to the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin: \u201cWhat worries me the most about Donald Trump is what he would do if put into a situation where he is sitting down with Putin. With his mouth, I have no idea what he would say to people.\u201d Democratic voters seem more enthusiastic about Mrs. Clinton as the party\u2019s possible nominee than Republicans do about Mr. Trump. Forty-eight percent of Democrats said they would support her enthusiastically, and 35 percent of Republicans said the same of Mr. Trump.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. May added, referring to the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin: \u201cWhat worries me the most about Donald Trump is what he would do if put into a situation where he is sitting down with Putin.", "paragraph_id": "5d7082e0c8e4820a9b66f40e"} +{"question": "Who runs the center?", "paragraph": "Mark Lubell, the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery. He said he believes the connection to the street \u2014 along with a cafe and screens beaming out images from the center\u2019s programming \u2014 will telegraph the institution\u2019s intention to become a hub for conversations about the increasingly complex way pictures circulate and function in the digital age. \u201cIt\u2019s going to be a big challenge to think about what an exhibition will even mean in that context,\u201d Mr. Lubell said. By New York museum standards, the turnaround time for the new space is whiplash fast, but Mr. Lubell said that he hoped the center would become known for such nimbleness. \u201cWe don\u2019t know everything yet, which is a little discomforting for some people,\u201d he said, \u201cbut we\u2019re figuring it out together.\u201d", "answer": "Mark Lubell", "sentence": "Mark Lubell , the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mark Lubell , the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery. He said he believes the connection to the street \u2014 along with a cafe and screens beaming out images from the center\u2019s programming \u2014 will telegraph the institution\u2019s intention to become a hub for conversations about the increasingly complex way pictures circulate and function in the digital age. \u201cIt\u2019s going to be a big challenge to think about what an exhibition will even mean in that context,\u201d Mr. Lubell said. By New York museum standards, the turnaround time for the new space is whiplash fast, but Mr. Lubell said that he hoped the center would become known for such nimbleness. \u201cWe don\u2019t know everything yet, which is a little discomforting for some people,\u201d he said, \u201cbut we\u2019re figuring it out together.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": " Mark Lubell , the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery. He said he believes the connection to the street \u2014 along with a cafe and screens beaming out images from the center\u2019s programming \u2014 will telegraph the institution\u2019s intention to become a hub for conversations about the increasingly complex way pictures circulate and function in the digital age. \u201cIt\u2019s going to be a big challenge to think about what an exhibition will even mean in that context,\u201d Mr. Lubell said. By New York museum standards, the turnaround time for the new space is whiplash fast, but Mr. Lubell said that he hoped the center would become known for such nimbleness. \u201cWe don\u2019t know everything yet, which is a little discomforting for some people,\u201d he said, \u201cbut we\u2019re figuring it out together.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Mark Lubell , the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery.", "paragraph_id": "5d7017a0c8e4820a9b66c39e"} +{"question": "What are some examples of daily life mentioned?", "paragraph": "Black-and-white images depict daily life \u2014 families around the breakfast table, a mother holding an infant, men and women heading off to work \u2014 as Mrs. Clinton reminds voters they are \u201cnot just electing a president, but a commander in chief.\u201d Photos show her flanked by military officers, and descending alone from her Air Force jet as secretary of state, as she can be heard, as a candidate, emphasizing the need to be \u201cboth secure at home and leading the world.\u201d Only when she is finally shown delivering the speech, at Mountain View College in Dallas in mid-November, does the black-and-white give way to full color.", "answer": "families around the breakfast table, a mother holding an infant, men and women heading off to work", "sentence": "Black-and-white images depict daily life \u2014 families around the breakfast table, a mother holding an infant, men and women heading off to work \u2014 as Mrs. Clinton reminds voters they are \u201cnot just electing a president, but a commander in chief.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Black-and-white images depict daily life \u2014 families around the breakfast table, a mother holding an infant, men and women heading off to work \u2014 as Mrs. Clinton reminds voters they are \u201cnot just electing a president, but a commander in chief.\u201d Photos show her flanked by military officers, and descending alone from her Air Force jet as secretary of state, as she can be heard, as a candidate, emphasizing the need to be \u201cboth secure at home and leading the world.\u201d Only when she is finally shown delivering the speech, at Mountain View College in Dallas in mid-November, does the black-and-white give way to full color.", "paragraph_answer": "Black-and-white images depict daily life \u2014 families around the breakfast table, a mother holding an infant, men and women heading off to work \u2014 as Mrs. Clinton reminds voters they are \u201cnot just electing a president, but a commander in chief.\u201d Photos show her flanked by military officers, and descending alone from her Air Force jet as secretary of state, as she can be heard, as a candidate, emphasizing the need to be \u201cboth secure at home and leading the world.\u201d Only when she is finally shown delivering the speech, at Mountain View College in Dallas in mid-November, does the black-and-white give way to full color.", "sentence_answer": "Black-and-white images depict daily life \u2014 families around the breakfast table, a mother holding an infant, men and women heading off to work \u2014 as Mrs. Clinton reminds voters they are \u201cnot just electing a president, but a commander in chief.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d700f65c8e4820a9b66bb72"} +{"question": "What was the anthropologist's correct last name?", "paragraph": "An article on Wednesday about research suggesting that chimpanzees have the cognitive ability to cook misstated, at one point, the surname of the Harvard anthropologist who hypothesized that cooking has driven changes in human evolution. As the article correctly noted elsewhere, he is Richard Wrangham, not Wrangell. BUSINESS DAY An article on Tuesday about a decision by the airbag manufacturer Takata to continue using a chemical compound deemed dangerous by experts misstated the point at which the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration began receiving complaints about rupturing Takata airbags. It was in 2001, not \u201calmost 15 years ago.\u201d The error was repeated in articles on Sept. 15, 2014, and on May 20, which referred to the complaints as having started in 2000, rather than 2001. \u2022 An article on May 23 about the environmental threat posed by plastic microbeads used as exfoliating agents in personal care products misstated the source of PHA, a naturally occurring plastic that one company is developing as a biodegradable substitute. It is produced by bacteria, not by mushrooms. SPORTS", "answer": "Wrangham", "sentence": "As the article correctly noted elsewhere, he is Richard Wrangham , not Wrangell.", "paragraph_sentence": "An article on Wednesday about research suggesting that chimpanzees have the cognitive ability to cook misstated, at one point, the surname of the Harvard anthropologist who hypothesized that cooking has driven changes in human evolution. As the article correctly noted elsewhere, he is Richard Wrangham , not Wrangell. BUSINESS DAY An article on Tuesday about a decision by the airbag manufacturer Takata to continue using a chemical compound deemed dangerous by experts misstated the point at which the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration began receiving complaints about rupturing Takata airbags. It was in 2001, not \u201calmost 15 years ago.\u201d The error was repeated in articles on Sept. 15, 2014, and on May 20, which referred to the complaints as having started in 2000, rather than 2001. \u2022 An article on May 23 about the environmental threat posed by plastic microbeads used as exfoliating agents in personal care products misstated the source of PHA, a naturally occurring plastic that one company is developing as a biodegradable substitute. It is produced by bacteria, not by mushrooms. SPORTS", "paragraph_answer": "An article on Wednesday about research suggesting that chimpanzees have the cognitive ability to cook misstated, at one point, the surname of the Harvard anthropologist who hypothesized that cooking has driven changes in human evolution. As the article correctly noted elsewhere, he is Richard Wrangham , not Wrangell. BUSINESS DAY An article on Tuesday about a decision by the airbag manufacturer Takata to continue using a chemical compound deemed dangerous by experts misstated the point at which the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration began receiving complaints about rupturing Takata airbags. It was in 2001, not \u201calmost 15 years ago.\u201d The error was repeated in articles on Sept. 15, 2014, and on May 20, which referred to the complaints as having started in 2000, rather than 2001. \u2022 An article on May 23 about the environmental threat posed by plastic microbeads used as exfoliating agents in personal care products misstated the source of PHA, a naturally occurring plastic that one company is developing as a biodegradable substitute. It is produced by bacteria, not by mushrooms. SPORTS", "sentence_answer": "As the article correctly noted elsewhere, he is Richard Wrangham , not Wrangell.", "paragraph_id": "5d701002c8e4820a9b66bc08"} +{"question": "What did The Wirecutter comb through?", "paragraph": "The Archer C7 isn\u2019t for everyone. So The Wirecutter also combed through test results and picked some routers for different living situations, such as small apartments or homes where people primarily use Apple devices. Generally, we recommend you upgrade to a new router every three to four years. That accounts for how often people typically upgrade devices like smartphones (every two years) and computers (every three to four years). Yet whether your smartphones, computers and tablets are one, two or five years old, now is a good time to buy a new router if you haven\u2019t in the last three years. Newer devices are probably using the 802.11ac standard, so you will get the fastest speeds at long distances with an 802.11ac router. If you hoard old devices, you will also get faster speeds and greater range. These benefits will be especially clear if you stay on a 5 GHz Wi-Fi network for as long as you can.", "answer": "test results", "sentence": "So The Wirecutter also combed through test results and picked some routers for different living situations, such as small apartments or homes where people primarily use Apple devices.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Archer C7 isn\u2019t for everyone. So The Wirecutter also combed through test results and picked some routers for different living situations, such as small apartments or homes where people primarily use Apple devices. Generally, we recommend you upgrade to a new router every three to four years. That accounts for how often people typically upgrade devices like smartphones (every two years) and computers (every three to four years). Yet whether your smartphones, computers and tablets are one, two or five years old, now is a good time to buy a new router if you haven\u2019t in the last three years. Newer devices are probably using the 802.11ac standard, so you will get the fastest speeds at long distances with an 802.11ac router. If you hoard old devices, you will also get faster speeds and greater range. These benefits will be especially clear if you stay on a 5 GHz Wi-Fi network for as long as you can.", "paragraph_answer": "The Archer C7 isn\u2019t for everyone. So The Wirecutter also combed through test results and picked some routers for different living situations, such as small apartments or homes where people primarily use Apple devices. Generally, we recommend you upgrade to a new router every three to four years. That accounts for how often people typically upgrade devices like smartphones (every two years) and computers (every three to four years). Yet whether your smartphones, computers and tablets are one, two or five years old, now is a good time to buy a new router if you haven\u2019t in the last three years. Newer devices are probably using the 802.11ac standard, so you will get the fastest speeds at long distances with an 802.11ac router. If you hoard old devices, you will also get faster speeds and greater range. These benefits will be especially clear if you stay on a 5 GHz Wi-Fi network for as long as you can.", "sentence_answer": "So The Wirecutter also combed through test results and picked some routers for different living situations, such as small apartments or homes where people primarily use Apple devices.", "paragraph_id": "5d7056f6c8e4820a9b66ed39"} +{"question": "What is the most important part of co-borrowing?", "paragraph": "This type of arrangement can potentially cut buyers\u2019 individual expenses, while providing them with a potential equity gain and a mortgage interest tax deduction. But these ventures can also end badly if buyers assume that friendship alone will see them through any future difficulty. Before applying for a mortgage, the co-borrowers should fully reveal their income, debt and credit status to each other, said Mike Venable, a senior vice president and head of underwriting for retail bank operations at TD Bank. \u201cIt definitely needs to be someone you really trust,\u201d he said.", "answer": "to be someone you really trust,", "sentence": "\u201cIt definitely needs to be someone you really trust, \u201d he said.", "paragraph_sentence": "This type of arrangement can potentially cut buyers\u2019 individual expenses, while providing them with a potential equity gain and a mortgage interest tax deduction. But these ventures can also end badly if buyers assume that friendship alone will see them through any future difficulty. Before applying for a mortgage, the co-borrowers should fully reveal their income, debt and credit status to each other, said Mike Venable, a senior vice president and head of underwriting for retail bank operations at TD Bank. \u201cIt definitely needs to be someone you really trust, \u201d he said. ", "paragraph_answer": "This type of arrangement can potentially cut buyers\u2019 individual expenses, while providing them with a potential equity gain and a mortgage interest tax deduction. But these ventures can also end badly if buyers assume that friendship alone will see them through any future difficulty. Before applying for a mortgage, the co-borrowers should fully reveal their income, debt and credit status to each other, said Mike Venable, a senior vice president and head of underwriting for retail bank operations at TD Bank. \u201cIt definitely needs to be someone you really trust, \u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt definitely needs to be someone you really trust, \u201d he said.", "paragraph_id": "5d706737c8e4820a9b66f0d4"} +{"question": "What did Sandy do around Ithaca with friends?", "paragraph": "On a quiet Friday morning in November 2010, Sandy sat down with a mug of honey-\u00adginger tea to read two books that Daryl had brought her. By this point, a year and a half after her amnestic M.C.I. diagnosis, she had progressed to what Duffy said was Alzheimer\u2019s disease. She had retired from Cornell, but she was doing well. She could still travel alone to familiar destinations, including Austin, Tex., where Emily was living. Jeremy had temporarily moved back home to be with her. She could read novels, even difficult ones like Cormac McCarthy\u2019s \u201cThe Road.\u201d She played tennis, gardened and went for walks around Ithaca with a handful of friends, most of them former colleagues from Cornell. She saw a few psychotherapy patients. One would later say that even though Sandy was having some trouble remembering words, \u201cit didn\u2019t really matter. In a therapy relationship you\u2019re talking more about emotions \u2014 and in that regard, she didn\u2019t miss a beat.\u201d", "answer": "went for walks", "sentence": "She played tennis, gardened and went for walks around Ithaca with a handful of friends, most of them former colleagues from Cornell.", "paragraph_sentence": "On a quiet Friday morning in November 2010, Sandy sat down with a mug of honey-\u00adginger tea to read two books that Daryl had brought her. By this point, a year and a half after her amnestic M.C.I. diagnosis, she had progressed to what Duffy said was Alzheimer\u2019s disease. She had retired from Cornell, but she was doing well. She could still travel alone to familiar destinations, including Austin, Tex., where Emily was living. Jeremy had temporarily moved back home to be with her. She could read novels, even difficult ones like Cormac McCarthy\u2019s \u201cThe Road.\u201d She played tennis, gardened and went for walks around Ithaca with a handful of friends, most of them former colleagues from Cornell. She saw a few psychotherapy patients. One would later say that even though Sandy was having some trouble remembering words, \u201cit didn\u2019t really matter. In a therapy relationship you\u2019re talking more about emotions \u2014 and in that regard, she didn\u2019t miss a beat.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "On a quiet Friday morning in November 2010, Sandy sat down with a mug of honey-\u00adginger tea to read two books that Daryl had brought her. By this point, a year and a half after her amnestic M.C.I. diagnosis, she had progressed to what Duffy said was Alzheimer\u2019s disease. She had retired from Cornell, but she was doing well. She could still travel alone to familiar destinations, including Austin, Tex., where Emily was living. Jeremy had temporarily moved back home to be with her. She could read novels, even difficult ones like Cormac McCarthy\u2019s \u201cThe Road.\u201d She played tennis, gardened and went for walks around Ithaca with a handful of friends, most of them former colleagues from Cornell. She saw a few psychotherapy patients. One would later say that even though Sandy was having some trouble remembering words, \u201cit didn\u2019t really matter. In a therapy relationship you\u2019re talking more about emotions \u2014 and in that regard, she didn\u2019t miss a beat.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "She played tennis, gardened and went for walks around Ithaca with a handful of friends, most of them former colleagues from Cornell.", "paragraph_id": "5d704083c8e4820a9b66e50b"} +{"question": "What subject did 321's students meet 80 percent in state standards?", "paragraph": "Public School 321, a well-regarded elementary school on Seventh Avenue, is a major attraction. Last year, 78 percent of students met state standards on the state English test, and 80 percent on the math test, versus 30 and 39 percent citywide. The Berkeley Carroll School, a private institution for prekindergarten through 12th grade, has its lower school on Carroll Street and middle and high schools on Lincoln Place. The Commute", "answer": "math", "sentence": "Last year, 78 percent of students met state standards on the state English test, and 80 percent on the math test, versus 30 and 39 percent citywide.", "paragraph_sentence": "Public School 321, a well-regarded elementary school on Seventh Avenue, is a major attraction. Last year, 78 percent of students met state standards on the state English test, and 80 percent on the math test, versus 30 and 39 percent citywide. The Berkeley Carroll School, a private institution for prekindergarten through 12th grade, has its lower school on Carroll Street and middle and high schools on Lincoln Place. The Commute", "paragraph_answer": "Public School 321, a well-regarded elementary school on Seventh Avenue, is a major attraction. Last year, 78 percent of students met state standards on the state English test, and 80 percent on the math test, versus 30 and 39 percent citywide. The Berkeley Carroll School, a private institution for prekindergarten through 12th grade, has its lower school on Carroll Street and middle and high schools on Lincoln Place. The Commute", "sentence_answer": "Last year, 78 percent of students met state standards on the state English test, and 80 percent on the math test, versus 30 and 39 percent citywide.", "paragraph_id": "5d708f39c8e4820a9b66f565"} +{"question": "Which one could be a solution to crime regarding the use of guns?", "paragraph": "That category could easily have included me. In 2006 I was shot at by a drunken 20-something man on the North Side of Chicago while riding in a car with three female friends. The reason? I was in the back seat next to the man\u2019s ex-girlfriend. Enraged, he burst from his house, pistol popping. Luckily, his aim was bad, and my friend was a good defensive driver: The shooter only managed to crack the rear window. I learned later that he had loose ties to a Hispanic set. Since then, I have sometimes wondered how close I came, as a brown man, then in my mid-20s, to having my death trivialized by a two-word phrase in a police blotter. The chimera of devious street tribes might give people a scapegoat for Chicago\u2019s gun violence, but it doesn\u2019t reflect the complex reality on the ground. And sending in tactical units to \u201cdestroy the gangs,\u201d as the former Chicago police superintendent Garry McCarthy recently vowed, distracts from the structural problems that lead to gun violence in inner-city neighborhoods. When our solution to crime is to target gangs, we risk targeting whole swaths of people in economically disadvantaged neighborhoods, almost all of them black and Hispanic. A real solution would involve more opportunities for employment and education, stricter policies on gun control and safe spaces for those who have been traumatized, in order to minimize the chance of violence being perpetuated \u2014 the same things people have spent half a century calling for in these neighborhoods.", "answer": "stricter policies on gun control", "sentence": "A real solution would involve more opportunities for employment and education, stricter policies on gun control and safe spaces for those who have been traumatized, in order to minimize the chance of violence being perpetuated \u2014 the same things people have spent half a century calling for in these neighborhoods.", "paragraph_sentence": "That category could easily have included me. In 2006 I was shot at by a drunken 20-something man on the North Side of Chicago while riding in a car with three female friends. The reason? I was in the back seat next to the man\u2019s ex-girlfriend. Enraged, he burst from his house, pistol popping. Luckily, his aim was bad, and my friend was a good defensive driver: The shooter only managed to crack the rear window. I learned later that he had loose ties to a Hispanic set. Since then, I have sometimes wondered how close I came, as a brown man, then in my mid-20s, to having my death trivialized by a two-word phrase in a police blotter. The chimera of devious street tribes might give people a scapegoat for Chicago\u2019s gun violence, but it doesn\u2019t reflect the complex reality on the ground. And sending in tactical units to \u201cdestroy the gangs,\u201d as the former Chicago police superintendent Garry McCarthy recently vowed, distracts from the structural problems that lead to gun violence in inner-city neighborhoods. When our solution to crime is to target gangs, we risk targeting whole swaths of people in economically disadvantaged neighborhoods, almost all of them black and Hispanic. A real solution would involve more opportunities for employment and education, stricter policies on gun control and safe spaces for those who have been traumatized, in order to minimize the chance of violence being perpetuated \u2014 the same things people have spent half a century calling for in these neighborhoods. ", "paragraph_answer": "That category could easily have included me. In 2006 I was shot at by a drunken 20-something man on the North Side of Chicago while riding in a car with three female friends. The reason? I was in the back seat next to the man\u2019s ex-girlfriend. Enraged, he burst from his house, pistol popping. Luckily, his aim was bad, and my friend was a good defensive driver: The shooter only managed to crack the rear window. I learned later that he had loose ties to a Hispanic set. Since then, I have sometimes wondered how close I came, as a brown man, then in my mid-20s, to having my death trivialized by a two-word phrase in a police blotter. The chimera of devious street tribes might give people a scapegoat for Chicago\u2019s gun violence, but it doesn\u2019t reflect the complex reality on the ground. And sending in tactical units to \u201cdestroy the gangs,\u201d as the former Chicago police superintendent Garry McCarthy recently vowed, distracts from the structural problems that lead to gun violence in inner-city neighborhoods. When our solution to crime is to target gangs, we risk targeting whole swaths of people in economically disadvantaged neighborhoods, almost all of them black and Hispanic. A real solution would involve more opportunities for employment and education, stricter policies on gun control and safe spaces for those who have been traumatized, in order to minimize the chance of violence being perpetuated \u2014 the same things people have spent half a century calling for in these neighborhoods.", "sentence_answer": "A real solution would involve more opportunities for employment and education, stricter policies on gun control and safe spaces for those who have been traumatized, in order to minimize the chance of violence being perpetuated \u2014 the same things people have spent half a century calling for in these neighborhoods.", "paragraph_id": "5d7015fcc8e4820a9b66c1fc"} +{"question": "What did the Solviet Union acquire that was mentioned in The Times article?", "paragraph": "Yankees players and Manager Casey Stengel were fined a total of $500 for their intemperance. The Yankees won two of three against the Philadelphia Athletics, and the Red Sox matched that in Washington. With two games to play, Boston still led by one game. The tension in the pennant race riveted both cities. In an article on reaction in New England to the Soviet Union\u2019s getting an atomic bomb, The Times wrote: \u201cPeople appeared almost unanimous in their opinion that if the Russians had the atomic bomb and intended to use it, there was nothing that they, individually, could do about it. A more immediate pressing concern was whether Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox would hit any home runs against the New York Yankees.\u201d Pneumonia had put DiMaggio in the hospital, and he had lost 18 pounds, but he decided it was time to return. The Yankees proclaimed it Joe DiMaggio Day, and for an hour before the game, he was lauded and showered with gifts, including 300 quarts of ice cream and a speedboat.", "answer": "Soviet Union\u2019s getting an atomic bomb", "sentence": "In an article on reaction in New England to the Soviet Union\u2019s getting an atomic bomb , The Times wrote: \u201cPeople appeared almost unanimous in their opinion that if the Russians had the atomic bomb and intended to use it, there was nothing that they, individually, could do about it.", "paragraph_sentence": "Yankees players and Manager Casey Stengel were fined a total of $500 for their intemperance. The Yankees won two of three against the Philadelphia Athletics, and the Red Sox matched that in Washington. With two games to play, Boston still led by one game. The tension in the pennant race riveted both cities. In an article on reaction in New England to the Soviet Union\u2019s getting an atomic bomb , The Times wrote: \u201cPeople appeared almost unanimous in their opinion that if the Russians had the atomic bomb and intended to use it, there was nothing that they, individually, could do about it. A more immediate pressing concern was whether Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox would hit any home runs against the New York Yankees.\u201d Pneumonia had put DiMaggio in the hospital, and he had lost 18 pounds, but he decided it was time to return. The Yankees proclaimed it Joe DiMaggio Day, and for an hour before the game, he was lauded and showered with gifts, including 300 quarts of ice cream and a speedboat.", "paragraph_answer": "Yankees players and Manager Casey Stengel were fined a total of $500 for their intemperance. The Yankees won two of three against the Philadelphia Athletics, and the Red Sox matched that in Washington. With two games to play, Boston still led by one game. The tension in the pennant race riveted both cities. In an article on reaction in New England to the Soviet Union\u2019s getting an atomic bomb , The Times wrote: \u201cPeople appeared almost unanimous in their opinion that if the Russians had the atomic bomb and intended to use it, there was nothing that they, individually, could do about it. A more immediate pressing concern was whether Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox would hit any home runs against the New York Yankees.\u201d Pneumonia had put DiMaggio in the hospital, and he had lost 18 pounds, but he decided it was time to return. The Yankees proclaimed it Joe DiMaggio Day, and for an hour before the game, he was lauded and showered with gifts, including 300 quarts of ice cream and a speedboat.", "sentence_answer": "In an article on reaction in New England to the Soviet Union\u2019s getting an atomic bomb , The Times wrote: \u201cPeople appeared almost unanimous in their opinion that if the Russians had the atomic bomb and intended to use it, there was nothing that they, individually, could do about it.", "paragraph_id": "5d7018bdc8e4820a9b66c4e1"} +{"question": "Where is the Foreign Ministry located?", "paragraph": "What startled France, a country where the customer is always wrong, was the revolt of the taxi rider. For the last half year, many have turned away from cabs, loving the convenience of Uber and the way the drivers would open doors and not have the meter prematurely racking up the tab. The French were stunned to learn that the fifth floor of the American Embassy, a few doors from the \u00c9lys\u00e9e Palace, was a trompe l\u2019oeil design hiding what they call the \u201cbig ears\u201d of eavesdropping equipment pointed at Fran\u00e7ois Hollande (and his actress girlfriend, Julie Gayet, who is stealthily hanging out at the \u00c9lys\u00e9e). \u201cIt\u2019s a little bit like an invited guest whom you\u2019ve surprised looking into the bedroom through a keyhole,\u201d huffed Laurent Joffrin in a signed editorial in Lib\u00e9ration, concluding the only way to deal with this \u201cstain\u201d by a \u201ccondescending ally\u201d against the rules of good conduct was to give asylum to \u201cthe courageous whistle-blower,\u201d Edward Snowden. French officials, pleased with the successful collaboration of the French and the U.S. against jihadists in Africa, Libya, Mali and Syria, were more inclined to treat the wiretapping as an old story. (Though Lib\u00e9ration denounced that as hypocritical, \u201ca case of Tartufferie.\u201d) I visited the Foreign Ministry at the Quai d\u2019Orsay \u2014 bristling with emergency meetings on terrorism \u2014 to check on the status of French-American relations.", "answer": "Quai d\u2019Orsay", "sentence": "I visited the Foreign Ministry at the Quai d\u2019Orsay \u2014 bristling with emergency meetings on terrorism \u2014 to check on the status of French-American relations.", "paragraph_sentence": "What startled France, a country where the customer is always wrong, was the revolt of the taxi rider. For the last half year, many have turned away from cabs, loving the convenience of Uber and the way the drivers would open doors and not have the meter prematurely racking up the tab. The French were stunned to learn that the fifth floor of the American Embassy, a few doors from the \u00c9lys\u00e9e Palace, was a trompe l\u2019oeil design hiding what they call the \u201cbig ears\u201d of eavesdropping equipment pointed at Fran\u00e7ois Hollande (and his actress girlfriend, Julie Gayet, who is stealthily hanging out at the \u00c9lys\u00e9e). \u201cIt\u2019s a little bit like an invited guest whom you\u2019ve surprised looking into the bedroom through a keyhole,\u201d huffed Laurent Joffrin in a signed editorial in Lib\u00e9ration, concluding the only way to deal with this \u201cstain\u201d by a \u201ccondescending ally\u201d against the rules of good conduct was to give asylum to \u201cthe courageous whistle-blower,\u201d Edward Snowden. French officials, pleased with the successful collaboration of the French and the U.S. against jihadists in Africa, Libya, Mali and Syria, were more inclined to treat the wiretapping as an old story. (Though Lib\u00e9ration denounced that as hypocritical, \u201ca case of Tartufferie.\u201d) I visited the Foreign Ministry at the Quai d\u2019Orsay \u2014 bristling with emergency meetings on terrorism \u2014 to check on the status of French-American relations. ", "paragraph_answer": "What startled France, a country where the customer is always wrong, was the revolt of the taxi rider. For the last half year, many have turned away from cabs, loving the convenience of Uber and the way the drivers would open doors and not have the meter prematurely racking up the tab. The French were stunned to learn that the fifth floor of the American Embassy, a few doors from the \u00c9lys\u00e9e Palace, was a trompe l\u2019oeil design hiding what they call the \u201cbig ears\u201d of eavesdropping equipment pointed at Fran\u00e7ois Hollande (and his actress girlfriend, Julie Gayet, who is stealthily hanging out at the \u00c9lys\u00e9e). \u201cIt\u2019s a little bit like an invited guest whom you\u2019ve surprised looking into the bedroom through a keyhole,\u201d huffed Laurent Joffrin in a signed editorial in Lib\u00e9ration, concluding the only way to deal with this \u201cstain\u201d by a \u201ccondescending ally\u201d against the rules of good conduct was to give asylum to \u201cthe courageous whistle-blower,\u201d Edward Snowden. French officials, pleased with the successful collaboration of the French and the U.S. against jihadists in Africa, Libya, Mali and Syria, were more inclined to treat the wiretapping as an old story. (Though Lib\u00e9ration denounced that as hypocritical, \u201ca case of Tartufferie.\u201d) I visited the Foreign Ministry at the Quai d\u2019Orsay \u2014 bristling with emergency meetings on terrorism \u2014 to check on the status of French-American relations.", "sentence_answer": "I visited the Foreign Ministry at the Quai d\u2019Orsay \u2014 bristling with emergency meetings on terrorism \u2014 to check on the status of French-American relations.", "paragraph_id": "5d703523c8e4820a9b66df59"} +{"question": "How many times did the Cavs turnover the ball?", "paragraph": "Indeed, James\u2019s return could not fix what ails Love or point guard Kyrie Irving, whose ragged performance produced six assists and eight turnovers. The Cavaliers lost the ball 19 times, and their defense was again missing in action for too much of the game. In choosing to leave Miami and return to Cleveland, James publicly preached patience but seemed intent on winning another title as soon as possible. It seems to be slowly dawning on him that not every player on the Cavaliers is going to take to his mentoring like a seedling to sunlight.", "answer": "19", "sentence": "The Cavaliers lost the ball 19 times, and their defense was again missing in action for too much of the game.", "paragraph_sentence": "Indeed, James\u2019s return could not fix what ails Love or point guard Kyrie Irving, whose ragged performance produced six assists and eight turnovers. The Cavaliers lost the ball 19 times, and their defense was again missing in action for too much of the game. In choosing to leave Miami and return to Cleveland, James publicly preached patience but seemed intent on winning another title as soon as possible. It seems to be slowly dawning on him that not every player on the Cavaliers is going to take to his mentoring like a seedling to sunlight.", "paragraph_answer": "Indeed, James\u2019s return could not fix what ails Love or point guard Kyrie Irving, whose ragged performance produced six assists and eight turnovers. The Cavaliers lost the ball 19 times, and their defense was again missing in action for too much of the game. In choosing to leave Miami and return to Cleveland, James publicly preached patience but seemed intent on winning another title as soon as possible. It seems to be slowly dawning on him that not every player on the Cavaliers is going to take to his mentoring like a seedling to sunlight.", "sentence_answer": "The Cavaliers lost the ball 19 times, and their defense was again missing in action for too much of the game.", "paragraph_id": "5d703af8c8e4820a9b66e267"} +{"question": "Which cardinal has issued public dismissals of Cuba's political opposition?", "paragraph": "\u201cWhat the church recognizes today and they are addressing is that the first thing you have to address with the Cuban people is trying to meet their basic needs,\u201d said Andy Gomez, a former senior fellow at the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies at the University of Miami. \u201cOnce you start helping them address their basic needs, food and shelter, then you can start talking about religion, social change and some of these other things.\u201d The most powerful figure in the Cuban church is Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino, the archbishop of Havana, who is set to retire. Detractors attack him as being too conciliatory to the government of President Ra\u00fal Castro. Defenders say he is astute and politically savvy in preserving the relevance of the church. According to Catholic clergy and lay members, Cardinal Ortega favors a slower, smoother transition to a more democratic and market-based Cuba, a view shared by some on and off the island who fear that a more dramatic change could bring social and economic turmoil. But some Cuban bishops have wanted a more confrontational approach, while other critics have been upset by the cardinal\u2019s public dismissals of Cuba\u2019s political opposition.", "answer": "Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino", "sentence": "The most powerful figure in the Cuban church is Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino , the archbishop of Havana, who is set to retire.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWhat the church recognizes today and they are addressing is that the first thing you have to address with the Cuban people is trying to meet their basic needs,\u201d said Andy Gomez, a former senior fellow at the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies at the University of Miami. \u201cOnce you start helping them address their basic needs, food and shelter, then you can start talking about religion, social change and some of these other things.\u201d The most powerful figure in the Cuban church is Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino , the archbishop of Havana, who is set to retire. Detractors attack him as being too conciliatory to the government of President Ra\u00fal Castro. Defenders say he is astute and politically savvy in preserving the relevance of the church. According to Catholic clergy and lay members, Cardinal Ortega favors a slower, smoother transition to a more democratic and market-based Cuba, a view shared by some on and off the island who fear that a more dramatic change could bring social and economic turmoil. But some Cuban bishops have wanted a more confrontational approach, while other critics have been upset by the cardinal\u2019s public dismissals of Cuba\u2019s political opposition.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWhat the church recognizes today and they are addressing is that the first thing you have to address with the Cuban people is trying to meet their basic needs,\u201d said Andy Gomez, a former senior fellow at the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies at the University of Miami. \u201cOnce you start helping them address their basic needs, food and shelter, then you can start talking about religion, social change and some of these other things.\u201d The most powerful figure in the Cuban church is Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino , the archbishop of Havana, who is set to retire. Detractors attack him as being too conciliatory to the government of President Ra\u00fal Castro. Defenders say he is astute and politically savvy in preserving the relevance of the church. According to Catholic clergy and lay members, Cardinal Ortega favors a slower, smoother transition to a more democratic and market-based Cuba, a view shared by some on and off the island who fear that a more dramatic change could bring social and economic turmoil. But some Cuban bishops have wanted a more confrontational approach, while other critics have been upset by the cardinal\u2019s public dismissals of Cuba\u2019s political opposition.", "sentence_answer": "The most powerful figure in the Cuban church is Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino , the archbishop of Havana, who is set to retire.", "paragraph_id": "5d701671c8e4820a9b66c28b"} +{"question": "how many groundwater basins are connected to surface water?", "paragraph": "If the connection between groundwater and surface water is considered, that time frame for running out of water altogether will almost certainly be even shorter. Arizona\u2019s top water official told ProPublica that it was both politically difficult and costly to properly account for the interconnection. But deep in a 685-page document that is part of Arizona\u2019s water plan, the state lists 42 groundwater basins that it says are connected to surface water, indicating a potential conflict over rights to those supplies. It\u2019s unclear how much water flows from one into the other, but the documents show that many of the water sources are heavily relied on as sources of both groundwater and surface supplies at the same time. Thomas Buschatzke, the director of Arizona\u2019s Department of Water Resources, acknowledged that pumping from wells could dry up streams, but said the current law kept the two resources separate, and \u201cit would be a huge upset to the economy to do away with that.\u201d", "answer": "42", "sentence": "But deep in a 685-page document that is part of Arizona\u2019s water plan, the state lists 42 groundwater basins that it says are connected to surface water, indicating a potential conflict over rights to those supplies.", "paragraph_sentence": "If the connection between groundwater and surface water is considered, that time frame for running out of water altogether will almost certainly be even shorter. Arizona\u2019s top water official told ProPublica that it was both politically difficult and costly to properly account for the interconnection. But deep in a 685-page document that is part of Arizona\u2019s water plan, the state lists 42 groundwater basins that it says are connected to surface water, indicating a potential conflict over rights to those supplies. It\u2019s unclear how much water flows from one into the other, but the documents show that many of the water sources are heavily relied on as sources of both groundwater and surface supplies at the same time. Thomas Buschatzke, the director of Arizona\u2019s Department of Water Resources, acknowledged that pumping from wells could dry up streams, but said the current law kept the two resources separate, and \u201cit would be a huge upset to the economy to do away with that.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "If the connection between groundwater and surface water is considered, that time frame for running out of water altogether will almost certainly be even shorter. Arizona\u2019s top water official told ProPublica that it was both politically difficult and costly to properly account for the interconnection. But deep in a 685-page document that is part of Arizona\u2019s water plan, the state lists 42 groundwater basins that it says are connected to surface water, indicating a potential conflict over rights to those supplies. It\u2019s unclear how much water flows from one into the other, but the documents show that many of the water sources are heavily relied on as sources of both groundwater and surface supplies at the same time. Thomas Buschatzke, the director of Arizona\u2019s Department of Water Resources, acknowledged that pumping from wells could dry up streams, but said the current law kept the two resources separate, and \u201cit would be a huge upset to the economy to do away with that.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "But deep in a 685-page document that is part of Arizona\u2019s water plan, the state lists 42 groundwater basins that it says are connected to surface water, indicating a potential conflict over rights to those supplies.", "paragraph_id": "5d7024bdc8e4820a9b66d12b"} +{"question": "Why did the \"establishment\" science disappoint Dr. Coggan?", "paragraph": "Dr. Coggan had earlier grown disappointed with the \u201cestablishment\u201d science in which, he says, academic research and corporate profit priorities are increasingly indistinguishable. He bootstrapped the research laboratory with his own money and now supports it with funding from a variety of private individual contributions and scientific research grants. NeuroLinx now supports a range of research projects, including an exploration of the way dolphins sleep, an effort to create a computer simulation of the ubiquitous lab worm C. elegans (known as the Open Worm project), and an exploration of nerve damage in diseases like multiple sclerosis. Dr. Ohayon had done early research in the field of autonomous agents based on neural networks, computing models inspired by biological nervous systems, but stopped for almost a decade because of worries about military applications of the technology.", "answer": "academic research and corporate profit priorities are increasingly indistinguishable", "sentence": "Dr. Coggan had earlier grown disappointed with the \u201cestablishment\u201d science in which, he says, academic research and corporate profit priorities are increasingly indistinguishable .", "paragraph_sentence": " Dr. Coggan had earlier grown disappointed with the \u201cestablishment\u201d science in which, he says, academic research and corporate profit priorities are increasingly indistinguishable . He bootstrapped the research laboratory with his own money and now supports it with funding from a variety of private individual contributions and scientific research grants. NeuroLinx now supports a range of research projects, including an exploration of the way dolphins sleep, an effort to create a computer simulation of the ubiquitous lab worm C. elegans (known as the Open Worm project), and an exploration of nerve damage in diseases like multiple sclerosis. Dr. Ohayon had done early research in the field of autonomous agents based on neural networks, computing models inspired by biological nervous systems, but stopped for almost a decade because of worries about military applications of the technology.", "paragraph_answer": "Dr. Coggan had earlier grown disappointed with the \u201cestablishment\u201d science in which, he says, academic research and corporate profit priorities are increasingly indistinguishable . He bootstrapped the research laboratory with his own money and now supports it with funding from a variety of private individual contributions and scientific research grants. NeuroLinx now supports a range of research projects, including an exploration of the way dolphins sleep, an effort to create a computer simulation of the ubiquitous lab worm C. elegans (known as the Open Worm project), and an exploration of nerve damage in diseases like multiple sclerosis. Dr. Ohayon had done early research in the field of autonomous agents based on neural networks, computing models inspired by biological nervous systems, but stopped for almost a decade because of worries about military applications of the technology.", "sentence_answer": "Dr. Coggan had earlier grown disappointed with the \u201cestablishment\u201d science in which, he says, academic research and corporate profit priorities are increasingly indistinguishable .", "paragraph_id": "5d6f96e9c8e4820a9b66a77e"} +{"question": "What did the gunman bring with them?", "paragraph": "The mosque\u2019s muezzin, Moazzem Hossain, was shot in the head and died later in a hospital. Three other men, including the mosque\u2019s 35-year-old imam, were wounded in the attack and were hospitalized, said Ahsan Habib, the officer in charge at Shibganj police station in Bogra district, about 120 miles north of the Bangladeshi capital. \u201cI have never heard, and never received any information, that there was rivalry or conflict between the Shiite community and anyone else,\u201d Mr. Habib said. \u201cThis attack just astonished me.\u201d A Shiite leader in the region, Mozaffor Hossen, 35, secretary general of the Bangladesh Imamia Welfare Foundation, said the gunmen brought a lock with them and used it to lock the compound\u2019s gate, then entered the mosque and opened fire.", "answer": "a lock", "sentence": "A Shiite leader in the region, Mozaffor Hossen, 35, secretary general of the Bangladesh Imamia Welfare Foundation, said the gunmen brought a lock with them and used it to lock the compound\u2019s gate, then entered the mosque and opened fire.", "paragraph_sentence": "The mosque\u2019s muezzin, Moazzem Hossain, was shot in the head and died later in a hospital. Three other men, including the mosque\u2019s 35-year-old imam, were wounded in the attack and were hospitalized, said Ahsan Habib, the officer in charge at Shibganj police station in Bogra district, about 120 miles north of the Bangladeshi capital. \u201cI have never heard, and never received any information, that there was rivalry or conflict between the Shiite community and anyone else,\u201d Mr. Habib said. \u201cThis attack just astonished me.\u201d A Shiite leader in the region, Mozaffor Hossen, 35, secretary general of the Bangladesh Imamia Welfare Foundation, said the gunmen brought a lock with them and used it to lock the compound\u2019s gate, then entered the mosque and opened fire. ", "paragraph_answer": "The mosque\u2019s muezzin, Moazzem Hossain, was shot in the head and died later in a hospital. Three other men, including the mosque\u2019s 35-year-old imam, were wounded in the attack and were hospitalized, said Ahsan Habib, the officer in charge at Shibganj police station in Bogra district, about 120 miles north of the Bangladeshi capital. \u201cI have never heard, and never received any information, that there was rivalry or conflict between the Shiite community and anyone else,\u201d Mr. Habib said. \u201cThis attack just astonished me.\u201d A Shiite leader in the region, Mozaffor Hossen, 35, secretary general of the Bangladesh Imamia Welfare Foundation, said the gunmen brought a lock with them and used it to lock the compound\u2019s gate, then entered the mosque and opened fire.", "sentence_answer": "A Shiite leader in the region, Mozaffor Hossen, 35, secretary general of the Bangladesh Imamia Welfare Foundation, said the gunmen brought a lock with them and used it to lock the compound\u2019s gate, then entered the mosque and opened fire.", "paragraph_id": "5d70074dc8e4820a9b66ad45"} +{"question": "How many choices are usually on the dessert menu?", "paragraph": "We fared better with desserts. The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo, was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu. While the frozen lemon mousse had an icy, not-so-lemony taste, the cr\u00e8me br\u00fbl\u00e9e trio in classic, coffee and passion fruit flavors, as well as the triple chocolate mousse cake, were incredibly velvety. Better still was the warm honey pine nut tart, with a filling of caramelized nuts and chestnut honey and a dollop of cr\u00e8me fra\u00eeche. It was a sweet ending, but the nits picked throughout the night went beyond the food: some of our plates were chipped, and the waitstaff didn\u2019t replace a dropped knife or clean up our visibly dirty table before bringing out desserts. These faults wouldn\u2019t matter as much if the prices were lower, but Orama is an expensive night out, so our expectations were high. Still, there are those views and that gorgeous villa. Until the kitchen and the service catch up to the visuals, it might be preferable to savor the skyline and d\u00e9cor from the bar.", "answer": "eight", "sentence": "The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo, was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu.", "paragraph_sentence": "We fared better with desserts. The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo, was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu. While the frozen lemon mousse had an icy, not-so-lemony taste, the cr\u00e8me br\u00fbl\u00e9e trio in classic, coffee and passion fruit flavors, as well as the triple chocolate mousse cake, were incredibly velvety. Better still was the warm honey pine nut tart, with a filling of caramelized nuts and chestnut honey and a dollop of cr\u00e8me fra\u00eeche. It was a sweet ending, but the nits picked throughout the night went beyond the food: some of our plates were chipped, and the waitstaff didn\u2019t replace a dropped knife or clean up our visibly dirty table before bringing out desserts. These faults wouldn\u2019t matter as much if the prices were lower, but Orama is an expensive night out, so our expectations were high. Still, there are those views and that gorgeous villa. Until the kitchen and the service catch up to the visuals, it might be preferable to savor the skyline and d\u00e9cor from the bar.", "paragraph_answer": "We fared better with desserts. The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo, was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu. While the frozen lemon mousse had an icy, not-so-lemony taste, the cr\u00e8me br\u00fbl\u00e9e trio in classic, coffee and passion fruit flavors, as well as the triple chocolate mousse cake, were incredibly velvety. Better still was the warm honey pine nut tart, with a filling of caramelized nuts and chestnut honey and a dollop of cr\u00e8me fra\u00eeche. It was a sweet ending, but the nits picked throughout the night went beyond the food: some of our plates were chipped, and the waitstaff didn\u2019t replace a dropped knife or clean up our visibly dirty table before bringing out desserts. These faults wouldn\u2019t matter as much if the prices were lower, but Orama is an expensive night out, so our expectations were high. Still, there are those views and that gorgeous villa. Until the kitchen and the service catch up to the visuals, it might be preferable to savor the skyline and d\u00e9cor from the bar.", "sentence_answer": "The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo, was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu.", "paragraph_id": "5d706d9ec8e4820a9b66f197"} +{"question": "Who plays the lead actor in the movie, Bridge of Spies?", "paragraph": "\u2605 \u2018Bridge of Spies\u2019 (PG-13, 2:15) In this gravely moody, perfectly directed thriller about a real 1962 spy swap, Steven Spielberg returns you to the good old bad days of the Cold War and its fictions, with their bottomless political chasms and moral gray areas. Tom Hanks leads a terrific cast that includes Mark Rylance as a Soviet mole and Scott Shepherd as a C.I.A. operative. (Dargis) \u2605 \u2018Brooklyn\u2019 (PG-13, 1:51) Saoirse Ronan gives a remarkably lively and subtle performance as Eilis Lacey, a young woman who emigrates from Ireland to New York in the early 1950s, in John Crowley\u2019s lovely adaptation of the novel by Colm Toibin. (Scott) \u2018Burnt\u2019 (R, 1:40) Bradley Cooper plays a once-hot chef who is trying to regain his stature. If reality TV hasn\u2019t provided you with enough tyrannical chefs and images of artfully arranged food, this movie\u2019s for you. (Neil Genzlinger)", "answer": "Tom Hanks", "sentence": "Tom Hanks leads a terrific cast that includes Mark Rylance as a Soviet mole and Scott Shepherd as a C.I.A. operative.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2605 \u2018Bridge of Spies\u2019 (PG-13, 2:15) In this gravely moody, perfectly directed thriller about a real 1962 spy swap, Steven Spielberg returns you to the good old bad days of the Cold War and its fictions, with their bottomless political chasms and moral gray areas. Tom Hanks leads a terrific cast that includes Mark Rylance as a Soviet mole and Scott Shepherd as a C.I.A. operative. (Dargis) \u2605 \u2018Brooklyn\u2019 (PG-13, 1:51) Saoirse Ronan gives a remarkably lively and subtle performance as Eilis Lacey, a young woman who emigrates from Ireland to New York in the early 1950s, in John Crowley\u2019s lovely adaptation of the novel by Colm Toibin. (Scott) \u2018Burnt\u2019 (R, 1:40) Bradley Cooper plays a once-hot chef who is trying to regain his stature. If reality TV hasn\u2019t provided you with enough tyrannical chefs and images of artfully arranged food, this movie\u2019s for you. (Neil Genzlinger)", "paragraph_answer": "\u2605 \u2018Bridge of Spies\u2019 (PG-13, 2:15) In this gravely moody, perfectly directed thriller about a real 1962 spy swap, Steven Spielberg returns you to the good old bad days of the Cold War and its fictions, with their bottomless political chasms and moral gray areas. Tom Hanks leads a terrific cast that includes Mark Rylance as a Soviet mole and Scott Shepherd as a C.I.A. operative. (Dargis) \u2605 \u2018Brooklyn\u2019 (PG-13, 1:51) Saoirse Ronan gives a remarkably lively and subtle performance as Eilis Lacey, a young woman who emigrates from Ireland to New York in the early 1950s, in John Crowley\u2019s lovely adaptation of the novel by Colm Toibin. (Scott) \u2018Burnt\u2019 (R, 1:40) Bradley Cooper plays a once-hot chef who is trying to regain his stature. If reality TV hasn\u2019t provided you with enough tyrannical chefs and images of artfully arranged food, this movie\u2019s for you. (Neil Genzlinger)", "sentence_answer": " Tom Hanks leads a terrific cast that includes Mark Rylance as a Soviet mole and Scott Shepherd as a C.I.A. operative.", "paragraph_id": "5d701ea1c8e4820a9b66ca31"} +{"question": "What is the lastest work credited to Peter Doctor?", "paragraph": "Pete Docter is a director, writer, animator and voice actor for Pixar Animation Studios, part of the Walt Disney Company. His latest credit is \u201cInside Out,\u201d about the inner workings of a young girl\u2019s brain, which he directed and co-wrote. READING I am finishing \u201cDead Wake,\u201d by Erik Larson, about the sinking of the Lusitania. It cuts between the Lusitania and what\u2019s going on there with specific passengers and then down to the submarine commander who was sailing around in this little cigar tube with very little communication. And I\u2019m just starting \u201cRiver of Shadows,\u201d by Rebecca Solnit, about the photographer Eadweard Muybridge. Some of the early plates he did of animals in motion are studied to this day by animators. He also suffered a severe blow to the head and not long after that, he ended up killing his wife\u2019s lover.", "answer": "Inside Out", "sentence": "His latest credit is \u201c Inside Out ,\u201d about the inner workings of a young girl\u2019s brain, which he directed and co-wrote.", "paragraph_sentence": "Pete Docter is a director, writer, animator and voice actor for Pixar Animation Studios, part of the Walt Disney Company. His latest credit is \u201c Inside Out ,\u201d about the inner workings of a young girl\u2019s brain, which he directed and co-wrote. READING I am finishing \u201cDead Wake,\u201d by Erik Larson, about the sinking of the Lusitania. It cuts between the Lusitania and what\u2019s going on there with specific passengers and then down to the submarine commander who was sailing around in this little cigar tube with very little communication. And I\u2019m just starting \u201cRiver of Shadows,\u201d by Rebecca Solnit, about the photographer Eadweard Muybridge. Some of the early plates he did of animals in motion are studied to this day by animators. He also suffered a severe blow to the head and not long after that, he ended up killing his wife\u2019s lover.", "paragraph_answer": "Pete Docter is a director, writer, animator and voice actor for Pixar Animation Studios, part of the Walt Disney Company. His latest credit is \u201c Inside Out ,\u201d about the inner workings of a young girl\u2019s brain, which he directed and co-wrote. READING I am finishing \u201cDead Wake,\u201d by Erik Larson, about the sinking of the Lusitania. It cuts between the Lusitania and what\u2019s going on there with specific passengers and then down to the submarine commander who was sailing around in this little cigar tube with very little communication. And I\u2019m just starting \u201cRiver of Shadows,\u201d by Rebecca Solnit, about the photographer Eadweard Muybridge. Some of the early plates he did of animals in motion are studied to this day by animators. He also suffered a severe blow to the head and not long after that, he ended up killing his wife\u2019s lover.", "sentence_answer": "His latest credit is \u201c Inside Out ,\u201d about the inner workings of a young girl\u2019s brain, which he directed and co-wrote.", "paragraph_id": "5d700566c8e4820a9b66a8f7"} +{"question": "Who is the most powerful person in the Cuban church?", "paragraph": "\u201cWhat the church recognizes today and they are addressing is that the first thing you have to address with the Cuban people is trying to meet their basic needs,\u201d said Andy Gomez, a former senior fellow at the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies at the University of Miami. \u201cOnce you start helping them address their basic needs, food and shelter, then you can start talking about religion, social change and some of these other things.\u201d The most powerful figure in the Cuban church is Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino, the archbishop of Havana, who is set to retire. Detractors attack him as being too conciliatory to the government of President Ra\u00fal Castro. Defenders say he is astute and politically savvy in preserving the relevance of the church. According to Catholic clergy and lay members, Cardinal Ortega favors a slower, smoother transition to a more democratic and market-based Cuba, a view shared by some on and off the island who fear that a more dramatic change could bring social and economic turmoil. But some Cuban bishops have wanted a more confrontational approach, while other critics have been upset by the cardinal\u2019s public dismissals of Cuba\u2019s political opposition.", "answer": "Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino", "sentence": "The most powerful figure in the Cuban church is Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino , the archbishop of Havana, who is set to retire.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWhat the church recognizes today and they are addressing is that the first thing you have to address with the Cuban people is trying to meet their basic needs,\u201d said Andy Gomez, a former senior fellow at the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies at the University of Miami. \u201cOnce you start helping them address their basic needs, food and shelter, then you can start talking about religion, social change and some of these other things.\u201d The most powerful figure in the Cuban church is Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino , the archbishop of Havana, who is set to retire. Detractors attack him as being too conciliatory to the government of President Ra\u00fal Castro. Defenders say he is astute and politically savvy in preserving the relevance of the church. According to Catholic clergy and lay members, Cardinal Ortega favors a slower, smoother transition to a more democratic and market-based Cuba, a view shared by some on and off the island who fear that a more dramatic change could bring social and economic turmoil. But some Cuban bishops have wanted a more confrontational approach, while other critics have been upset by the cardinal\u2019s public dismissals of Cuba\u2019s political opposition.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWhat the church recognizes today and they are addressing is that the first thing you have to address with the Cuban people is trying to meet their basic needs,\u201d said Andy Gomez, a former senior fellow at the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies at the University of Miami. \u201cOnce you start helping them address their basic needs, food and shelter, then you can start talking about religion, social change and some of these other things.\u201d The most powerful figure in the Cuban church is Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino , the archbishop of Havana, who is set to retire. Detractors attack him as being too conciliatory to the government of President Ra\u00fal Castro. Defenders say he is astute and politically savvy in preserving the relevance of the church. According to Catholic clergy and lay members, Cardinal Ortega favors a slower, smoother transition to a more democratic and market-based Cuba, a view shared by some on and off the island who fear that a more dramatic change could bring social and economic turmoil. But some Cuban bishops have wanted a more confrontational approach, while other critics have been upset by the cardinal\u2019s public dismissals of Cuba\u2019s political opposition.", "sentence_answer": "The most powerful figure in the Cuban church is Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino , the archbishop of Havana, who is set to retire.", "paragraph_id": "5d701671c8e4820a9b66c289"} +{"question": "What is the quality of childcare?", "paragraph": "So where do we go from here? Slaughter focuses on high-quality child care, and that\u2019s a great place to start. For 60 percent of American households with children age 6 and under, every adult in the household is working. Meanwhile, experts tell us that most child care is mediocre to poor, including care by relatives \u2014 who are often too busy trying to get work done themselves. Blair faults Slaughter for \u201cwoolliness\u201d about solutions and an avoidance of the \u201cpolitical system.\u201d And indeed, today\u2019s Congress is a huge part of the stall. But we can\u2019t be vague about the political challenge. Perhaps surprisingly, the parts of the country that most desperately need great child care are the red states. The Republican states are poorer and have a higher rate of single motherhood and divorce, so mothers face more need to work, often in low-end jobs that don\u2019t allow payment for quality care. The need is there. And so is some surprising support. Endorsing the Strong Start for America\u2019s Children Act is an organization called Fight Crime: Invest in Kids, a national bipartisan nonprofit made up of nearly 5,000 police chiefs, sheriffs, prosecutors and others who see investment in child care as crime prevention.", "answer": "most child care is mediocre to poor", "sentence": "Meanwhile, experts tell us that most child care is mediocre to poor , including care by relatives \u2014 who are often too busy trying to get work done themselves.", "paragraph_sentence": "So where do we go from here? Slaughter focuses on high-quality child care, and that\u2019s a great place to start. For 60 percent of American households with children age 6 and under, every adult in the household is working. Meanwhile, experts tell us that most child care is mediocre to poor , including care by relatives \u2014 who are often too busy trying to get work done themselves. Blair faults Slaughter for \u201cwoolliness\u201d about solutions and an avoidance of the \u201cpolitical system.\u201d And indeed, today\u2019s Congress is a huge part of the stall. But we can\u2019t be vague about the political challenge. Perhaps surprisingly, the parts of the country that most desperately need great child care are the red states. The Republican states are poorer and have a higher rate of single motherhood and divorce, so mothers face more need to work, often in low-end jobs that don\u2019t allow payment for quality care. The need is there. And so is some surprising support. Endorsing the Strong Start for America\u2019s Children Act is an organization called Fight Crime: Invest in Kids, a national bipartisan nonprofit made up of nearly 5,000 police chiefs, sheriffs, prosecutors and others who see investment in child care as crime prevention.", "paragraph_answer": "So where do we go from here? Slaughter focuses on high-quality child care, and that\u2019s a great place to start. For 60 percent of American households with children age 6 and under, every adult in the household is working. Meanwhile, experts tell us that most child care is mediocre to poor , including care by relatives \u2014 who are often too busy trying to get work done themselves. Blair faults Slaughter for \u201cwoolliness\u201d about solutions and an avoidance of the \u201cpolitical system.\u201d And indeed, today\u2019s Congress is a huge part of the stall. But we can\u2019t be vague about the political challenge. Perhaps surprisingly, the parts of the country that most desperately need great child care are the red states. The Republican states are poorer and have a higher rate of single motherhood and divorce, so mothers face more need to work, often in low-end jobs that don\u2019t allow payment for quality care. The need is there. And so is some surprising support. Endorsing the Strong Start for America\u2019s Children Act is an organization called Fight Crime: Invest in Kids, a national bipartisan nonprofit made up of nearly 5,000 police chiefs, sheriffs, prosecutors and others who see investment in child care as crime prevention.", "sentence_answer": "Meanwhile, experts tell us that most child care is mediocre to poor , including care by relatives \u2014 who are often too busy trying to get work done themselves.", "paragraph_id": "5d701cb7c8e4820a9b66c839"} +{"question": "What was the play that Ms Moss had a role in?", "paragraph": "She might have been talking about herself. Though conscious of her considerable gifts as an actor \u2014 she\u2019s so able to project emotion that her face can seem almost see-through \u2014 Ms. Moss still confesses to \u201cmajor moments\u201d where she thinks: \u201cI can\u2019t believe they asked me to do this, they\u2019re crazy. This is all a mistake.\u201d Pam MacKinnon, the play\u2019s director and a Tony winner for \u201cWho\u2019s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?,\u201d disagreed. Speaking backstage as she prepared to return to rehearsal, she said that Ms. Moss had both the vulnerability and the sharpness that the role demands. \u201cShe\u2019s incredibly intuitive, incredibly smart, and she is sort of an observer, even though she\u2019s at the center of this rehearsal process,\u201d Ms. MacKinnon said.", "answer": "Who\u2019s Afraid of Virginia Woolf", "sentence": "Pam MacKinnon, the play\u2019s director and a Tony winner for \u201c Who\u2019s Afraid of Virginia Woolf ?,\u201d disagreed.", "paragraph_sentence": "She might have been talking about herself. Though conscious of her considerable gifts as an actor \u2014 she\u2019s so able to project emotion that her face can seem almost see-through \u2014 Ms. Moss still confesses to \u201cmajor moments\u201d where she thinks: \u201cI can\u2019t believe they asked me to do this, they\u2019re crazy. This is all a mistake.\u201d Pam MacKinnon, the play\u2019s director and a Tony winner for \u201c Who\u2019s Afraid of Virginia Woolf ?,\u201d disagreed. Speaking backstage as she prepared to return to rehearsal, she said that Ms. Moss had both the vulnerability and the sharpness that the role demands. \u201cShe\u2019s incredibly intuitive, incredibly smart, and she is sort of an observer, even though she\u2019s at the center of this rehearsal process,\u201d Ms. MacKinnon said.", "paragraph_answer": "She might have been talking about herself. Though conscious of her considerable gifts as an actor \u2014 she\u2019s so able to project emotion that her face can seem almost see-through \u2014 Ms. Moss still confesses to \u201cmajor moments\u201d where she thinks: \u201cI can\u2019t believe they asked me to do this, they\u2019re crazy. This is all a mistake.\u201d Pam MacKinnon, the play\u2019s director and a Tony winner for \u201c Who\u2019s Afraid of Virginia Woolf ?,\u201d disagreed. Speaking backstage as she prepared to return to rehearsal, she said that Ms. Moss had both the vulnerability and the sharpness that the role demands. \u201cShe\u2019s incredibly intuitive, incredibly smart, and she is sort of an observer, even though she\u2019s at the center of this rehearsal process,\u201d Ms. MacKinnon said.", "sentence_answer": "Pam MacKinnon, the play\u2019s director and a Tony winner for \u201c Who\u2019s Afraid of Virginia Woolf ?,\u201d disagreed.", "paragraph_id": "5d701c4cc8e4820a9b66c7a0"} +{"question": "What happened when Joseph Stalin came to power?", "paragraph": "Guggenheim Museum: \u2018Alberto Burri: The Trauma of Painting\u2019 (through Jan. 6) This Italian artist\u2019s prescient paintings from the 1950s and early \u201860s \u2014 in patched, burned and otherwise abused burlap, plastic or wood \u2014 form a lavish, beautiful and admirable, if sometimes monotonous retrospective at the Guggenheim. Unfortunately, he may also inaugurate a bane of current art: the use of found materials so inherently affecting \u2014 burlap is one \u2014 that they require little of the artist. 1071 Fifth Avenue, at 89th Street, 212-423-3500, guggenheim.org. (Smith) Guggenheim Museum: \u2018Photo-Poetics: An Anthology\u2019 (through March 23) Formally complex and expressively reserved, even hermetic. the work by ten photographers in this stimulating show has roots in Conceptualism and takes language, history and speculative thinking as its raw materials. Photographs are structured with the equivalent of poetry\u2019s metrical cadences and internal rhymes, and treated less as generators of translatable ideas than of suggestive metaphors. 1071 Fifth Avenue, at 89th Street, 212-423-3500, guggenheim.org. (Cotter) \u2605 Jewish Museum: \u2018The Power of Pictures: Early Soviet Photography, Early Soviet Film\u2019 (through Feb. 7) Revolutions sell utopias; that\u2019s their job. Art, if it behaves itself and sticks to the right script, can be an important part of the promotional package. That\u2019s the basic tale told by this exhibition of photographs and vintage films of the 1920s and \u201930s, but with a question added: What happens to art when the script is drastically revised? Russia was an experiment in progress in the heady years following the 1917 revolution, and avant-garde art, free-spirited by definition, was officially embraced. When Joseph Stalin came to power art became government-dictated propaganda and its makers, often under threat, towed the line. Remarkably, the show presents a dozen films \u2014 some familiar, some not \u2014 full-length, on a rotating schedule of four a day, in a small viewing theater built into one of the Jewish Museum\u2019s galleries. 1109 Fifth Avenue, at 92nd Street, 212-423-3200, thejewishmuseum.org. (Cotter) \u2605 Jewish Museum: \u2018Unorthodox\u2019 (through March 27) With about 200 putatively unorthodox works crowded into tightly walled-in spaces, this lively show has the feel of an Outsider Art fair \u2014 in a good way. The paintings, drawings, collages, assemblages, ceramics, weavings and videos are variously funny, funky, quirky, eccentric, idiosyncratic and visionary. Are they truly unorthodox by the standards of a contemporary art world wherein no one wants to be thought orthodox? No, but that\u2019s O.K. It\u2019s an entertaining and intermittently exhilarating exhibition nonetheless. 1109 Fifth Avenue, at 92nd Street, 212-423-3200, thejewishmuseum.org. (Johnson)", "answer": "art became government-dictated propaganda and its makers, often under threat, towed the line", "sentence": "When Joseph Stalin came to power art became government-dictated propaganda and its makers, often under threat, towed the line .", "paragraph_sentence": "Guggenheim Museum: \u2018Alberto Burri: The Trauma of Painting\u2019 (through Jan. 6) This Italian artist\u2019s prescient paintings from the 1950s and early \u201860s \u2014 in patched, burned and otherwise abused burlap, plastic or wood \u2014 form a lavish, beautiful and admirable, if sometimes monotonous retrospective at the Guggenheim. Unfortunately, he may also inaugurate a bane of current art: the use of found materials so inherently affecting \u2014 burlap is one \u2014 that they require little of the artist. 1071 Fifth Avenue, at 89th Street, 212-423-3500, guggenheim.org. (Smith) Guggenheim Museum: \u2018Photo-Poetics: An Anthology\u2019 (through March 23) Formally complex and expressively reserved, even hermetic. the work by ten photographers in this stimulating show has roots in Conceptualism and takes language, history and speculative thinking as its raw materials. Photographs are structured with the equivalent of poetry\u2019s metrical cadences and internal rhymes, and treated less as generators of translatable ideas than of suggestive metaphors. 1071 Fifth Avenue, at 89th Street, 212-423-3500, guggenheim.org. (Cotter) \u2605 Jewish Museum: \u2018The Power of Pictures: Early Soviet Photography, Early Soviet Film\u2019 (through Feb. 7) Revolutions sell utopias; that\u2019s their job. Art, if it behaves itself and sticks to the right script, can be an important part of the promotional package. That\u2019s the basic tale told by this exhibition of photographs and vintage films of the 1920s and \u201930s, but with a question added: What happens to art when the script is drastically revised? Russia was an experiment in progress in the heady years following the 1917 revolution, and avant-garde art, free-spirited by definition, was officially embraced. When Joseph Stalin came to power art became government-dictated propaganda and its makers, often under threat, towed the line . Remarkably, the show presents a dozen films \u2014 some familiar, some not \u2014 full-length, on a rotating schedule of four a day, in a small viewing theater built into one of the Jewish Museum\u2019s galleries. 1109 Fifth Avenue, at 92nd Street, 212-423-3200, thejewishmuseum.org. (Cotter) \u2605 Jewish Museum: \u2018Unorthodox\u2019 (through March 27) With about 200 putatively unorthodox works crowded into tightly walled-in spaces, this lively show has the feel of an Outsider Art fair \u2014 in a good way. The paintings, drawings, collages, assemblages, ceramics, weavings and videos are variously funny, funky, quirky, eccentric, idiosyncratic and visionary. Are they truly unorthodox by the standards of a contemporary art world wherein no one wants to be thought orthodox? No, but that\u2019s O.K. It\u2019s an entertaining and intermittently exhilarating exhibition nonetheless. 1109 Fifth Avenue, at 92nd Street, 212-423-3200, thejewishmuseum.org. (Johnson)", "paragraph_answer": "Guggenheim Museum: \u2018Alberto Burri: The Trauma of Painting\u2019 (through Jan. 6) This Italian artist\u2019s prescient paintings from the 1950s and early \u201860s \u2014 in patched, burned and otherwise abused burlap, plastic or wood \u2014 form a lavish, beautiful and admirable, if sometimes monotonous retrospective at the Guggenheim. Unfortunately, he may also inaugurate a bane of current art: the use of found materials so inherently affecting \u2014 burlap is one \u2014 that they require little of the artist. 1071 Fifth Avenue, at 89th Street, 212-423-3500, guggenheim.org. (Smith) Guggenheim Museum: \u2018Photo-Poetics: An Anthology\u2019 (through March 23) Formally complex and expressively reserved, even hermetic. the work by ten photographers in this stimulating show has roots in Conceptualism and takes language, history and speculative thinking as its raw materials. Photographs are structured with the equivalent of poetry\u2019s metrical cadences and internal rhymes, and treated less as generators of translatable ideas than of suggestive metaphors. 1071 Fifth Avenue, at 89th Street, 212-423-3500, guggenheim.org. (Cotter) \u2605 Jewish Museum: \u2018The Power of Pictures: Early Soviet Photography, Early Soviet Film\u2019 (through Feb. 7) Revolutions sell utopias; that\u2019s their job. Art, if it behaves itself and sticks to the right script, can be an important part of the promotional package. That\u2019s the basic tale told by this exhibition of photographs and vintage films of the 1920s and \u201930s, but with a question added: What happens to art when the script is drastically revised? Russia was an experiment in progress in the heady years following the 1917 revolution, and avant-garde art, free-spirited by definition, was officially embraced. When Joseph Stalin came to power art became government-dictated propaganda and its makers, often under threat, towed the line . Remarkably, the show presents a dozen films \u2014 some familiar, some not \u2014 full-length, on a rotating schedule of four a day, in a small viewing theater built into one of the Jewish Museum\u2019s galleries. 1109 Fifth Avenue, at 92nd Street, 212-423-3200, thejewishmuseum.org. (Cotter) \u2605 Jewish Museum: \u2018Unorthodox\u2019 (through March 27) With about 200 putatively unorthodox works crowded into tightly walled-in spaces, this lively show has the feel of an Outsider Art fair \u2014 in a good way. The paintings, drawings, collages, assemblages, ceramics, weavings and videos are variously funny, funky, quirky, eccentric, idiosyncratic and visionary. Are they truly unorthodox by the standards of a contemporary art world wherein no one wants to be thought orthodox? No, but that\u2019s O.K. It\u2019s an entertaining and intermittently exhilarating exhibition nonetheless. 1109 Fifth Avenue, at 92nd Street, 212-423-3200, thejewishmuseum.org. (Johnson)", "sentence_answer": "When Joseph Stalin came to power art became government-dictated propaganda and its makers, often under threat, towed the line .", "paragraph_id": "5d700d61c8e4820a9b66b903"} +{"question": "DuPont may have unnecessarily large costs in which sectors?", "paragraph": "Trian, which has invested $1.7 billion in DuPont, disputes this and is putting forth an equally vigorous case that DuPont has underperformed. According to Trian, DuPont has repeatedly missed its long-term earnings targets. The firm attributes the rise in DuPont\u2019s stock price to market fluctuations and the influence of Trian\u2019s presence. It also notes that the company\u2019s 2015 earnings per share are expected to be below its 2011 numbers. Trian says that the company is also likely to miss its earnings forecast this year. Trian also claims that DuPont has bloated costs in both administrative and research and development efforts, as well as bad corporate governance practices. DuPont\u2019s acquisition of Danisco was a \u201cdisaster,\u201d and DuPont left about $6 billion on the table in the sale of its performance coatings business, Trian said.", "answer": "administrative and research and development efforts", "sentence": "Trian also claims that DuPont has bloated costs in both administrative and research and development efforts , as well as bad corporate governance practices.", "paragraph_sentence": "Trian, which has invested $1.7 billion in DuPont, disputes this and is putting forth an equally vigorous case that DuPont has underperformed. According to Trian, DuPont has repeatedly missed its long-term earnings targets. The firm attributes the rise in DuPont\u2019s stock price to market fluctuations and the influence of Trian\u2019s presence. It also notes that the company\u2019s 2015 earnings per share are expected to be below its 2011 numbers. Trian says that the company is also likely to miss its earnings forecast this year. Trian also claims that DuPont has bloated costs in both administrative and research and development efforts , as well as bad corporate governance practices. DuPont\u2019s acquisition of Danisco was a \u201cdisaster,\u201d and DuPont left about $6 billion on the table in the sale of its performance coatings business, Trian said.", "paragraph_answer": "Trian, which has invested $1.7 billion in DuPont, disputes this and is putting forth an equally vigorous case that DuPont has underperformed. According to Trian, DuPont has repeatedly missed its long-term earnings targets. The firm attributes the rise in DuPont\u2019s stock price to market fluctuations and the influence of Trian\u2019s presence. It also notes that the company\u2019s 2015 earnings per share are expected to be below its 2011 numbers. Trian says that the company is also likely to miss its earnings forecast this year. Trian also claims that DuPont has bloated costs in both administrative and research and development efforts , as well as bad corporate governance practices. DuPont\u2019s acquisition of Danisco was a \u201cdisaster,\u201d and DuPont left about $6 billion on the table in the sale of its performance coatings business, Trian said.", "sentence_answer": "Trian also claims that DuPont has bloated costs in both administrative and research and development efforts , as well as bad corporate governance practices.", "paragraph_id": "5d7050d0c8e4820a9b66eb5c"} +{"question": "Under which mayor did the the Fund for Public Schools see a decline in fund-raising?", "paragraph": "The executive director of the Fund for Public Schools, a nonprofit that raises money for New York City public schools, abruptly resigned this week amid concerns about her management style and turnover on the fund\u2019s staff. The city\u2019s Education Department said the director, Iris Chen, who was appointed by Schools Chancellor Carmen Fari\u00f1a less than 16 months ago, had resigned \u201cto pursue other opportunities.\u201d But people who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were describing confidential discussions said that City Hall, the chancellor and the fund\u2019s board of directors had been worried about unhappiness among the fund\u2019s staff members and the departure of several crucial employees whom Ms. Chen had hired, among other issues. The fund, which under former Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg raised hundreds of millions of dollars for educational programs, has experienced declines in fund-raising under Mayor Bill de Blasio. Some education philanthropists were put off by Mr. de Blasio\u2019s criticism of charter schools. Ms. Chen, a former executive director of Teach for America\u2019s New York office, acknowledged in an interview this spring that early on she had been late to some meetings with donors.", "answer": "Bill de Blasio", "sentence": "The fund, which under former Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg raised hundreds of millions of dollars for educational programs, has experienced declines in fund-raising under Mayor Bill de Blasio .", "paragraph_sentence": "The executive director of the Fund for Public Schools, a nonprofit that raises money for New York City public schools, abruptly resigned this week amid concerns about her management style and turnover on the fund\u2019s staff. The city\u2019s Education Department said the director, Iris Chen, who was appointed by Schools Chancellor Carmen Fari\u00f1a less than 16 months ago, had resigned \u201cto pursue other opportunities.\u201d But people who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were describing confidential discussions said that City Hall, the chancellor and the fund\u2019s board of directors had been worried about unhappiness among the fund\u2019s staff members and the departure of several crucial employees whom Ms. Chen had hired, among other issues. The fund, which under former Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg raised hundreds of millions of dollars for educational programs, has experienced declines in fund-raising under Mayor Bill de Blasio . Some education philanthropists were put off by Mr. de Blasio\u2019s criticism of charter schools. Ms. Chen, a former executive director of Teach for America\u2019s New York office, acknowledged in an interview this spring that early on she had been late to some meetings with donors.", "paragraph_answer": "The executive director of the Fund for Public Schools, a nonprofit that raises money for New York City public schools, abruptly resigned this week amid concerns about her management style and turnover on the fund\u2019s staff. The city\u2019s Education Department said the director, Iris Chen, who was appointed by Schools Chancellor Carmen Fari\u00f1a less than 16 months ago, had resigned \u201cto pursue other opportunities.\u201d But people who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were describing confidential discussions said that City Hall, the chancellor and the fund\u2019s board of directors had been worried about unhappiness among the fund\u2019s staff members and the departure of several crucial employees whom Ms. Chen had hired, among other issues. The fund, which under former Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg raised hundreds of millions of dollars for educational programs, has experienced declines in fund-raising under Mayor Bill de Blasio . Some education philanthropists were put off by Mr. de Blasio\u2019s criticism of charter schools. Ms. Chen, a former executive director of Teach for America\u2019s New York office, acknowledged in an interview this spring that early on she had been late to some meetings with donors.", "sentence_answer": "The fund, which under former Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg raised hundreds of millions of dollars for educational programs, has experienced declines in fund-raising under Mayor Bill de Blasio .", "paragraph_id": "5d70888cc8e4820a9b66f47c"} +{"question": "What did Smith pass out?", "paragraph": "Smith made history, but she didn\u2019t make any real dent in the election. Most people didn\u2019t seem to take her very seriously, and it didn\u2019t help that her signature campaign tactic was passing out muffin recipes. The Republicans, in the end, nominated Barry Goldwater. The Democrats\u2019 first big moment came in 1972 when Shirley Chisholm ran for the presidential nomination. Chisholm, an African-American, would have been a double historic first. But her party was in no way ready to make symbolic gestures. They needed a winner! So they nominated George McGovern. HAVE you noticed a pattern here?", "answer": "muffin recipes", "sentence": "Most people didn\u2019t seem to take her very seriously, and it didn\u2019t help that her signature campaign tactic was passing out muffin recipes .", "paragraph_sentence": "Smith made history, but she didn\u2019t make any real dent in the election. Most people didn\u2019t seem to take her very seriously, and it didn\u2019t help that her signature campaign tactic was passing out muffin recipes . The Republicans, in the end, nominated Barry Goldwater. The Democrats\u2019 first big moment came in 1972 when Shirley Chisholm ran for the presidential nomination. Chisholm, an African-American, would have been a double historic first. But her party was in no way ready to make symbolic gestures. They needed a winner! So they nominated George McGovern. HAVE you noticed a pattern here?", "paragraph_answer": "Smith made history, but she didn\u2019t make any real dent in the election. Most people didn\u2019t seem to take her very seriously, and it didn\u2019t help that her signature campaign tactic was passing out muffin recipes . The Republicans, in the end, nominated Barry Goldwater. The Democrats\u2019 first big moment came in 1972 when Shirley Chisholm ran for the presidential nomination. Chisholm, an African-American, would have been a double historic first. But her party was in no way ready to make symbolic gestures. They needed a winner! So they nominated George McGovern. HAVE you noticed a pattern here?", "sentence_answer": "Most people didn\u2019t seem to take her very seriously, and it didn\u2019t help that her signature campaign tactic was passing out muffin recipes .", "paragraph_id": "5d70060ec8e4820a9b66aa62"} +{"question": "On which street is the company's shop located?", "paragraph": "LONDON \u2014 What\u2019s being billed as the future of skin care starts suspiciously like a visit to the dentist: with a mouthwash gargle. That\u2019s to eliminate debris that may interfere with a good saliva sample, from which DNA will be extracted and serums tailored to one\u2019s genetic blueprint. The test is from a company called GeneU (pronounced \u201cgene you\u201d) and performed at its nine-month-old shop on New Bond Street, which looks like a cross between a science fiction movie set and a silver-gray-and-red-dipped Apple store \u2014 perhaps fittingly, because the DNA test is done by a flash-drive-size microchip. It\u2019s administered by one of a handful of improbably dewy-skinned beauties who also happen to have Ph.D.s. Unlike other DNA tests, which are sent to labs and take at least two weeks to complete, GeneU\u2019s in-store test is done in 30 minutes. Currently, it looks only at variations in two genes: one that contains instructions for how fast your body degrades collagen and the other for antioxidant protection.", "answer": "New Bond Street", "sentence": "The test is from a company called GeneU (pronounced \u201cgene you\u201d) and performed at its nine-month-old shop on New Bond Street , which looks like a cross between a science fiction movie set and a silver-gray-and-red-dipped Apple store \u2014 perhaps fittingly, because the DNA test is done by a flash-drive-size microchip.", "paragraph_sentence": "LONDON \u2014 What\u2019s being billed as the future of skin care starts suspiciously like a visit to the dentist: with a mouthwash gargle. That\u2019s to eliminate debris that may interfere with a good saliva sample, from which DNA will be extracted and serums tailored to one\u2019s genetic blueprint. The test is from a company called GeneU (pronounced \u201cgene you\u201d) and performed at its nine-month-old shop on New Bond Street , which looks like a cross between a science fiction movie set and a silver-gray-and-red-dipped Apple store \u2014 perhaps fittingly, because the DNA test is done by a flash-drive-size microchip. It\u2019s administered by one of a handful of improbably dewy-skinned beauties who also happen to have Ph.D.s. Unlike other DNA tests, which are sent to labs and take at least two weeks to complete, GeneU\u2019s in-store test is done in 30 minutes. Currently, it looks only at variations in two genes: one that contains instructions for how fast your body degrades collagen and the other for antioxidant protection.", "paragraph_answer": "LONDON \u2014 What\u2019s being billed as the future of skin care starts suspiciously like a visit to the dentist: with a mouthwash gargle. That\u2019s to eliminate debris that may interfere with a good saliva sample, from which DNA will be extracted and serums tailored to one\u2019s genetic blueprint. The test is from a company called GeneU (pronounced \u201cgene you\u201d) and performed at its nine-month-old shop on New Bond Street , which looks like a cross between a science fiction movie set and a silver-gray-and-red-dipped Apple store \u2014 perhaps fittingly, because the DNA test is done by a flash-drive-size microchip. It\u2019s administered by one of a handful of improbably dewy-skinned beauties who also happen to have Ph.D.s. Unlike other DNA tests, which are sent to labs and take at least two weeks to complete, GeneU\u2019s in-store test is done in 30 minutes. Currently, it looks only at variations in two genes: one that contains instructions for how fast your body degrades collagen and the other for antioxidant protection.", "sentence_answer": "The test is from a company called GeneU (pronounced \u201cgene you\u201d) and performed at its nine-month-old shop on New Bond Street , which looks like a cross between a science fiction movie set and a silver-gray-and-red-dipped Apple store \u2014 perhaps fittingly, because the DNA test is done by a flash-drive-size microchip.", "paragraph_id": "5d70105dc8e4820a9b66bc87"} +{"question": "How long was the Syrian hospital under attack?", "paragraph": "BEIRUT, Lebanon \u2014 Scores of Syrian government soldiers and civilians besieged by insurgents for nearly a month in a hospital in northern Syria fled on Friday in a dramatic exit that both the army and its opponents promptly claimed as a victory. Videos posted by each side showed lines of uniformed soldiers trotting away across a field as what sounded like rifle and artillery fire echoed in the background; the government claimed that they reached safety, while insurgents claimed that many were killed or captured.", "answer": "nearly a month", "sentence": "BEIRUT, Lebanon \u2014 Scores of Syrian government soldiers and civilians besieged by insurgents for nearly a month in a hospital in northern Syria fled on Friday in a dramatic exit that both the army and its opponents promptly claimed as a victory.", "paragraph_sentence": " BEIRUT, Lebanon \u2014 Scores of Syrian government soldiers and civilians besieged by insurgents for nearly a month in a hospital in northern Syria fled on Friday in a dramatic exit that both the army and its opponents promptly claimed as a victory. Videos posted by each side showed lines of uniformed soldiers trotting away across a field as what sounded like rifle and artillery fire echoed in the background; the government claimed that they reached safety, while insurgents claimed that many were killed or captured.", "paragraph_answer": "BEIRUT, Lebanon \u2014 Scores of Syrian government soldiers and civilians besieged by insurgents for nearly a month in a hospital in northern Syria fled on Friday in a dramatic exit that both the army and its opponents promptly claimed as a victory. Videos posted by each side showed lines of uniformed soldiers trotting away across a field as what sounded like rifle and artillery fire echoed in the background; the government claimed that they reached safety, while insurgents claimed that many were killed or captured.", "sentence_answer": "BEIRUT, Lebanon \u2014 Scores of Syrian government soldiers and civilians besieged by insurgents for nearly a month in a hospital in northern Syria fled on Friday in a dramatic exit that both the army and its opponents promptly claimed as a victory.", "paragraph_id": "5d70226ec8e4820a9b66ce7d"} +{"question": "Who accompanied the star?", "paragraph": "An appealing portrait miniature of a woman who loses and finds her bearings, \u201cAlex of Venice\u201d takes place against that messy Los Angeles backdrop of beachside attractions and boardwalk crowds, millionaire mansions and homeless encampments known as Venice. That\u2019s the neighborhood in which the heroine, Alex (Mary Elizabeth Winstead), grew up and that, with her family, she still calls home. She may not notice the carnival anymore, but the director, Chris Messina, takes time to gently point out some of the more picturesque sites, like the Venice sign that serves as a gateway to the Pacific and the arched walkways that Orson Welles immortalized in \u201cTouch of Evil.\u201d", "answer": "Chris Messina", "sentence": "She may not notice the carnival anymore, but the director, Chris Messina , takes time to gently point out some of the more picturesque sites, like the Venice sign that serves as a gateway to the Pacific and the arched walkways that Orson Welles immortalized in \u201cTouch of Evil.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "An appealing portrait miniature of a woman who loses and finds her bearings, \u201cAlex of Venice\u201d takes place against that messy Los Angeles backdrop of beachside attractions and boardwalk crowds, millionaire mansions and homeless encampments known as Venice. That\u2019s the neighborhood in which the heroine, Alex (Mary Elizabeth Winstead), grew up and that, with her family, she still calls home. She may not notice the carnival anymore, but the director, Chris Messina , takes time to gently point out some of the more picturesque sites, like the Venice sign that serves as a gateway to the Pacific and the arched walkways that Orson Welles immortalized in \u201cTouch of Evil.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "An appealing portrait miniature of a woman who loses and finds her bearings, \u201cAlex of Venice\u201d takes place against that messy Los Angeles backdrop of beachside attractions and boardwalk crowds, millionaire mansions and homeless encampments known as Venice. That\u2019s the neighborhood in which the heroine, Alex (Mary Elizabeth Winstead), grew up and that, with her family, she still calls home. She may not notice the carnival anymore, but the director, Chris Messina , takes time to gently point out some of the more picturesque sites, like the Venice sign that serves as a gateway to the Pacific and the arched walkways that Orson Welles immortalized in \u201cTouch of Evil.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "She may not notice the carnival anymore, but the director, Chris Messina , takes time to gently point out some of the more picturesque sites, like the Venice sign that serves as a gateway to the Pacific and the arched walkways that Orson Welles immortalized in \u201cTouch of Evil.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d702fb1c8e4820a9b66dc61"} +{"question": "When is Schumer at her strongest?", "paragraph": "As with any young talent, she has a way to go, including as a screenwriter. \u201cTrainwreck\u201d has groaners and dead spots (including a dreary art-film parody with Daniel Radcliffe and Marisa Tomei), and its jokes about race don\u2019t have the penetrating wit that her material on sex and gender does. Like a lot of white people, Ms. Schumer can fumble when latching onto race; unlike a lot of white performers, she takes on race directly. The looming appearance of LeBron James, who plays himself as well as Aaron\u2019s odd-couple-like best friend, may be a heat-seeking gimmick (he\u2019s the movie\u2019s biggest star), but he\u2019s a surprisingly limber comic presence and he helps set up a sharp scene in which Aaron challenges Amy\u2019s bumblingly false claim about having black friends. Amy wiggles through that embarrassment, as she does repeatedly. That could be seen as having your cake and eating it too, but mostly it adds another ding to an often ridiculous, imperfect, recognizable character. (This is, after all, a woman who, when she cuts back on her drinking, donates her booze to a derelict played by Dave Attell.) At times in some of her bits, Ms. Schumer has, like other comics, used fakey apologies as get-out-of- jail cards, as a way to both toss out insults and smilingly refuse responsibility for them. In \u201cTrainwreck,\u201d as in her best work elsewhere, Ms. Schumer is at her strongest when she insists that women aren\u2019t distressed damsels but \u2014 as they toddle, walk and race in the highest of heels, the tightest of skirts, the sexiest, mightiest of poses \u2014 the absolute agents of their lives and desires.", "answer": "when she insists that women aren\u2019t distressed damsels", "sentence": "In \u201cTrainwreck,\u201d as in her best work elsewhere, Ms. Schumer is at her strongest when she insists that women aren\u2019t distressed damsels but \u2014 as they toddle, walk and race in the highest of heels, the tightest of skirts, the sexiest, mightiest of poses \u2014 the absolute agents of their lives and desires.", "paragraph_sentence": "As with any young talent, she has a way to go, including as a screenwriter. \u201cTrainwreck\u201d has groaners and dead spots (including a dreary art-film parody with Daniel Radcliffe and Marisa Tomei), and its jokes about race don\u2019t have the penetrating wit that her material on sex and gender does. Like a lot of white people, Ms. Schumer can fumble when latching onto race; unlike a lot of white performers, she takes on race directly. The looming appearance of LeBron James, who plays himself as well as Aaron\u2019s odd-couple-like best friend, may be a heat-seeking gimmick (he\u2019s the movie\u2019s biggest star), but he\u2019s a surprisingly limber comic presence and he helps set up a sharp scene in which Aaron challenges Amy\u2019s bumblingly false claim about having black friends. Amy wiggles through that embarrassment, as she does repeatedly. That could be seen as having your cake and eating it too, but mostly it adds another ding to an often ridiculous, imperfect, recognizable character. (This is, after all, a woman who, when she cuts back on her drinking, donates her booze to a derelict played by Dave Attell.) At times in some of her bits, Ms. Schumer has, like other comics, used fakey apologies as get-out-of- jail cards, as a way to both toss out insults and smilingly refuse responsibility for them. In \u201cTrainwreck,\u201d as in her best work elsewhere, Ms. Schumer is at her strongest when she insists that women aren\u2019t distressed damsels but \u2014 as they toddle, walk and race in the highest of heels, the tightest of skirts, the sexiest, mightiest of poses \u2014 the absolute agents of their lives and desires. ", "paragraph_answer": "As with any young talent, she has a way to go, including as a screenwriter. \u201cTrainwreck\u201d has groaners and dead spots (including a dreary art-film parody with Daniel Radcliffe and Marisa Tomei), and its jokes about race don\u2019t have the penetrating wit that her material on sex and gender does. Like a lot of white people, Ms. Schumer can fumble when latching onto race; unlike a lot of white performers, she takes on race directly. The looming appearance of LeBron James, who plays himself as well as Aaron\u2019s odd-couple-like best friend, may be a heat-seeking gimmick (he\u2019s the movie\u2019s biggest star), but he\u2019s a surprisingly limber comic presence and he helps set up a sharp scene in which Aaron challenges Amy\u2019s bumblingly false claim about having black friends. Amy wiggles through that embarrassment, as she does repeatedly. That could be seen as having your cake and eating it too, but mostly it adds another ding to an often ridiculous, imperfect, recognizable character. (This is, after all, a woman who, when she cuts back on her drinking, donates her booze to a derelict played by Dave Attell.) At times in some of her bits, Ms. Schumer has, like other comics, used fakey apologies as get-out-of- jail cards, as a way to both toss out insults and smilingly refuse responsibility for them. In \u201cTrainwreck,\u201d as in her best work elsewhere, Ms. Schumer is at her strongest when she insists that women aren\u2019t distressed damsels but \u2014 as they toddle, walk and race in the highest of heels, the tightest of skirts, the sexiest, mightiest of poses \u2014 the absolute agents of their lives and desires.", "sentence_answer": "In \u201cTrainwreck,\u201d as in her best work elsewhere, Ms. Schumer is at her strongest when she insists that women aren\u2019t distressed damsels but \u2014 as they toddle, walk and race in the highest of heels, the tightest of skirts, the sexiest, mightiest of poses \u2014 the absolute agents of their lives and desires.", "paragraph_id": "5d7012c5c8e4820a9b66bf0d"} +{"question": "Who is Kyrgios's older brother?", "paragraph": "Remarks from Kyrgios\u2019s family only worsened his situation. His mother, Nill, said his insult was justified because of Wawrinka\u2019s criticism of Kyrgios months earlier, writing on Twitter, \u201cA sledge for a sledge,\u201d while using an Australian term for an insult. Kyrgios\u2019s older brother, Christos, made crude comments about Vekic and threatening comments toward Wawrinka and was kicked off the air during a radio interview for making a crude pun. (The Cincinnati tournament reportedly denied Christos Kyrgios a credential to the player areas, although he sat in the front row for his brother\u2019s match against Gasquet.) Kyrgios on Tuesday declined to answer any direct questions about his or his family\u2019s remarks. On Saturday \u2014 on the same court where Kyrgios eventually lost Tuesday \u2014 Kokkinakis was again dragged into the fray, ending up in a heated altercation with the American Ryan Harrison, his opponent in the first round of qualifying. After a testy handshake ended a match full of flare-ups, the two had to be separated by the chair umpire. Harrison then lumped in Kokkinakis \u2014 a young Greek-Australian with a prominent earring, like Kyrgios, but generally a far milder presence \u2014 with his maligned compatriot.", "answer": "Christos", "sentence": "Kyrgios\u2019s older brother, Christos , made crude comments about Vekic and threatening comments toward Wawrinka and was kicked off the air during a radio interview for making a crude pun.", "paragraph_sentence": "Remarks from Kyrgios\u2019s family only worsened his situation. His mother, Nill, said his insult was justified because of Wawrinka\u2019s criticism of Kyrgios months earlier, writing on Twitter, \u201cA sledge for a sledge,\u201d while using an Australian term for an insult. Kyrgios\u2019s older brother, Christos , made crude comments about Vekic and threatening comments toward Wawrinka and was kicked off the air during a radio interview for making a crude pun. (The Cincinnati tournament reportedly denied Christos Kyrgios a credential to the player areas, although he sat in the front row for his brother\u2019s match against Gasquet.) Kyrgios on Tuesday declined to answer any direct questions about his or his family\u2019s remarks. On Saturday \u2014 on the same court where Kyrgios eventually lost Tuesday \u2014 Kokkinakis was again dragged into the fray, ending up in a heated altercation with the American Ryan Harrison, his opponent in the first round of qualifying. After a testy handshake ended a match full of flare-ups, the two had to be separated by the chair umpire. Harrison then lumped in Kokkinakis \u2014 a young Greek-Australian with a prominent earring, like Kyrgios, but generally a far milder presence \u2014 with his maligned compatriot.", "paragraph_answer": "Remarks from Kyrgios\u2019s family only worsened his situation. His mother, Nill, said his insult was justified because of Wawrinka\u2019s criticism of Kyrgios months earlier, writing on Twitter, \u201cA sledge for a sledge,\u201d while using an Australian term for an insult. Kyrgios\u2019s older brother, Christos , made crude comments about Vekic and threatening comments toward Wawrinka and was kicked off the air during a radio interview for making a crude pun. (The Cincinnati tournament reportedly denied Christos Kyrgios a credential to the player areas, although he sat in the front row for his brother\u2019s match against Gasquet.) Kyrgios on Tuesday declined to answer any direct questions about his or his family\u2019s remarks. On Saturday \u2014 on the same court where Kyrgios eventually lost Tuesday \u2014 Kokkinakis was again dragged into the fray, ending up in a heated altercation with the American Ryan Harrison, his opponent in the first round of qualifying. After a testy handshake ended a match full of flare-ups, the two had to be separated by the chair umpire. Harrison then lumped in Kokkinakis \u2014 a young Greek-Australian with a prominent earring, like Kyrgios, but generally a far milder presence \u2014 with his maligned compatriot.", "sentence_answer": "Kyrgios\u2019s older brother, Christos , made crude comments about Vekic and threatening comments toward Wawrinka and was kicked off the air during a radio interview for making a crude pun.", "paragraph_id": "5d708890c8e4820a9b66f485"} +{"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 .", "paragraph_id": "5d702996c8e4820a9b66d738"} +{"question": "Who is the director and screenwriter of the new movie \"Spy?\"", "paragraph": "BUDAPEST \u2014 Melissa McCarthy was standing in an ersatz C.I.A. office here, on a soundstage a few miles outside the city. With a curly wig and a fake case of pink eye, she was shooting a scene opposite Jude Law for their new movie, \u201cSpy,\u201d as the director and screenwriter, Paul Feig, looked on. Mr. Feig, lanky and preternaturally dapper in his customary bespoke three-piece suit, pocket square and flower lapel pin, traversed the set with an ornate walking stick. Mr. Law, playing a James Bond-esque agent, was similarly kitted out in sleek designer garb. The costume for Ms. McCarthy, as an analyst in the field for her first undercover operation, included a lot of beige; a brown crocheted vest, a ruffled denim skirt, athletic sandals. The wig, she said, is \u201cnot human hair,\u201d maybe \u201crecycled water bottles.\u201d As a few producers watched and Mr. Feig adjusted the blocking, the actors filmed a scene in which Mr. Law\u2019s character jokes about running away together and Ms. McCarthy, as his besotted colleague, takes him seriously.", "answer": "which Mr. Law\u2019s character jokes about running away together and Ms. McCarthy, as his besotted colleague, takes him seriously.", "sentence": "As a few producers watched and Mr. Feig adjusted the blocking, the actors filmed a scene in which Mr. Law\u2019s character jokes about running away together and Ms. McCarthy, as his besotted colleague, takes him seriously.", "paragraph_sentence": "BUDAPEST \u2014 Melissa McCarthy was standing in an ersatz C.I.A. office here, on a soundstage a few miles outside the city. With a curly wig and a fake case of pink eye, she was shooting a scene opposite Jude Law for their new movie, \u201cSpy,\u201d as the director and screenwriter, Paul Feig, looked on. Mr. Feig, lanky and preternaturally dapper in his customary bespoke three-piece suit, pocket square and flower lapel pin, traversed the set with an ornate walking stick. Mr. Law, playing a James Bond-esque agent, was similarly kitted out in sleek designer garb. The costume for Ms. McCarthy, as an analyst in the field for her first undercover operation, included a lot of beige; a brown crocheted vest, a ruffled denim skirt, athletic sandals. The wig, she said, is \u201cnot human hair,\u201d maybe \u201crecycled water bottles.\u201d As a few producers watched and Mr. Feig adjusted the blocking, the actors filmed a scene in which Mr. Law\u2019s character jokes about running away together and Ms. McCarthy, as his besotted colleague, takes him seriously. ", "paragraph_answer": "BUDAPEST \u2014 Melissa McCarthy was standing in an ersatz C.I.A. office here, on a soundstage a few miles outside the city. With a curly wig and a fake case of pink eye, she was shooting a scene opposite Jude Law for their new movie, \u201cSpy,\u201d as the director and screenwriter, Paul Feig, looked on. Mr. Feig, lanky and preternaturally dapper in his customary bespoke three-piece suit, pocket square and flower lapel pin, traversed the set with an ornate walking stick. Mr. Law, playing a James Bond-esque agent, was similarly kitted out in sleek designer garb. The costume for Ms. McCarthy, as an analyst in the field for her first undercover operation, included a lot of beige; a brown crocheted vest, a ruffled denim skirt, athletic sandals. The wig, she said, is \u201cnot human hair,\u201d maybe \u201crecycled water bottles.\u201d As a few producers watched and Mr. Feig adjusted the blocking, the actors filmed a scene in which Mr. Law\u2019s character jokes about running away together and Ms. McCarthy, as his besotted colleague, takes him seriously. ", "sentence_answer": "As a few producers watched and Mr. Feig adjusted the blocking, the actors filmed a scene in which Mr. Law\u2019s character jokes about running away together and Ms. McCarthy, as his besotted colleague, takes him seriously. ", "paragraph_id": "5d70138bc8e4820a9b66c025"} +{"question": "Who was part of the discussion about the father's absence?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt isn\u2019t him, though,\u201d I said gently. \u201cI was mistaken.\u201d I immediately regretted saying anything. I wrapped my arm around her shoulder and pulled her close. She nestled into me, her head still turned in his direction. I longed to give her the world. The man packed up his minivan and drove off, and my alternate reality went right along with him. We climbed into the car and I pulled out. All the talks my daughter and I had had over the years about her father\u2019s absence swirled around us, filling the car like plumes of smoke from a freshly lit fire. I had always chosen my words carefully, conscious that one person\u2019s perception can so easily be woven into another person\u2019s foundation, forever obscuring an impartial truth.", "answer": "daughter", "sentence": "All the talks my daughter and I had had over the years about her father\u2019s absence swirled around us, filling the car like plumes of smoke from a freshly lit fire.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt isn\u2019t him, though,\u201d I said gently. \u201cI was mistaken.\u201d I immediately regretted saying anything. I wrapped my arm around her shoulder and pulled her close. She nestled into me, her head still turned in his direction. I longed to give her the world. The man packed up his minivan and drove off, and my alternate reality went right along with him. We climbed into the car and I pulled out. All the talks my daughter and I had had over the years about her father\u2019s absence swirled around us, filling the car like plumes of smoke from a freshly lit fire. I had always chosen my words carefully, conscious that one person\u2019s perception can so easily be woven into another person\u2019s foundation, forever obscuring an impartial truth.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt isn\u2019t him, though,\u201d I said gently. \u201cI was mistaken.\u201d I immediately regretted saying anything. I wrapped my arm around her shoulder and pulled her close. She nestled into me, her head still turned in his direction. I longed to give her the world. The man packed up his minivan and drove off, and my alternate reality went right along with him. We climbed into the car and I pulled out. All the talks my daughter and I had had over the years about her father\u2019s absence swirled around us, filling the car like plumes of smoke from a freshly lit fire. I had always chosen my words carefully, conscious that one person\u2019s perception can so easily be woven into another person\u2019s foundation, forever obscuring an impartial truth.", "sentence_answer": "All the talks my daughter and I had had over the years about her father\u2019s absence swirled around us, filling the car like plumes of smoke from a freshly lit fire.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026a3c8e4820a9b66d2fb"} +{"question": "What is a consequence of a patent being denied on the basis that it isn't novel?", "paragraph": "Profits made during their period of market exclusivity are, in large part, why new drugs exist, though an argument could be made that the rewards far outstrip development costs. Nevertheless, few companies will sink hundreds of millions of dollars into even a potentially lifesaving idea without the promise of a return on investment, nor should we reasonably expect them to. That\u2019s why we provide patents for good ideas (and, yes, some not-so-good ideas, too). Except sometimes we don\u2019t. By law, patents can be denied for ideas that may be good, but are not novel or are obvious. This sounds completely sensible, until you think through the consequences. It means that even potentially great drugs might not come to market because they were disclosed in the past \u2014 so they\u2019re now not novel \u2014 or because they are a natural extension of existing knowledge \u2014 so they\u2019re now obvious.", "answer": "drugs might not come to market", "sentence": "It means that even potentially great drugs might not come to market because they were disclosed in the past \u2014 so they\u2019re now not novel \u2014 or because they are a natural extension of existing knowledge \u2014 so they\u2019re now obvious.", "paragraph_sentence": "Profits made during their period of market exclusivity are, in large part, why new drugs exist, though an argument could be made that the rewards far outstrip development costs. Nevertheless, few companies will sink hundreds of millions of dollars into even a potentially lifesaving idea without the promise of a return on investment, nor should we reasonably expect them to. That\u2019s why we provide patents for good ideas (and, yes, some not-so-good ideas, too). Except sometimes we don\u2019t. By law, patents can be denied for ideas that may be good, but are not novel or are obvious. This sounds completely sensible, until you think through the consequences. It means that even potentially great drugs might not come to market because they were disclosed in the past \u2014 so they\u2019re now not novel \u2014 or because they are a natural extension of existing knowledge \u2014 so they\u2019re now obvious. ", "paragraph_answer": "Profits made during their period of market exclusivity are, in large part, why new drugs exist, though an argument could be made that the rewards far outstrip development costs. Nevertheless, few companies will sink hundreds of millions of dollars into even a potentially lifesaving idea without the promise of a return on investment, nor should we reasonably expect them to. That\u2019s why we provide patents for good ideas (and, yes, some not-so-good ideas, too). Except sometimes we don\u2019t. By law, patents can be denied for ideas that may be good, but are not novel or are obvious. This sounds completely sensible, until you think through the consequences. It means that even potentially great drugs might not come to market because they were disclosed in the past \u2014 so they\u2019re now not novel \u2014 or because they are a natural extension of existing knowledge \u2014 so they\u2019re now obvious.", "sentence_answer": "It means that even potentially great drugs might not come to market because they were disclosed in the past \u2014 so they\u2019re now not novel \u2014 or because they are a natural extension of existing knowledge \u2014 so they\u2019re now obvious.", "paragraph_id": "5d700f42c8e4820a9b66bb48"} +{"question": "What site were victims of malware sent to to pay ransom?", "paragraph": "But the proliferation of ransom demands has provided an unhappy reminder of the virtual currency\u2019s continuing appeal to the criminal underworld, long after the authorities shut down the online drug bazaar, Silk Road, where heroin and cocaine were sold using Bitcoin. The latest reminder of Bitcoin\u2019s underbelly came last week with the arrest of two Florida men. The authorities said victims of malware were steered to Coin.mx, a site run by the two men, to buy the Bitcoins to pay the ransom demanded by the malware. The complaint suggested that the criminals also used the site to launder their proceeds.", "answer": "Coin.mx", "sentence": "The authorities said victims of malware were steered to Coin.mx , a site run by the two men, to buy the Bitcoins to pay the ransom demanded by the malware.", "paragraph_sentence": "But the proliferation of ransom demands has provided an unhappy reminder of the virtual currency\u2019s continuing appeal to the criminal underworld, long after the authorities shut down the online drug bazaar, Silk Road, where heroin and cocaine were sold using Bitcoin. The latest reminder of Bitcoin\u2019s underbelly came last week with the arrest of two Florida men. The authorities said victims of malware were steered to Coin.mx , a site run by the two men, to buy the Bitcoins to pay the ransom demanded by the malware. The complaint suggested that the criminals also used the site to launder their proceeds.", "paragraph_answer": "But the proliferation of ransom demands has provided an unhappy reminder of the virtual currency\u2019s continuing appeal to the criminal underworld, long after the authorities shut down the online drug bazaar, Silk Road, where heroin and cocaine were sold using Bitcoin. The latest reminder of Bitcoin\u2019s underbelly came last week with the arrest of two Florida men. The authorities said victims of malware were steered to Coin.mx , a site run by the two men, to buy the Bitcoins to pay the ransom demanded by the malware. The complaint suggested that the criminals also used the site to launder their proceeds.", "sentence_answer": "The authorities said victims of malware were steered to Coin.mx , a site run by the two men, to buy the Bitcoins to pay the ransom demanded by the malware.", "paragraph_id": "5d703d83c8e4820a9b66e3b5"} +{"question": "Did Woods sign his scorecard?", "paragraph": "In theater terms, Woods is in previews. For him, opening night is April 9, the first day of the Masters. If he is worried about the state of his game, Woods hid it behind his actor\u2019s mask. After signing his scorecard, he stepped to the microphone and deadpanned, \u201cI\u2019m just doing this so I won\u2019t get fined.\u201d Everybody, starting with Woods, laughed at his sendup of the media-averse Seattle Seahawks running back Marshawn Lynch. Woods\u2019s stab at humor hit closer to the funny bone than the attempt by the marshal at the par-3 seventh hole on Thursday. As Woods\u2019s group approached the tee box, the man announced to the fans, \u201cNo jokes about missing teeth, blondes or 5-irons.\u201d", "answer": "signing his scorecard", "sentence": "After signing his scorecard , he stepped to the microphone and deadpanned, \u201cI\u2019m just doing this so I won\u2019t get fined.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "In theater terms, Woods is in previews. For him, opening night is April 9, the first day of the Masters. If he is worried about the state of his game, Woods hid it behind his actor\u2019s mask. After signing his scorecard , he stepped to the microphone and deadpanned, \u201cI\u2019m just doing this so I won\u2019t get fined.\u201d Everybody, starting with Woods, laughed at his sendup of the media-averse Seattle Seahawks running back Marshawn Lynch. Woods\u2019s stab at humor hit closer to the funny bone than the attempt by the marshal at the par-3 seventh hole on Thursday. As Woods\u2019s group approached the tee box, the man announced to the fans, \u201cNo jokes about missing teeth, blondes or 5-irons.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "In theater terms, Woods is in previews. For him, opening night is April 9, the first day of the Masters. If he is worried about the state of his game, Woods hid it behind his actor\u2019s mask. After signing his scorecard , he stepped to the microphone and deadpanned, \u201cI\u2019m just doing this so I won\u2019t get fined.\u201d Everybody, starting with Woods, laughed at his sendup of the media-averse Seattle Seahawks running back Marshawn Lynch. Woods\u2019s stab at humor hit closer to the funny bone than the attempt by the marshal at the par-3 seventh hole on Thursday. As Woods\u2019s group approached the tee box, the man announced to the fans, \u201cNo jokes about missing teeth, blondes or 5-irons.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "After signing his scorecard , he stepped to the microphone and deadpanned, \u201cI\u2019m just doing this so I won\u2019t get fined.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d70238ec8e4820a9b66cfa5"} +{"question": "In whose sets does the stone pillars change", "paragraph": "The contemporary relevance of \u201cPoliuto\u201d is potentially strong, whether to the centenary of the Armenian genocide or to events in the Middle East. Ms. Cl\u00e9ment updates the action, mostly to the interwar period. The costumes nod to dictatorships, maybe Nazi or Italian, less likely the Communism of Armenia. Muddled projections by the videographers fettFilm point obliquely and fleetingly to the 1990s siege of Sarajevo, and to an international criminal court. Towering stone pillars change position in Julia Hansen\u2019s sets, suggesting the protean power of tyranny and the danger of lives lived in the shadows, but they transform awkwardly.", "answer": "Julia Hansen\u2019s", "sentence": "Towering stone pillars change position in Julia Hansen\u2019s sets, suggesting the protean power of tyranny and the danger of lives lived in the shadows, but they transform awkwardly.", "paragraph_sentence": "The contemporary relevance of \u201cPoliuto\u201d is potentially strong, whether to the centenary of the Armenian genocide or to events in the Middle East. Ms. Cl\u00e9ment updates the action, mostly to the interwar period. The costumes nod to dictatorships, maybe Nazi or Italian, less likely the Communism of Armenia. Muddled projections by the videographers fettFilm point obliquely and fleetingly to the 1990s siege of Sarajevo, and to an international criminal court. Towering stone pillars change position in Julia Hansen\u2019s sets, suggesting the protean power of tyranny and the danger of lives lived in the shadows, but they transform awkwardly. ", "paragraph_answer": "The contemporary relevance of \u201cPoliuto\u201d is potentially strong, whether to the centenary of the Armenian genocide or to events in the Middle East. Ms. Cl\u00e9ment updates the action, mostly to the interwar period. The costumes nod to dictatorships, maybe Nazi or Italian, less likely the Communism of Armenia. Muddled projections by the videographers fettFilm point obliquely and fleetingly to the 1990s siege of Sarajevo, and to an international criminal court. Towering stone pillars change position in Julia Hansen\u2019s sets, suggesting the protean power of tyranny and the danger of lives lived in the shadows, but they transform awkwardly.", "sentence_answer": "Towering stone pillars change position in Julia Hansen\u2019s sets, suggesting the protean power of tyranny and the danger of lives lived in the shadows, but they transform awkwardly.", "paragraph_id": "5d703c41c8e4820a9b66e2ed"} +{"question": "What baseball team won the 1990 World Series?", "paragraph": "Rose has permission to be on the field Tuesday as part of M.L.B.\u2019s fan-voted Franchise Four promotion. REDS FANS SAVOR TEAM HISTORY Cincinnati was home to the first professional baseball team, the 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings, who went unbeaten their inaugural season. There are tributes to the vintage players around the city, and former players will be in town from two other great Cincinnati teams \u2014 the 1975-76 world champions, including Rose, and the 1990 team, led by Barry Larkin, which swept the World Series over Oakland.", "answer": "REDS", "sentence": "REDS FANS SAVOR TEAM HISTORY Cincinnati was home to the first professional baseball team, the 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings, who went unbeaten their inaugural season.", "paragraph_sentence": "Rose has permission to be on the field Tuesday as part of M.L.B.\u2019s fan-voted Franchise Four promotion. REDS FANS SAVOR TEAM HISTORY Cincinnati was home to the first professional baseball team, the 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings, who went unbeaten their inaugural season. There are tributes to the vintage players around the city, and former players will be in town from two other great Cincinnati teams \u2014 the 1975-76 world champions, including Rose, and the 1990 team, led by Barry Larkin, which swept the World Series over Oakland.", "paragraph_answer": "Rose has permission to be on the field Tuesday as part of M.L.B.\u2019s fan-voted Franchise Four promotion. REDS FANS SAVOR TEAM HISTORY Cincinnati was home to the first professional baseball team, the 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings, who went unbeaten their inaugural season. There are tributes to the vintage players around the city, and former players will be in town from two other great Cincinnati teams \u2014 the 1975-76 world champions, including Rose, and the 1990 team, led by Barry Larkin, which swept the World Series over Oakland.", "sentence_answer": " REDS FANS SAVOR TEAM HISTORY Cincinnati was home to the first professional baseball team, the 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings, who went unbeaten their inaugural season.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026ebc8e4820a9b66d446"} +{"question": "Who created the drama, \"Good People\"?", "paragraph": "EAST HADDAM Goodspeed Opera House \u201cLa Cage aux Folles,\u201d musical by Harvey Fierstein and Jerry Herman. June 26 through Sept. 6. $28 to $75. Goodspeed Opera House, 6 Main Street. goodspeed.org; 860-873-8668. HARTFORD Bushnell Center for the Performing Arts \u201cKinky Boots,\u201d musical by Cyndi Lauper and Harvey Fierstein. June 23 through 28. $21 to $82. Bushnell Center for the Performing Arts, 166 Capitol Avenue. 860-987-5900; bushnell.org. HARTFORD TheaterWorks \u201cGood People,\u201d drama by David Lindsay-Abaire. Through June 28. $15 to $65. TheaterWorks, 233 Pearl Street. theaterworkshartford.org; 860-527-7838.", "answer": "David Lindsay-Abaire", "sentence": "HARTFORD TheaterWorks \u201cGood People,\u201d drama by David Lindsay-Abaire .", "paragraph_sentence": "EAST HADDAM Goodspeed Opera House \u201cLa Cage aux Folles,\u201d musical by Harvey Fierstein and Jerry Herman. June 26 through Sept. 6. $28 to $75. Goodspeed Opera House, 6 Main Street. goodspeed.org; 860-873-8668. HARTFORD Bushnell Center for the Performing Arts \u201cKinky Boots,\u201d musical by Cyndi Lauper and Harvey Fierstein. June 23 through 28. $21 to $82. Bushnell Center for the Performing Arts, 166 Capitol Avenue. 860-987-5900; bushnell.org. HARTFORD TheaterWorks \u201cGood People,\u201d drama by David Lindsay-Abaire . Through June 28. $15 to $65. TheaterWorks, 233 Pearl Street. theaterworkshartford.org; 860-527-7838.", "paragraph_answer": "EAST HADDAM Goodspeed Opera House \u201cLa Cage aux Folles,\u201d musical by Harvey Fierstein and Jerry Herman. June 26 through Sept. 6. $28 to $75. Goodspeed Opera House, 6 Main Street. goodspeed.org; 860-873-8668. HARTFORD Bushnell Center for the Performing Arts \u201cKinky Boots,\u201d musical by Cyndi Lauper and Harvey Fierstein. June 23 through 28. $21 to $82. Bushnell Center for the Performing Arts, 166 Capitol Avenue. 860-987-5900; bushnell.org. HARTFORD TheaterWorks \u201cGood People,\u201d drama by David Lindsay-Abaire . Through June 28. $15 to $65. TheaterWorks, 233 Pearl Street. theaterworkshartford.org; 860-527-7838.", "sentence_answer": "HARTFORD TheaterWorks \u201cGood People,\u201d drama by David Lindsay-Abaire .", "paragraph_id": "5d70914dc8e4820a9b66f59b"} +{"question": "Who did Towns impersonate during one of his interviews?", "paragraph": "Towns\u2019s confidence was on full display. After he connected on a 17-foot jump shot toward the end of regulation, he bowed for the crowd. His night was punctuated by four interviews: one on the court with the in-house announcer, another with the local television broadcast team, a third with NBA TV (during which he did a solid impression of Shaquille O\u2019Neal, one of the hosts) and finally a small news conference for reporters in front of his locker. Karl Towns, his father, waited outside. He said he was extremely proud of his son, except for his two missed free throws. \u201cHe owes me 10 push-ups, and he knows it,\u201d Karl Towns said. As the Timberwolves continue to search for an offensive rhythm, Ricky Rubio, now one of the team\u2019s more experienced players, said he was getting a better feel for where and when Karl-Anthony Towns wanted the ball. Rubio declined to offer specifics.", "answer": "Shaquille O\u2019Neal", "sentence": "His night was punctuated by four interviews: one on the court with the in-house announcer, another with the local television broadcast team, a third with NBA TV (during which he did a solid impression of Shaquille O\u2019Neal , one of the hosts) and finally a small news conference for reporters in front of his locker.", "paragraph_sentence": "Towns\u2019s confidence was on full display. After he connected on a 17-foot jump shot toward the end of regulation, he bowed for the crowd. His night was punctuated by four interviews: one on the court with the in-house announcer, another with the local television broadcast team, a third with NBA TV (during which he did a solid impression of Shaquille O\u2019Neal , one of the hosts) and finally a small news conference for reporters in front of his locker. Karl Towns, his father, waited outside. He said he was extremely proud of his son, except for his two missed free throws. \u201cHe owes me 10 push-ups, and he knows it,\u201d Karl Towns said. As the Timberwolves continue to search for an offensive rhythm, Ricky Rubio, now one of the team\u2019s more experienced players, said he was getting a better feel for where and when Karl-Anthony Towns wanted the ball. Rubio declined to offer specifics.", "paragraph_answer": "Towns\u2019s confidence was on full display. After he connected on a 17-foot jump shot toward the end of regulation, he bowed for the crowd. His night was punctuated by four interviews: one on the court with the in-house announcer, another with the local television broadcast team, a third with NBA TV (during which he did a solid impression of Shaquille O\u2019Neal , one of the hosts) and finally a small news conference for reporters in front of his locker. Karl Towns, his father, waited outside. He said he was extremely proud of his son, except for his two missed free throws. \u201cHe owes me 10 push-ups, and he knows it,\u201d Karl Towns said. As the Timberwolves continue to search for an offensive rhythm, Ricky Rubio, now one of the team\u2019s more experienced players, said he was getting a better feel for where and when Karl-Anthony Towns wanted the ball. Rubio declined to offer specifics.", "sentence_answer": "His night was punctuated by four interviews: one on the court with the in-house announcer, another with the local television broadcast team, a third with NBA TV (during which he did a solid impression of Shaquille O\u2019Neal , one of the hosts) and finally a small news conference for reporters in front of his locker.", "paragraph_id": "5d7007b4c8e4820a9b66ae6f"} +{"question": "What is the percentage number of Mississippi same-sex-couple households?", "paragraph": "At one point, they tried to find someone who would do the home study that would be a requirement for adoption, but could not find anyone who would come to their home to do it. Both women are cautiously hopeful that the lawsuit will quickly change their situation. \u201cIt seems like it\u2019s just the logical next step, but oftentimes, Mississippi doesn\u2019t take the logical next step,\u201d Ms. Smith said. Last year, 29 percent of Mississippi\u2019s same-sex-couple households were raising children younger than 18 \u2014 the highest percentage of any state in the nation, the complaint said.", "answer": "29", "sentence": "Last year, 29 percent of Mississippi\u2019s same-sex-couple households were raising children younger than 18 \u2014 the highest percentage of any state in the nation, the complaint said.", "paragraph_sentence": "At one point, they tried to find someone who would do the home study that would be a requirement for adoption, but could not find anyone who would come to their home to do it. Both women are cautiously hopeful that the lawsuit will quickly change their situation. \u201cIt seems like it\u2019s just the logical next step, but oftentimes, Mississippi doesn\u2019t take the logical next step,\u201d Ms. Smith said. Last year, 29 percent of Mississippi\u2019s same-sex-couple households were raising children younger than 18 \u2014 the highest percentage of any state in the nation, the complaint said. ", "paragraph_answer": "At one point, they tried to find someone who would do the home study that would be a requirement for adoption, but could not find anyone who would come to their home to do it. Both women are cautiously hopeful that the lawsuit will quickly change their situation. \u201cIt seems like it\u2019s just the logical next step, but oftentimes, Mississippi doesn\u2019t take the logical next step,\u201d Ms. Smith said. Last year, 29 percent of Mississippi\u2019s same-sex-couple households were raising children younger than 18 \u2014 the highest percentage of any state in the nation, the complaint said.", "sentence_answer": "Last year, 29 percent of Mississippi\u2019s same-sex-couple households were raising children younger than 18 \u2014 the highest percentage of any state in the nation, the complaint said.", "paragraph_id": "5d7006f8c8e4820a9b66ac75"} +{"question": "Conducting is partly what?", "paragraph": "FRANZ WELSER-M\u00d6ST, music director of the Cleveland Orchestra, which Boulez first conducted in 1965: He has this unbelievable gift to convey something without showing it in his expression. The image of a conductor today is so much molded on Leonard Bernstein. Pierre is the total opposite, but nevertheless he gets these results that are not detached. They\u2019re just very clean, very to the core of the music. Conducting is partly show business, but he never looked at it that way.", "answer": "show business", "sentence": "Conducting is partly show business , but he never looked at it that way.", "paragraph_sentence": "FRANZ WELSER-M\u00d6ST, music director of the Cleveland Orchestra, which Boulez first conducted in 1965: He has this unbelievable gift to convey something without showing it in his expression. The image of a conductor today is so much molded on Leonard Bernstein. Pierre is the total opposite, but nevertheless he gets these results that are not detached. They\u2019re just very clean, very to the core of the music. Conducting is partly show business , but he never looked at it that way. ", "paragraph_answer": "FRANZ WELSER-M\u00d6ST, music director of the Cleveland Orchestra, which Boulez first conducted in 1965: He has this unbelievable gift to convey something without showing it in his expression. The image of a conductor today is so much molded on Leonard Bernstein. Pierre is the total opposite, but nevertheless he gets these results that are not detached. They\u2019re just very clean, very to the core of the music. Conducting is partly show business , but he never looked at it that way.", "sentence_answer": "Conducting is partly show business , but he never looked at it that way.", "paragraph_id": "5d705cacc8e4820a9b66ef3a"} +{"question": "What is the name of the Slovenian prime minister?", "paragraph": "LJUBLJANA, Slovenia \u2014 Slovenia began erecting a razor-wire fence at its border with Croatia on Wednesday to stem the inflow of migrants, as winter closes in and countries to the north tighten their own border controls. A convoy of army trucks carrying barbed wire and construction equipment arrived in the border town of Veliki Obrez at dawn on Wednesday. Soldiers rolled out the wire along the Slovenian bank of the Sotla River, which forms part of the 400-mile border with Croatia. Slovenia is an important country on the migration route through the Balkans because its border with Croatia also forms the southern frontier of Europe\u2019s Schengen area, where passport-free travel is possible. Since Oct. 17, when Hungary closed its border with Croatia and redirected the flow, more than 180,000 migrants from Africa, the Middle East and Asia have entered Slovenia, a nation of two million people. Though the new fence threatens to block the route again just as winter is approaching, migrants have largely been able to find their way around such obstacles. Officials are anticipating that asylum seekers may now turn to Albania and Italy as an alternative routes to more prosperous European countries in the north. Most of the migrants moving through the Balkans have gone on to Austria and then Germany. Slovenia has been saying that it could manage the influx of about 6,000 to 8,000 asylum seekers a day as long as roughly the same number moved on each day. But Austria said recently that it could accept only 6,000 people a day from Slovenia, and Germany has started to tighten some controls on arrivals. As a result, the Slovenian prime minister, Miro Cerar, said that it was very likely that many of the 30,000 migrants who were traveling north from Greece could become stranded in Slovenia, which has limited room to accommodate them. \u201cIt\u2019s a big number,\u201d Mr. Cerar said at a news conference on Tuesday, after the government approved construction of the fence. \u201cIf we don\u2019t act now, we could have a humanitarian catastrophe on the territory of Slovenia,\u201d he said.", "answer": "Miro Cerar", "sentence": "As a result, the Slovenian prime minister, Miro Cerar , said that it was very likely that many of the 30,000 migrants who were traveling north from Greece could become stranded in Slovenia, which has limited room to accommodate them.", "paragraph_sentence": "LJUBLJANA, Slovenia \u2014 Slovenia began erecting a razor-wire fence at its border with Croatia on Wednesday to stem the inflow of migrants, as winter closes in and countries to the north tighten their own border controls. A convoy of army trucks carrying barbed wire and construction equipment arrived in the border town of Veliki Obrez at dawn on Wednesday. Soldiers rolled out the wire along the Slovenian bank of the Sotla River, which forms part of the 400-mile border with Croatia. Slovenia is an important country on the migration route through the Balkans because its border with Croatia also forms the southern frontier of Europe\u2019s Schengen area, where passport-free travel is possible. Since Oct. 17, when Hungary closed its border with Croatia and redirected the flow, more than 180,000 migrants from Africa, the Middle East and Asia have entered Slovenia, a nation of two million people. Though the new fence threatens to block the route again just as winter is approaching, migrants have largely been able to find their way around such obstacles. Officials are anticipating that asylum seekers may now turn to Albania and Italy as an alternative routes to more prosperous European countries in the north. Most of the migrants moving through the Balkans have gone on to Austria and then Germany. Slovenia has been saying that it could manage the influx of about 6,000 to 8,000 asylum seekers a day as long as roughly the same number moved on each day. But Austria said recently that it could accept only 6,000 people a day from Slovenia, and Germany has started to tighten some controls on arrivals. As a result, the Slovenian prime minister, Miro Cerar , said that it was very likely that many of the 30,000 migrants who were traveling north from Greece could become stranded in Slovenia, which has limited room to accommodate them. \u201cIt\u2019s a big number,\u201d Mr. Cerar said at a news conference on Tuesday, after the government approved construction of the fence. \u201cIf we don\u2019t act now, we could have a humanitarian catastrophe on the territory of Slovenia,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "LJUBLJANA, Slovenia \u2014 Slovenia began erecting a razor-wire fence at its border with Croatia on Wednesday to stem the inflow of migrants, as winter closes in and countries to the north tighten their own border controls. A convoy of army trucks carrying barbed wire and construction equipment arrived in the border town of Veliki Obrez at dawn on Wednesday. Soldiers rolled out the wire along the Slovenian bank of the Sotla River, which forms part of the 400-mile border with Croatia. Slovenia is an important country on the migration route through the Balkans because its border with Croatia also forms the southern frontier of Europe\u2019s Schengen area, where passport-free travel is possible. Since Oct. 17, when Hungary closed its border with Croatia and redirected the flow, more than 180,000 migrants from Africa, the Middle East and Asia have entered Slovenia, a nation of two million people. Though the new fence threatens to block the route again just as winter is approaching, migrants have largely been able to find their way around such obstacles. Officials are anticipating that asylum seekers may now turn to Albania and Italy as an alternative routes to more prosperous European countries in the north. Most of the migrants moving through the Balkans have gone on to Austria and then Germany. Slovenia has been saying that it could manage the influx of about 6,000 to 8,000 asylum seekers a day as long as roughly the same number moved on each day. But Austria said recently that it could accept only 6,000 people a day from Slovenia, and Germany has started to tighten some controls on arrivals. As a result, the Slovenian prime minister, Miro Cerar , said that it was very likely that many of the 30,000 migrants who were traveling north from Greece could become stranded in Slovenia, which has limited room to accommodate them. \u201cIt\u2019s a big number,\u201d Mr. Cerar said at a news conference on Tuesday, after the government approved construction of the fence. \u201cIf we don\u2019t act now, we could have a humanitarian catastrophe on the territory of Slovenia,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "As a result, the Slovenian prime minister, Miro Cerar , said that it was very likely that many of the 30,000 migrants who were traveling north from Greece could become stranded in Slovenia, which has limited room to accommodate them.", "paragraph_id": "5d7006ccc8e4820a9b66ac0c"} +{"question": "How long did it take Clayton to break the record?", "paragraph": "LOS ANGELES \u2014 Clayton Kershaw went to the mound on Sunday needing to strike out six batters to reach 300 for the season, something no major league pitcher had done in 13 years. With the first round of the postseason against the Mets looming, he wasn\u2019t going to stick around very long. Maybe a couple of innings or so, just enough to stay sharp, even if he didn\u2019t remain long enough to get to 300. And yet he did get there, striking out seven San Diego Padres in just three and two-thirds innings, and getting two standing ovations from Dodgers fans along the way. In the end, he finished the 2015 regular season with a 16-7 record, a 2.13 E.R.A., a WHIP of 0.88 and a strikeout total of 301, a nice exclamation point for a pitcher who has already won three Cy Young Awards and a Most Valuable Player trophy.", "answer": "three and two-thirds innings", "sentence": "And yet he did get there, striking out seven San Diego Padres in just three and two-thirds innings , and getting two standing ovations from Dodgers fans along the way.", "paragraph_sentence": "LOS ANGELES \u2014 Clayton Kershaw went to the mound on Sunday needing to strike out six batters to reach 300 for the season, something no major league pitcher had done in 13 years. With the first round of the postseason against the Mets looming, he wasn\u2019t going to stick around very long. Maybe a couple of innings or so, just enough to stay sharp, even if he didn\u2019t remain long enough to get to 300. And yet he did get there, striking out seven San Diego Padres in just three and two-thirds innings , and getting two standing ovations from Dodgers fans along the way. In the end, he finished the 2015 regular season with a 16-7 record, a 2.13 E.R.A., a WHIP of 0.88 and a strikeout total of 301, a nice exclamation point for a pitcher who has already won three Cy Young Awards and a Most Valuable Player trophy.", "paragraph_answer": "LOS ANGELES \u2014 Clayton Kershaw went to the mound on Sunday needing to strike out six batters to reach 300 for the season, something no major league pitcher had done in 13 years. With the first round of the postseason against the Mets looming, he wasn\u2019t going to stick around very long. Maybe a couple of innings or so, just enough to stay sharp, even if he didn\u2019t remain long enough to get to 300. And yet he did get there, striking out seven San Diego Padres in just three and two-thirds innings , and getting two standing ovations from Dodgers fans along the way. In the end, he finished the 2015 regular season with a 16-7 record, a 2.13 E.R.A., a WHIP of 0.88 and a strikeout total of 301, a nice exclamation point for a pitcher who has already won three Cy Young Awards and a Most Valuable Player trophy.", "sentence_answer": "And yet he did get there, striking out seven San Diego Padres in just three and two-thirds innings , and getting two standing ovations from Dodgers fans along the way.", "paragraph_id": "5d700d73c8e4820a9b66b90b"} +{"question": "Who is the contributor?", "paragraph": "Parents and prospective students often think of colleges as cohesive institutions, each with their own cultures and academic standards. To attend, say, the University of North Carolina \u2014 regardless of what you study \u2014 is supposed to mean something different from attending nearby Duke, North Carolina State or a faraway college. In reality, colleges are much less cohesive than many outsiders realize, especially when it comes to academics. Many instead resemble a collection of disparate departments \u2014 or even just disparate professors \u2014 who happen to work on the same campus. These disparate groups rarely interact, share little in common and face little accountability. Yes, higher education is generally worth it, by any empirical definition, as I\u2019ve often written. But higher education is also full of expensive, damaging inefficiencies and inconsistencies. Our contributor Kevin Carey has written an important and eye-opening piece on this subject, and I encourage you to read it. He starts the piece with a notorious football scandal but goes far beyond sports and scandal. Colleges, Kevin writes, \u201care not coherent academic enterprises with consistent standards of classroom excellence. When it comes to exerting influence over teaching and learning, they\u2019re Easter eggs. They barely exist.\u201d Let us know what you think of his argument, in the comments section at the bottom or through Facebook or Twitter. And I hope you enjoy your weekend. David Leonhardt", "answer": "Kevin Carey", "sentence": "Our contributor Kevin Carey has written an important and eye-opening piece on this subject, and I encourage you to read it.", "paragraph_sentence": "Parents and prospective students often think of colleges as cohesive institutions, each with their own cultures and academic standards. To attend, say, the University of North Carolina \u2014 regardless of what you study \u2014 is supposed to mean something different from attending nearby Duke, North Carolina State or a faraway college. In reality, colleges are much less cohesive than many outsiders realize, especially when it comes to academics. Many instead resemble a collection of disparate departments \u2014 or even just disparate professors \u2014 who happen to work on the same campus. These disparate groups rarely interact, share little in common and face little accountability. Yes, higher education is generally worth it, by any empirical definition, as I\u2019ve often written. But higher education is also full of expensive, damaging inefficiencies and inconsistencies. Our contributor Kevin Carey has written an important and eye-opening piece on this subject, and I encourage you to read it. He starts the piece with a notorious football scandal but goes far beyond sports and scandal. Colleges, Kevin writes, \u201care not coherent academic enterprises with consistent standards of classroom excellence. When it comes to exerting influence over teaching and learning, they\u2019re Easter eggs. They barely exist.\u201d Let us know what you think of his argument, in the comments section at the bottom or through Facebook or Twitter. And I hope you enjoy your weekend. David Leonhardt", "paragraph_answer": "Parents and prospective students often think of colleges as cohesive institutions, each with their own cultures and academic standards. To attend, say, the University of North Carolina \u2014 regardless of what you study \u2014 is supposed to mean something different from attending nearby Duke, North Carolina State or a faraway college. In reality, colleges are much less cohesive than many outsiders realize, especially when it comes to academics. Many instead resemble a collection of disparate departments \u2014 or even just disparate professors \u2014 who happen to work on the same campus. These disparate groups rarely interact, share little in common and face little accountability. Yes, higher education is generally worth it, by any empirical definition, as I\u2019ve often written. But higher education is also full of expensive, damaging inefficiencies and inconsistencies. Our contributor Kevin Carey has written an important and eye-opening piece on this subject, and I encourage you to read it. He starts the piece with a notorious football scandal but goes far beyond sports and scandal. Colleges, Kevin writes, \u201care not coherent academic enterprises with consistent standards of classroom excellence. When it comes to exerting influence over teaching and learning, they\u2019re Easter eggs. They barely exist.\u201d Let us know what you think of his argument, in the comments section at the bottom or through Facebook or Twitter. And I hope you enjoy your weekend. David Leonhardt", "sentence_answer": "Our contributor Kevin Carey has written an important and eye-opening piece on this subject, and I encourage you to read it.", "paragraph_id": "5d704185c8e4820a9b66e5a0"} +{"question": "Who was the Ukrainian officer?", "paragraph": "Capt. Andrii Syurkalo, a Ukrainian officer, said it was commendable that the trainers were willing to use the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal as an element in a class on the Geneva Conventions. American officers described the course work as equivalent to the latter months of basic training in the United States. The courses will train 705 Ukrainian soldiers at a cost of $19 million over six months. The Ukrainian National Guard is rotating from the front what units it can spare for the training. American instructors intend to recommend top performers to serve as trainers within other Ukrainian units, and in this way spread the instruction more broadly.", "answer": "Capt. Andrii Syurkalo", "sentence": "Capt. Andrii Syurkalo , a Ukrainian officer, said it was commendable that the trainers were willing to use the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal as an element in a class on the Geneva Conventions.", "paragraph_sentence": " Capt. Andrii Syurkalo , a Ukrainian officer, said it was commendable that the trainers were willing to use the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal as an element in a class on the Geneva Conventions. American officers described the course work as equivalent to the latter months of basic training in the United States. The courses will train 705 Ukrainian soldiers at a cost of $19 million over six months. The Ukrainian National Guard is rotating from the front what units it can spare for the training. American instructors intend to recommend top performers to serve as trainers within other Ukrainian units, and in this way spread the instruction more broadly.", "paragraph_answer": " Capt. Andrii Syurkalo , a Ukrainian officer, said it was commendable that the trainers were willing to use the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal as an element in a class on the Geneva Conventions. American officers described the course work as equivalent to the latter months of basic training in the United States. The courses will train 705 Ukrainian soldiers at a cost of $19 million over six months. The Ukrainian National Guard is rotating from the front what units it can spare for the training. American instructors intend to recommend top performers to serve as trainers within other Ukrainian units, and in this way spread the instruction more broadly.", "sentence_answer": " Capt. Andrii Syurkalo , a Ukrainian officer, said it was commendable that the trainers were willing to use the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal as an element in a class on the Geneva Conventions.", "paragraph_id": "5d702701c8e4820a9b66d4d9"} +{"question": "What type of conservatives would propose no other candidate to speaker?", "paragraph": "\u201cWhen it became clear that the majority leader lost his election, I didn\u2019t frankly believe it was right for me to leave at the end of last year,\u201d Mr. Boehner said. But if Mr. Boehner was counting on his No. 2 to replace him, he did not give Mr. McCarthy much warning, telling him about his plans to retire only two minutes before giving the news to the entire House Republican conference. \u201cI had to tell him five times, because he didn\u2019t believe me,\u201d Mr. Boehner said. While there appear to be no challengers to Mr. McCarthy for the speakership at this point, there is little doubt that Tea Party conservatives will be looking for a candidate to back.", "answer": "Tea Party", "sentence": "While there appear to be no challengers to Mr. McCarthy for the speakership at this point, there is little doubt that Tea Party conservatives will be looking for a candidate to back.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWhen it became clear that the majority leader lost his election, I didn\u2019t frankly believe it was right for me to leave at the end of last year,\u201d Mr. Boehner said. But if Mr. Boehner was counting on his No. 2 to replace him, he did not give Mr. McCarthy much warning, telling him about his plans to retire only two minutes before giving the news to the entire House Republican conference. \u201cI had to tell him five times, because he didn\u2019t believe me,\u201d Mr. Boehner said. While there appear to be no challengers to Mr. McCarthy for the speakership at this point, there is little doubt that Tea Party conservatives will be looking for a candidate to back. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWhen it became clear that the majority leader lost his election, I didn\u2019t frankly believe it was right for me to leave at the end of last year,\u201d Mr. Boehner said. But if Mr. Boehner was counting on his No. 2 to replace him, he did not give Mr. McCarthy much warning, telling him about his plans to retire only two minutes before giving the news to the entire House Republican conference. \u201cI had to tell him five times, because he didn\u2019t believe me,\u201d Mr. Boehner said. While there appear to be no challengers to Mr. McCarthy for the speakership at this point, there is little doubt that Tea Party conservatives will be looking for a candidate to back.", "sentence_answer": "While there appear to be no challengers to Mr. McCarthy for the speakership at this point, there is little doubt that Tea Party conservatives will be looking for a candidate to back.", "paragraph_id": "5d70332ac8e4820a9b66de49"} +{"question": "Who just exchanged vows with his longtime boyfriend?", "paragraph": "None of the businesses facing sanctions are saying they wouldn\u2019t serve gay people as a class; they just don\u2019t want to work at nuptials. This isn\u2019t a structural system of oppression, a society-wide conspiracy like Jim Crow; we\u2019re talking about a handful of shops across the country. It seems possible, and reasonable, to live and let live. I think discrimination is discrimination. What about you? Would you bake the cake? Honestly, since so many of my friends aren\u2019t religious or conservative, I\u2019ve always taken for granted that being part of their lives meant accompanying them through life choices that belong to a different worldview than my own. (And I\u2019m very grateful that they\u2019ve accompanied and tolerated me.) My family has its share of divorces and second marriages; my friends\u2019 romantic paths are varied; my closest friend from high school just exchanged vows with his longtime boyfriend. I\u2019m going to a party celebrating them next month. If they asked me, I\u2019d bring a cake.", "answer": "closest friend from high school", "sentence": "My family has its share of divorces and second marriages; my friends\u2019 romantic paths are varied; my closest friend from high school just exchanged vows with his longtime boyfriend.", "paragraph_sentence": "None of the businesses facing sanctions are saying they wouldn\u2019t serve gay people as a class; they just don\u2019t want to work at nuptials. This isn\u2019t a structural system of oppression, a society-wide conspiracy like Jim Crow; we\u2019re talking about a handful of shops across the country. It seems possible, and reasonable, to live and let live. I think discrimination is discrimination. What about you? Would you bake the cake? Honestly, since so many of my friends aren\u2019t religious or conservative, I\u2019ve always taken for granted that being part of their lives meant accompanying them through life choices that belong to a different worldview than my own. (And I\u2019m very grateful that they\u2019ve accompanied and tolerated me.) My family has its share of divorces and second marriages; my friends\u2019 romantic paths are varied; my closest friend from high school just exchanged vows with his longtime boyfriend. I\u2019m going to a party celebrating them next month. If they asked me, I\u2019d bring a cake.", "paragraph_answer": "None of the businesses facing sanctions are saying they wouldn\u2019t serve gay people as a class; they just don\u2019t want to work at nuptials. This isn\u2019t a structural system of oppression, a society-wide conspiracy like Jim Crow; we\u2019re talking about a handful of shops across the country. It seems possible, and reasonable, to live and let live. I think discrimination is discrimination. What about you? Would you bake the cake? Honestly, since so many of my friends aren\u2019t religious or conservative, I\u2019ve always taken for granted that being part of their lives meant accompanying them through life choices that belong to a different worldview than my own. (And I\u2019m very grateful that they\u2019ve accompanied and tolerated me.) My family has its share of divorces and second marriages; my friends\u2019 romantic paths are varied; my closest friend from high school just exchanged vows with his longtime boyfriend. I\u2019m going to a party celebrating them next month. If they asked me, I\u2019d bring a cake.", "sentence_answer": "My family has its share of divorces and second marriages; my friends\u2019 romantic paths are varied; my closest friend from high school just exchanged vows with his longtime boyfriend.", "paragraph_id": "5d702b3ac8e4820a9b66d8b5"} +{"question": "What is the name of Red Bull's second team?", "paragraph": "After discussions, the Italian team rejected the idea of supplying Red Bull, although it did accept to supply Toro Rosso, Red Bull\u2019s second team. Ferrari, which is scraping its way back from its worst period in more than a decade, did not want to give the same engine that its cars use to a team that could well beat it. And that is what Red Bull wanted. \u201cThe possibility of cooperating with Red Bull regarding the development of a power unit remains an option,\u201d said Sergio Marchionne, the president of Fiat and Ferrari. \u201cBut not in the context of Ferrari equipping Red Bull with an engine equivalent to what Ferrari races.\u201d", "answer": "Toro Rosso", "sentence": "After discussions, the Italian team rejected the idea of supplying Red Bull, although it did accept to supply Toro Rosso , Red Bull\u2019s second team.", "paragraph_sentence": " After discussions, the Italian team rejected the idea of supplying Red Bull, although it did accept to supply Toro Rosso , Red Bull\u2019s second team. Ferrari, which is scraping its way back from its worst period in more than a decade, did not want to give the same engine that its cars use to a team that could well beat it. And that is what Red Bull wanted. \u201cThe possibility of cooperating with Red Bull regarding the development of a power unit remains an option,\u201d said Sergio Marchionne, the president of Fiat and Ferrari. \u201cBut not in the context of Ferrari equipping Red Bull with an engine equivalent to what Ferrari races.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "After discussions, the Italian team rejected the idea of supplying Red Bull, although it did accept to supply Toro Rosso , Red Bull\u2019s second team. Ferrari, which is scraping its way back from its worst period in more than a decade, did not want to give the same engine that its cars use to a team that could well beat it. And that is what Red Bull wanted. \u201cThe possibility of cooperating with Red Bull regarding the development of a power unit remains an option,\u201d said Sergio Marchionne, the president of Fiat and Ferrari. \u201cBut not in the context of Ferrari equipping Red Bull with an engine equivalent to what Ferrari races.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "After discussions, the Italian team rejected the idea of supplying Red Bull, although it did accept to supply Toro Rosso , Red Bull\u2019s second team.", "paragraph_id": "5d70087fc8e4820a9b66b015"} +{"question": "How many games does N.F.L. Week 7 score and highlight into the 2015 season?", "paragraph": "N.F.L. Week 7 scores and highlights Four games into the 2015 season, the Eagles were 1-3 and fans were calling for Coach Chip Kelly\u2019s head. Speculation ran wild about which college program Kelly might helm next year after receiving his walking papers in Philadelphia. But with two straight wins, including a 27-7 throttling of their division rival Giants, the Eagles sit atop the N.F.C. East. Their offense, which struggled mightily in its first four games, averaged 472 yards in its last two (it averaged only 294 in its first four). In short, the Eagles are looking like the Eagles many expected coming into this season. And they are doing it despite the poor play of quarterback Sam Bradford, who tossed three interceptions against the Giants and is second in the league in interceptions over all with nine. Bradford does not seem to have any grasp on what his problems are.", "answer": "Four", "sentence": "N.F.L. Week 7 scores and highlights Four games into the 2015 season, the Eagles were 1-3 and fans were calling for Coach Chip Kelly\u2019s head.", "paragraph_sentence": " N.F.L. Week 7 scores and highlights Four games into the 2015 season, the Eagles were 1-3 and fans were calling for Coach Chip Kelly\u2019s head. Speculation ran wild about which college program Kelly might helm next year after receiving his walking papers in Philadelphia. But with two straight wins, including a 27-7 throttling of their division rival Giants, the Eagles sit atop the N.F.C. East. Their offense, which struggled mightily in its first four games, averaged 472 yards in its last two (it averaged only 294 in its first four). In short, the Eagles are looking like the Eagles many expected coming into this season. And they are doing it despite the poor play of quarterback Sam Bradford, who tossed three interceptions against the Giants and is second in the league in interceptions over all with nine. Bradford does not seem to have any grasp on what his problems are.", "paragraph_answer": "N.F.L. Week 7 scores and highlights Four games into the 2015 season, the Eagles were 1-3 and fans were calling for Coach Chip Kelly\u2019s head. Speculation ran wild about which college program Kelly might helm next year after receiving his walking papers in Philadelphia. But with two straight wins, including a 27-7 throttling of their division rival Giants, the Eagles sit atop the N.F.C. East. Their offense, which struggled mightily in its first four games, averaged 472 yards in its last two (it averaged only 294 in its first four). In short, the Eagles are looking like the Eagles many expected coming into this season. And they are doing it despite the poor play of quarterback Sam Bradford, who tossed three interceptions against the Giants and is second in the league in interceptions over all with nine. Bradford does not seem to have any grasp on what his problems are.", "sentence_answer": "N.F.L. Week 7 scores and highlights Four games into the 2015 season, the Eagles were 1-3 and fans were calling for Coach Chip Kelly\u2019s head.", "paragraph_id": "5d702b48c8e4820a9b66d8c5"} +{"question": "What are venture capitalists funding?", "paragraph": "Venture capitalists are funding new search start-ups that treat information and the web as legacy products and that focus on actions and apps instead. And while Google, with $65 billion in the bank, can buy any start-up it likes, one company it cannot buy \u2014 Apple \u2014 is also joining the mobile search fray. On Thursday, Apple released an early, or \u201cbeta,\u201d version of the next version of its iOS mobile software, giving iPhone and iPad users the ability to tap Apple\u2019s own search engine for searches of music, apps and local services \u2014 allowing them to potentially bypass Google.", "answer": "new search start-ups", "sentence": "Venture capitalists are funding new search start-ups that treat information and the web as legacy products and that focus on actions and apps instead.", "paragraph_sentence": " Venture capitalists are funding new search start-ups that treat information and the web as legacy products and that focus on actions and apps instead. And while Google, with $65 billion in the bank, can buy any start-up it likes, one company it cannot buy \u2014 Apple \u2014 is also joining the mobile search fray. On Thursday, Apple released an early, or \u201cbeta,\u201d version of the next version of its iOS mobile software, giving iPhone and iPad users the ability to tap Apple\u2019s own search engine for searches of music, apps and local services \u2014 allowing them to potentially bypass Google.", "paragraph_answer": "Venture capitalists are funding new search start-ups that treat information and the web as legacy products and that focus on actions and apps instead. And while Google, with $65 billion in the bank, can buy any start-up it likes, one company it cannot buy \u2014 Apple \u2014 is also joining the mobile search fray. On Thursday, Apple released an early, or \u201cbeta,\u201d version of the next version of its iOS mobile software, giving iPhone and iPad users the ability to tap Apple\u2019s own search engine for searches of music, apps and local services \u2014 allowing them to potentially bypass Google.", "sentence_answer": "Venture capitalists are funding new search start-ups that treat information and the web as legacy products and that focus on actions and apps instead.", "paragraph_id": "5d703284c8e4820a9b66ddd5"} +{"question": "Who was serious about tapering its program of quantitative easing?", "paragraph": "The original taper tantrum happened in June 2013. It is a cute name for what occurred when global financial markets collectively went berserk over the realization that the Fed was serious about tapering its program of quantitative easing \u2014 or put more plainly, that the Fed would wind down its injections of money into the financial system over time. There was a second, similar explosion of volatility in October 2014, as the Fed\u2019s intentions to raise interest rates in 2015 became clearer. In effect, the Fed\u2019s easy money policies had led global investors to search for higher-yielding securities, which they found in many faster-growing emerging markets. Money gushed into these countries in search of better returns from 2010 until 2013, driving up asset prices.", "answer": "Fed", "sentence": "It is a cute name for what occurred when global financial markets collectively went berserk over the realization that the Fed was serious about tapering its program of quantitative easing \u2014 or put more plainly, that the Fed would wind down its injections of money into the financial system over time.", "paragraph_sentence": "The original taper tantrum happened in June 2013. It is a cute name for what occurred when global financial markets collectively went berserk over the realization that the Fed was serious about tapering its program of quantitative easing \u2014 or put more plainly, that the Fed would wind down its injections of money into the financial system over time. There was a second, similar explosion of volatility in October 2014, as the Fed\u2019s intentions to raise interest rates in 2015 became clearer. In effect, the Fed\u2019s easy money policies had led global investors to search for higher-yielding securities, which they found in many faster-growing emerging markets. Money gushed into these countries in search of better returns from 2010 until 2013, driving up asset prices.", "paragraph_answer": "The original taper tantrum happened in June 2013. It is a cute name for what occurred when global financial markets collectively went berserk over the realization that the Fed was serious about tapering its program of quantitative easing \u2014 or put more plainly, that the Fed would wind down its injections of money into the financial system over time. There was a second, similar explosion of volatility in October 2014, as the Fed\u2019s intentions to raise interest rates in 2015 became clearer. In effect, the Fed\u2019s easy money policies had led global investors to search for higher-yielding securities, which they found in many faster-growing emerging markets. Money gushed into these countries in search of better returns from 2010 until 2013, driving up asset prices.", "sentence_answer": "It is a cute name for what occurred when global financial markets collectively went berserk over the realization that the Fed was serious about tapering its program of quantitative easing \u2014 or put more plainly, that the Fed would wind down its injections of money into the financial system over time.", "paragraph_id": "5d701f0ac8e4820a9b66cabf"} +{"question": "What position does David Alaba play?", "paragraph": "That is not even half the question of what Bayern needs to know. The team against Barcelona was gutted by injuries, most importantly to its flying wingers, Arjen Robben and Franck Rib\u00e9ry. But it was also without the key defenders David Alaba and Holger Badstuber, and aches and fatigue also affected some who did play, like Xabi Alonso, Philipp Lahm and Bastian Schweinsteiger. The Germans among those players deny themselves the excuse that the Champions League semifinals they lost last year and this year sandwiched an event that was just as important to them, and arguably more so: the 2014 World Cup. Age is becoming a factor to the German club, too. Six from the Bavarian team \u2014 which peaked two years ago when it won the treble of the Champions League, the Bundesliga and the German Cup in the same season \u2014 are now over 30. That need not be a terminal age for a player today, thanks to improved medical and dietary care and rosters that are large enough to rotate star players. However, Rib\u00e9ry and Robben may never again reach the peak they did in 2013 under Jupp Heynckes\u2019s final season as coach. Rib\u00e9ry is 32 now and Robben is 31. Alonso is 33, Lahm 31, and dear old Schweinsteiger, though only just 30, looks what he is \u2014 a ferocious competitor who has pushed himself through countless knocks and strains while playing for both club and country.", "answer": "defenders", "sentence": "But it was also without the key defenders David Alaba and Holger Badstuber, and aches and fatigue also affected some who did play, like Xabi Alonso, Philipp Lahm and Bastian Schweinsteiger.", "paragraph_sentence": "That is not even half the question of what Bayern needs to know. The team against Barcelona was gutted by injuries, most importantly to its flying wingers, Arjen Robben and Franck Rib\u00e9ry. But it was also without the key defenders David Alaba and Holger Badstuber, and aches and fatigue also affected some who did play, like Xabi Alonso, Philipp Lahm and Bastian Schweinsteiger. The Germans among those players deny themselves the excuse that the Champions League semifinals they lost last year and this year sandwiched an event that was just as important to them, and arguably more so: the 2014 World Cup. Age is becoming a factor to the German club, too. Six from the Bavarian team \u2014 which peaked two years ago when it won the treble of the Champions League, the Bundesliga and the German Cup in the same season \u2014 are now over 30. That need not be a terminal age for a player today, thanks to improved medical and dietary care and rosters that are large enough to rotate star players. However, Rib\u00e9ry and Robben may never again reach the peak they did in 2013 under Jupp Heynckes\u2019s final season as coach. Rib\u00e9ry is 32 now and Robben is 31. Alonso is 33, Lahm 31, and dear old Schweinsteiger, though only just 30, looks what he is \u2014 a ferocious competitor who has pushed himself through countless knocks and strains while playing for both club and country.", "paragraph_answer": "That is not even half the question of what Bayern needs to know. The team against Barcelona was gutted by injuries, most importantly to its flying wingers, Arjen Robben and Franck Rib\u00e9ry. But it was also without the key defenders David Alaba and Holger Badstuber, and aches and fatigue also affected some who did play, like Xabi Alonso, Philipp Lahm and Bastian Schweinsteiger. The Germans among those players deny themselves the excuse that the Champions League semifinals they lost last year and this year sandwiched an event that was just as important to them, and arguably more so: the 2014 World Cup. Age is becoming a factor to the German club, too. Six from the Bavarian team \u2014 which peaked two years ago when it won the treble of the Champions League, the Bundesliga and the German Cup in the same season \u2014 are now over 30. That need not be a terminal age for a player today, thanks to improved medical and dietary care and rosters that are large enough to rotate star players. However, Rib\u00e9ry and Robben may never again reach the peak they did in 2013 under Jupp Heynckes\u2019s final season as coach. Rib\u00e9ry is 32 now and Robben is 31. Alonso is 33, Lahm 31, and dear old Schweinsteiger, though only just 30, looks what he is \u2014 a ferocious competitor who has pushed himself through countless knocks and strains while playing for both club and country.", "sentence_answer": "But it was also without the key defenders David Alaba and Holger Badstuber, and aches and fatigue also affected some who did play, like Xabi Alonso, Philipp Lahm and Bastian Schweinsteiger.", "paragraph_id": "5d701f3bc8e4820a9b66caef"} +{"question": "Where did Omar go?", "paragraph": "\u201cThis is a mythology that Venezuela is not good at soccer,\u201d said Omar Pironel, a 27-year-old Colombia fan visiting Chile for the tournament. \u201cWe often struggle with them.\u201d Before this year, Venezuela had only four wins in 55 games at the Copa Am\u00e9rica, and it is the only member of the South American confederation that has never qualified for a World Cup. In the 1975 Copa, it lost by 11-0 to a merciless Argentina side. In 1999 and 2000, it lost to Brazil by a combined score of 13-0 in a Copa Am\u00e9rica match and a subsequent World Cup qualifier.", "answer": "Chile", "sentence": "\u201cThis is a mythology that Venezuela is not good at soccer,\u201d said Omar Pironel, a 27-year-old Colombia fan visiting Chile for the tournament.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThis is a mythology that Venezuela is not good at soccer,\u201d said Omar Pironel, a 27-year-old Colombia fan visiting Chile for the tournament. \u201cWe often struggle with them.\u201d Before this year, Venezuela had only four wins in 55 games at the Copa Am\u00e9rica, and it is the only member of the South American confederation that has never qualified for a World Cup. In the 1975 Copa, it lost by 11-0 to a merciless Argentina side. In 1999 and 2000, it lost to Brazil by a combined score of 13-0 in a Copa Am\u00e9rica match and a subsequent World Cup qualifier.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThis is a mythology that Venezuela is not good at soccer,\u201d said Omar Pironel, a 27-year-old Colombia fan visiting Chile for the tournament. \u201cWe often struggle with them.\u201d Before this year, Venezuela had only four wins in 55 games at the Copa Am\u00e9rica, and it is the only member of the South American confederation that has never qualified for a World Cup. In the 1975 Copa, it lost by 11-0 to a merciless Argentina side. In 1999 and 2000, it lost to Brazil by a combined score of 13-0 in a Copa Am\u00e9rica match and a subsequent World Cup qualifier.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThis is a mythology that Venezuela is not good at soccer,\u201d said Omar Pironel, a 27-year-old Colombia fan visiting Chile for the tournament.", "paragraph_id": "5d700d5fc8e4820a9b66b8f6"} +{"question": "What era did gas shortages occur?", "paragraph": "During the post-World War II marriage boom, when gas shortages persuaded honeymooners from New York and Philadelphia to stay closer to home, hoteliers began luring newlyweds to the Poconos instead of to Niagara Falls. But it wasn\u2019t until 1968 that those northeastern Pennsylvania mountains would be unblushingly branded the libidinous Land of Love. That was when Morris Wilkins, a former electrician and submariner, in the unlikely guise of Cupid, sparked a romantic reformation in his own Poconos hotel, the nondescript lakeside Cove Haven resort. Mr. Wilkins, by all accounts, designed and installed the Poconos\u2019 first heart-shaped bathtub.", "answer": "post-World War II", "sentence": "During the post-World War II marriage boom, when gas shortages persuaded honeymooners from New York and Philadelphia to stay closer to home, hoteliers began luring newlyweds to the Poconos instead of to Niagara Falls.", "paragraph_sentence": " During the post-World War II marriage boom, when gas shortages persuaded honeymooners from New York and Philadelphia to stay closer to home, hoteliers began luring newlyweds to the Poconos instead of to Niagara Falls. But it wasn\u2019t until 1968 that those northeastern Pennsylvania mountains would be unblushingly branded the libidinous Land of Love. That was when Morris Wilkins, a former electrician and submariner, in the unlikely guise of Cupid, sparked a romantic reformation in his own Poconos hotel, the nondescript lakeside Cove Haven resort. Mr. Wilkins, by all accounts, designed and installed the Poconos\u2019 first heart-shaped bathtub.", "paragraph_answer": "During the post-World War II marriage boom, when gas shortages persuaded honeymooners from New York and Philadelphia to stay closer to home, hoteliers began luring newlyweds to the Poconos instead of to Niagara Falls. But it wasn\u2019t until 1968 that those northeastern Pennsylvania mountains would be unblushingly branded the libidinous Land of Love. That was when Morris Wilkins, a former electrician and submariner, in the unlikely guise of Cupid, sparked a romantic reformation in his own Poconos hotel, the nondescript lakeside Cove Haven resort. Mr. Wilkins, by all accounts, designed and installed the Poconos\u2019 first heart-shaped bathtub.", "sentence_answer": "During the post-World War II marriage boom, when gas shortages persuaded honeymooners from New York and Philadelphia to stay closer to home, hoteliers began luring newlyweds to the Poconos instead of to Niagara Falls.", "paragraph_id": "5d700789c8e4820a9b66adf7"} +{"question": "What city is mentioned first?", "paragraph": "Many universities have decided to drop fossil fuel stocks from their investment portfolios, but the New School in New York City has decided to go a step further. The eclectic, historically progressive school said not only would it divest itself of all fossil fuel investments in coming years, but it is also reshaping the entire curriculum to focus more on climate change and sustainability. The school, which has a strong emphasis on the field of design, sees opportunities in meeting the challenge of climate change and economic growth, said Joel Towers, executive dean of Parsons the New School of Design.", "answer": "New York City", "sentence": "Many universities have decided to drop fossil fuel stocks from their investment portfolios, but the New School in New York City has decided to go a step further.", "paragraph_sentence": " Many universities have decided to drop fossil fuel stocks from their investment portfolios, but the New School in New York City has decided to go a step further. The eclectic, historically progressive school said not only would it divest itself of all fossil fuel investments in coming years, but it is also reshaping the entire curriculum to focus more on climate change and sustainability. The school, which has a strong emphasis on the field of design, sees opportunities in meeting the challenge of climate change and economic growth, said Joel Towers, executive dean of Parsons the New School of Design.", "paragraph_answer": "Many universities have decided to drop fossil fuel stocks from their investment portfolios, but the New School in New York City has decided to go a step further. The eclectic, historically progressive school said not only would it divest itself of all fossil fuel investments in coming years, but it is also reshaping the entire curriculum to focus more on climate change and sustainability. The school, which has a strong emphasis on the field of design, sees opportunities in meeting the challenge of climate change and economic growth, said Joel Towers, executive dean of Parsons the New School of Design.", "sentence_answer": "Many universities have decided to drop fossil fuel stocks from their investment portfolios, but the New School in New York City has decided to go a step further.", "paragraph_id": "5d700b3ec8e4820a9b66b5b5"} +{"question": "What person has a crowded public life?", "paragraph": "The person at whose expense Aveling generally made himself comfortable was, of course, Eleanor. Besotted throughout her time with him, she was yet often miserable. Aveling was selfish, nasty, petty, and three times out of five not there when she needed him; a hypochondriac of some dimension, he was forever going off to take \u201cthe cure\u201d somewhere (really to rendezvous with other women), leaving Eleanor alone for weeks on end. As the years went on, the discrepancy between a crowded public life and a lonely personal one weighed ever more heavily on her.", "answer": "Eleanor", "sentence": "The person at whose expense Aveling generally made himself comfortable was, of course, Eleanor .", "paragraph_sentence": " The person at whose expense Aveling generally made himself comfortable was, of course, Eleanor . Besotted throughout her time with him, she was yet often miserable. Aveling was selfish, nasty, petty, and three times out of five not there when she needed him; a hypochondriac of some dimension, he was forever going off to take \u201cthe cure\u201d somewhere (really to rendezvous with other women), leaving Eleanor alone for weeks on end. As the years went on, the discrepancy between a crowded public life and a lonely personal one weighed ever more heavily on her.", "paragraph_answer": "The person at whose expense Aveling generally made himself comfortable was, of course, Eleanor . Besotted throughout her time with him, she was yet often miserable. Aveling was selfish, nasty, petty, and three times out of five not there when she needed him; a hypochondriac of some dimension, he was forever going off to take \u201cthe cure\u201d somewhere (really to rendezvous with other women), leaving Eleanor alone for weeks on end. As the years went on, the discrepancy between a crowded public life and a lonely personal one weighed ever more heavily on her.", "sentence_answer": "The person at whose expense Aveling generally made himself comfortable was, of course, Eleanor .", "paragraph_id": "5d700588c8e4820a9b66a92f"} +{"question": "What do these republican measures require in order to be implemented?", "paragraph": "The state House is again pushing forward with a Republican priority to require photo identification at the polls, after similar measures were stymied by the Senate or courts in recent years. The House gave initial approval Wednesday to put a constitutional amendment before voters in 2016 and also endorsed a bill that would institute the photo ID requirements if the constitutional amendment is approved. Both measures need a second House vote and also would have to pass the Senate, where Democrats have previously blocked proposed ID requirements. Supporters say the requirement is needed to ensure the integrity of elections. Democrats say it could make it harder for older people, minorities and women to vote, because they might have more difficulty getting the underlying documents such as birth certificates or marriage licenses that are needed to obtain an ID.", "answer": "Both measures need a second House vote and also would have to pass the Senate", "sentence": "Both measures need a second House vote and also would have to pass the Senate , where Democrats have previously blocked proposed ID requirements.", "paragraph_sentence": "The state House is again pushing forward with a Republican priority to require photo identification at the polls, after similar measures were stymied by the Senate or courts in recent years. The House gave initial approval Wednesday to put a constitutional amendment before voters in 2016 and also endorsed a bill that would institute the photo ID requirements if the constitutional amendment is approved. Both measures need a second House vote and also would have to pass the Senate , where Democrats have previously blocked proposed ID requirements. Supporters say the requirement is needed to ensure the integrity of elections. Democrats say it could make it harder for older people, minorities and women to vote, because they might have more difficulty getting the underlying documents such as birth certificates or marriage licenses that are needed to obtain an ID.", "paragraph_answer": "The state House is again pushing forward with a Republican priority to require photo identification at the polls, after similar measures were stymied by the Senate or courts in recent years. The House gave initial approval Wednesday to put a constitutional amendment before voters in 2016 and also endorsed a bill that would institute the photo ID requirements if the constitutional amendment is approved. Both measures need a second House vote and also would have to pass the Senate , where Democrats have previously blocked proposed ID requirements. Supporters say the requirement is needed to ensure the integrity of elections. Democrats say it could make it harder for older people, minorities and women to vote, because they might have more difficulty getting the underlying documents such as birth certificates or marriage licenses that are needed to obtain an ID.", "sentence_answer": " Both measures need a second House vote and also would have to pass the Senate , where Democrats have previously blocked proposed ID requirements.", "paragraph_id": "5d701513c8e4820a9b66c101"} +{"question": "Christopher R. Heanue called the child what?", "paragraph": "The city\u2019s population of children in foster care hit its peak in the early 1990s, amid a crack epidemic, topping 49,000 in December 1991. Since then, the numbers have steadily declined, in part because of a shift in strategy that seeks to keep families unified as long as possible while addressing underlying problems in the household. On Sunday, officials from the children\u2019s services agency addressed the Holy Child Jesus congregation at a Spanish-language morning Mass and at an English-language midday Mass. The appearance of the baby last month was celebrated in the parish as a message of hope. Some have taken to calling the boy Emmanuel. The Rev. Christopher R. Heanue, a parochial vicar at the church, has nicknamed him John the Baptist. During one of the Sunday services, the church\u2019s pastor, Bishop Octavio Cisneros, referred to the baby as \u201cour little one.\u201d \u201cI would like to express our gratitude to you in person for taking care of the baby that was found here Thanksgiving week, the start of this very special time of the year,\u201d Ms. McKnight told congregants at the midday Mass. The baby, she reported, was \u201cthriving\u201d in his foster home. \u201cBut,\u201d she said, \u201cthis little one has come to represent something greater.\u201d She then introduced the agency\u2019s \u201ccall to action\u201d on adoption. After the services, Bishop Cisneros said he was hopeful about the campaign.", "answer": "John the Baptist", "sentence": "The Rev. Christopher R. Heanue, a parochial vicar at the church, has nicknamed him John the Baptist .", "paragraph_sentence": "The city\u2019s population of children in foster care hit its peak in the early 1990s, amid a crack epidemic, topping 49,000 in December 1991. Since then, the numbers have steadily declined, in part because of a shift in strategy that seeks to keep families unified as long as possible while addressing underlying problems in the household. On Sunday, officials from the children\u2019s services agency addressed the Holy Child Jesus congregation at a Spanish-language morning Mass and at an English-language midday Mass. The appearance of the baby last month was celebrated in the parish as a message of hope. Some have taken to calling the boy Emmanuel. The Rev. Christopher R. Heanue, a parochial vicar at the church, has nicknamed him John the Baptist . During one of the Sunday services, the church\u2019s pastor, Bishop Octavio Cisneros, referred to the baby as \u201cour little one.\u201d \u201cI would like to express our gratitude to you in person for taking care of the baby that was found here Thanksgiving week, the start of this very special time of the year,\u201d Ms. McKnight told congregants at the midday Mass. The baby, she reported, was \u201cthriving\u201d in his foster home. \u201cBut,\u201d she said, \u201cthis little one has come to represent something greater.\u201d She then introduced the agency\u2019s \u201ccall to action\u201d on adoption. After the services, Bishop Cisneros said he was hopeful about the campaign.", "paragraph_answer": "The city\u2019s population of children in foster care hit its peak in the early 1990s, amid a crack epidemic, topping 49,000 in December 1991. Since then, the numbers have steadily declined, in part because of a shift in strategy that seeks to keep families unified as long as possible while addressing underlying problems in the household. On Sunday, officials from the children\u2019s services agency addressed the Holy Child Jesus congregation at a Spanish-language morning Mass and at an English-language midday Mass. The appearance of the baby last month was celebrated in the parish as a message of hope. Some have taken to calling the boy Emmanuel. The Rev. Christopher R. Heanue, a parochial vicar at the church, has nicknamed him John the Baptist . During one of the Sunday services, the church\u2019s pastor, Bishop Octavio Cisneros, referred to the baby as \u201cour little one.\u201d \u201cI would like to express our gratitude to you in person for taking care of the baby that was found here Thanksgiving week, the start of this very special time of the year,\u201d Ms. McKnight told congregants at the midday Mass. The baby, she reported, was \u201cthriving\u201d in his foster home. \u201cBut,\u201d she said, \u201cthis little one has come to represent something greater.\u201d She then introduced the agency\u2019s \u201ccall to action\u201d on adoption. After the services, Bishop Cisneros said he was hopeful about the campaign.", "sentence_answer": "The Rev. Christopher R. Heanue, a parochial vicar at the church, has nicknamed him John the Baptist .", "paragraph_id": "5d701e71c8e4820a9b66ca09"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d70284dc8e4820a9b66d5f7"} +{"question": "Who do the Koch Brothers trade compliments with sometimes?", "paragraph": "Once known for grim letters to fellow wealthy Americans warning of socialist apocalypse, Charles G. Koch now promotes research on the link between freedom and everyday happiness. Turn on \u201cThe Big Bang Theory\u201d or \u201cMorning Joe,\u201d and you are likely to see soft-focus television spots introducing some of the many employees of Koch Industries. Instead of trading insults with Harry Reid, the Democratic Senate leader, Mr. Koch and his brother, David H. Koch, are trading compliments with President Obama, who this month praised the Kochs\u2019 support for criminal justice reform at a meeting of the N.A.A.C.P.", "answer": "President Obama", "sentence": "Instead of trading insults with Harry Reid, the Democratic Senate leader, Mr. Koch and his brother, David H. Koch, are trading compliments with President Obama , who this month praised the Kochs\u2019 support for criminal justice reform at a meeting of the N.A.A.C.P.", "paragraph_sentence": "Once known for grim letters to fellow wealthy Americans warning of socialist apocalypse, Charles G. Koch now promotes research on the link between freedom and everyday happiness. Turn on \u201cThe Big Bang Theory\u201d or \u201cMorning Joe,\u201d and you are likely to see soft-focus television spots introducing some of the many employees of Koch Industries. Instead of trading insults with Harry Reid, the Democratic Senate leader, Mr. Koch and his brother, David H. Koch, are trading compliments with President Obama , who this month praised the Kochs\u2019 support for criminal justice reform at a meeting of the N.A.A.C.P. ", "paragraph_answer": "Once known for grim letters to fellow wealthy Americans warning of socialist apocalypse, Charles G. Koch now promotes research on the link between freedom and everyday happiness. Turn on \u201cThe Big Bang Theory\u201d or \u201cMorning Joe,\u201d and you are likely to see soft-focus television spots introducing some of the many employees of Koch Industries. Instead of trading insults with Harry Reid, the Democratic Senate leader, Mr. Koch and his brother, David H. Koch, are trading compliments with President Obama , who this month praised the Kochs\u2019 support for criminal justice reform at a meeting of the N.A.A.C.P.", "sentence_answer": "Instead of trading insults with Harry Reid, the Democratic Senate leader, Mr. Koch and his brother, David H. Koch, are trading compliments with President Obama , who this month praised the Kochs\u2019 support for criminal justice reform at a meeting of the N.A.A.C.P.", "paragraph_id": "5d7013afc8e4820a9b66c046"} +{"question": "How long is the career of Colon?", "paragraph": "After a shaky first inning, where Colon gave up three hits but left undamaged thanks to a double play that he helped start, the pitching coach Dan Warthen implored the 42-year-old Colon to rely on his changeup and breaking pitches. Colon said after the game through an interpreter that it felt as if he threw more changeups in Wednesday\u2019s game than in any other over his 18-year career, but the strategy was successful.", "answer": "18-year", "sentence": "Colon said after the game through an interpreter that it felt as if he threw more changeups in Wednesday\u2019s game than in any other over his 18-year career, but the strategy was successful.", "paragraph_sentence": "After a shaky first inning, where Colon gave up three hits but left undamaged thanks to a double play that he helped start, the pitching coach Dan Warthen implored the 42-year-old Colon to rely on his changeup and breaking pitches. Colon said after the game through an interpreter that it felt as if he threw more changeups in Wednesday\u2019s game than in any other over his 18-year career, but the strategy was successful. ", "paragraph_answer": "After a shaky first inning, where Colon gave up three hits but left undamaged thanks to a double play that he helped start, the pitching coach Dan Warthen implored the 42-year-old Colon to rely on his changeup and breaking pitches. Colon said after the game through an interpreter that it felt as if he threw more changeups in Wednesday\u2019s game than in any other over his 18-year career, but the strategy was successful.", "sentence_answer": "Colon said after the game through an interpreter that it felt as if he threw more changeups in Wednesday\u2019s game than in any other over his 18-year career, but the strategy was successful.", "paragraph_id": "5d7011e4c8e4820a9b66be5f"} +{"question": "The Senate responded to a terrorist what?", "paragraph": "Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list? Nah. Let\u2019s go for it.", "answer": "mass shooting", "sentence": "Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list?", "paragraph_sentence": " Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list? Nah. Let\u2019s go for it.", "paragraph_answer": "Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list? Nah. Let\u2019s go for it.", "sentence_answer": "Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list?", "paragraph_id": "5d7017a4c8e4820a9b66c3a7"} +{"question": "GreenTech Automotive was owned by Terry McAuliffe, who held what government position in Virginia?", "paragraph": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "answer": "governor", "sentence": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia.", "paragraph_sentence": " When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "paragraph_answer": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "sentence_answer": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia.", "paragraph_id": "5d705c84c8e4820a9b66ef29"} +{"question": "How much did Malta's economy increase by in the year 2014?", "paragraph": "The tax system, in particular, has been a boon. Some foreign companies can be structured to pay 5 percent in corporate taxes. Malta also has double taxation treaties with 65 countries, allowing individuals and businesses to avoid being taxed in two places. Significant tax advantages and a pro-business regulator have created a booming financial services industry. It now represents 12 to 15 percent of the country\u2019s G.D.P., up from 6.3 percent in 2004. Online gambling companies have flocked to the island, as have hedge funds. With a strong corporate base, Malta sailed through the economic crisis relatively unscathed. The economy grew 3.5 percent in 2014. Unemployment is 5.8 percent, the fourth-lowest in Europe. Malta was looking to expand that economic growth through the citizenship program. Under the initial plan in 2013, the newly installed Labor Party government proposed selling passports for \u20ac650,000, with few other requirements for citizenship. Almost immediately, it drew protests. The country, critics argued, was not an economic basket case like other European nations trying similar programs. They also worried that the program would damage its reputation as an attractive place to do business. \u201cWe do not want to form part of a law which prostitutes Malta\u2019s identity and its citizenship,\u201d Mario de Marco, a vocal member of the opposition, said during the debate. The opposition took the program to the European Parliament in an effort to block it. While the Parliament condemned the program, it could do little else, because citizenship is controlled by national governments. To placate the Parliament and the opposition, the government raised the bar for citizenship. Strict due diligence standards were set to weed out money launderers and criminals. It also raised the cost and adopted a residency requirement. In addition to the \u20ac650,000 fee to the government, applicants must now invest \u20ac150,000 in government bonds, buy property for at least \u20ac350,000 or rent a place for at least \u20ac16,000 a year \u2014 all of which must be held for at least five years. \u201cThis is not \u2018tick the box,\u2019\u201d said Mr. Cardona, the chief of the program. Mr. Hyzler, the lawyer, and others note that the newcomers are establishing real links to Malta. They are setting up bank accounts and buying health insurance, both of which are required. They are also joining country clubs and donating to local charities, which is encouraged. \u201cClients genuinely want to do more than just make the investment,\u201d said Mark Stannard, managing director of the Maltese office of Henley & Partners, a residence and citizenship planning firm. He said a Saudi national with a Lebanese passport who had applied for Maltese citizenship had recently returned with a delegation of 12 to consider setting up businesses in aviation, life sciences and real estate.", "answer": "3.5 percent", "sentence": "The economy grew 3.5 percent in 2014.", "paragraph_sentence": "The tax system, in particular, has been a boon. Some foreign companies can be structured to pay 5 percent in corporate taxes. Malta also has double taxation treaties with 65 countries, allowing individuals and businesses to avoid being taxed in two places. Significant tax advantages and a pro-business regulator have created a booming financial services industry. It now represents 12 to 15 percent of the country\u2019s G.D.P., up from 6.3 percent in 2004. Online gambling companies have flocked to the island, as have hedge funds. With a strong corporate base, Malta sailed through the economic crisis relatively unscathed. The economy grew 3.5 percent in 2014. Unemployment is 5.8 percent, the fourth-lowest in Europe. Malta was looking to expand that economic growth through the citizenship program. Under the initial plan in 2013, the newly installed Labor Party government proposed selling passports for \u20ac650,000, with few other requirements for citizenship. Almost immediately, it drew protests. The country, critics argued, was not an economic basket case like other European nations trying similar programs. They also worried that the program would damage its reputation as an attractive place to do business. \u201cWe do not want to form part of a law which prostitutes Malta\u2019s identity and its citizenship,\u201d Mario de Marco, a vocal member of the opposition, said during the debate. The opposition took the program to the European Parliament in an effort to block it. While the Parliament condemned the program, it could do little else, because citizenship is controlled by national governments. To placate the Parliament and the opposition, the government raised the bar for citizenship. Strict due diligence standards were set to weed out money launderers and criminals. It also raised the cost and adopted a residency requirement. In addition to the \u20ac650,000 fee to the government, applicants must now invest \u20ac150,000 in government bonds, buy property for at least \u20ac350,000 or rent a place for at least \u20ac16,000 a year \u2014 all of which must be held for at least five years. \u201cThis is not \u2018tick the box,\u2019\u201d said Mr. Cardona, the chief of the program. Mr. Hyzler, the lawyer, and others note that the newcomers are establishing real links to Malta. They are setting up bank accounts and buying health insurance, both of which are required. They are also joining country clubs and donating to local charities, which is encouraged. \u201cClients genuinely want to do more than just make the investment,\u201d said Mark Stannard, managing director of the Maltese office of Henley & Partners, a residence and citizenship planning firm. He said a Saudi national with a Lebanese passport who had applied for Maltese citizenship had recently returned with a delegation of 12 to consider setting up businesses in aviation, life sciences and real estate.", "paragraph_answer": "The tax system, in particular, has been a boon. Some foreign companies can be structured to pay 5 percent in corporate taxes. Malta also has double taxation treaties with 65 countries, allowing individuals and businesses to avoid being taxed in two places. Significant tax advantages and a pro-business regulator have created a booming financial services industry. It now represents 12 to 15 percent of the country\u2019s G.D.P., up from 6.3 percent in 2004. Online gambling companies have flocked to the island, as have hedge funds. With a strong corporate base, Malta sailed through the economic crisis relatively unscathed. The economy grew 3.5 percent in 2014. Unemployment is 5.8 percent, the fourth-lowest in Europe. Malta was looking to expand that economic growth through the citizenship program. Under the initial plan in 2013, the newly installed Labor Party government proposed selling passports for \u20ac650,000, with few other requirements for citizenship. Almost immediately, it drew protests. The country, critics argued, was not an economic basket case like other European nations trying similar programs. They also worried that the program would damage its reputation as an attractive place to do business. \u201cWe do not want to form part of a law which prostitutes Malta\u2019s identity and its citizenship,\u201d Mario de Marco, a vocal member of the opposition, said during the debate. The opposition took the program to the European Parliament in an effort to block it. While the Parliament condemned the program, it could do little else, because citizenship is controlled by national governments. To placate the Parliament and the opposition, the government raised the bar for citizenship. Strict due diligence standards were set to weed out money launderers and criminals. It also raised the cost and adopted a residency requirement. In addition to the \u20ac650,000 fee to the government, applicants must now invest \u20ac150,000 in government bonds, buy property for at least \u20ac350,000 or rent a place for at least \u20ac16,000 a year \u2014 all of which must be held for at least five years. \u201cThis is not \u2018tick the box,\u2019\u201d said Mr. Cardona, the chief of the program. Mr. Hyzler, the lawyer, and others note that the newcomers are establishing real links to Malta. They are setting up bank accounts and buying health insurance, both of which are required. They are also joining country clubs and donating to local charities, which is encouraged. \u201cClients genuinely want to do more than just make the investment,\u201d said Mark Stannard, managing director of the Maltese office of Henley & Partners, a residence and citizenship planning firm. He said a Saudi national with a Lebanese passport who had applied for Maltese citizenship had recently returned with a delegation of 12 to consider setting up businesses in aviation, life sciences and real estate.", "sentence_answer": "The economy grew 3.5 percent in 2014.", "paragraph_id": "5d700908c8e4820a9b66b155"} +{"question": "What are the dates of when you can catch the Brazilian Jazz group?", "paragraph": "SOUTH ORANGE Papillon 25 Bossa Brasil, Brazilian Jazz group. July 9, 8 to 11 p.m. Free. Papillon 25, 25 Valley Street. 973-761-5299; papillon25.com. SOUTH ORANGE South Orange Performing Arts Center \u201cSOxSO: Creative Collisions,\u201d 12 interactive sessions, 15 musical performances and community art projects. Through June 28. $20 to $45. South Orange Performing Arts Center, 1 Sopac Way. 973-313-2787; sopacnow.org. STANHOPE The Stanhope House Milo Z, funk, featuring the Defending Champions. July 11 at 8:30 p.m. $20. The Stanhope House, 45 Main Street. 973-347-7777; stanhopehousenj.com.", "answer": "July 9, 8 to 11", "sentence": "July 9, 8 to 11 p.m.", "paragraph_sentence": "SOUTH ORANGE Papillon 25 Bossa Brasil, Brazilian Jazz group. July 9, 8 to 11 p.m. Free. Papillon 25, 25 Valley Street. 973-761-5299; papillon25.com. SOUTH ORANGE South Orange Performing Arts Center \u201cSOxSO: Creative Collisions,\u201d 12 interactive sessions, 15 musical performances and community art projects. Through June 28. $20 to $45. South Orange Performing Arts Center, 1 Sopac Way. 973-313-2787; sopacnow.org. STANHOPE The Stanhope House Milo Z, funk, featuring the Defending Champions. July 11 at 8:30 p.m. $20. The Stanhope House, 45 Main Street. 973-347-7777; stanhopehousenj.com.", "paragraph_answer": "SOUTH ORANGE Papillon 25 Bossa Brasil, Brazilian Jazz group. July 9, 8 to 11 p.m. Free. Papillon 25, 25 Valley Street. 973-761-5299; papillon25.com. SOUTH ORANGE South Orange Performing Arts Center \u201cSOxSO: Creative Collisions,\u201d 12 interactive sessions, 15 musical performances and community art projects. Through June 28. $20 to $45. South Orange Performing Arts Center, 1 Sopac Way. 973-313-2787; sopacnow.org. STANHOPE The Stanhope House Milo Z, funk, featuring the Defending Champions. July 11 at 8:30 p.m. $20. The Stanhope House, 45 Main Street. 973-347-7777; stanhopehousenj.com.", "sentence_answer": " July 9, 8 to 11 p.m.", "paragraph_id": "5d700c5ac8e4820a9b66b75c"} +{"question": "Who wrote \"For Kenneth Gaburo\"?", "paragraph": "Nate Wooley\u2019s new work \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d is a setting of a sentence by Mr. Gaburo (1926-93), a searching composer, conductor, pianist and language theorist. But its presentation of the words is extreme, to say the least. Abstractions of text in music aren\u2019t new. Listening to the premiere of \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d on Monday evening at the Wild Project in the East Village, I thought of Morton Feldman\u2019s glacial \u201cThree Voices\u201d (1982), in which long passages repeat and deconstruct, to the point of wordlessness, the opening of Frank O\u2019Hara\u2019s poem \u201cwind\u201d: \u201cWho\u2019d have thought/that snow falls.\u201d", "answer": "Nate Wooley", "sentence": "Nate Wooley \u2019s new work \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d is a setting of a sentence by Mr. Gaburo (1926-93), a searching composer, conductor, pianist and language theorist.", "paragraph_sentence": " Nate Wooley \u2019s new work \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d is a setting of a sentence by Mr. Gaburo (1926-93), a searching composer, conductor, pianist and language theorist. But its presentation of the words is extreme, to say the least. Abstractions of text in music aren\u2019t new. Listening to the premiere of \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d on Monday evening at the Wild Project in the East Village, I thought of Morton Feldman\u2019s glacial \u201cThree Voices\u201d (1982), in which long passages repeat and deconstruct, to the point of wordlessness, the opening of Frank O\u2019Hara\u2019s poem \u201cwind\u201d: \u201cWho\u2019d have thought/that snow falls.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": " Nate Wooley \u2019s new work \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d is a setting of a sentence by Mr. Gaburo (1926-93), a searching composer, conductor, pianist and language theorist. But its presentation of the words is extreme, to say the least. Abstractions of text in music aren\u2019t new. Listening to the premiere of \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d on Monday evening at the Wild Project in the East Village, I thought of Morton Feldman\u2019s glacial \u201cThree Voices\u201d (1982), in which long passages repeat and deconstruct, to the point of wordlessness, the opening of Frank O\u2019Hara\u2019s poem \u201cwind\u201d: \u201cWho\u2019d have thought/that snow falls.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Nate Wooley \u2019s new work \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d is a setting of a sentence by Mr. Gaburo (1926-93), a searching composer, conductor, pianist and language theorist.", "paragraph_id": "5d705d02c8e4820a9b66ef53"} +{"question": "What religion was Ben Lowe?", "paragraph": "For an earnest young Christian named Ben Lowe, revelation came on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, in Africa. A relentless warming of the lake was reducing the catch of fish, the people were going hungry \u2014 and he had learned of scientific evidence that climate change was to blame. For the Rev. Brian Sauder, who grew up attending a small Anabaptist church in rural Illinois, the moment came in a college classroom. Studying the fallout from environmental degradation, he learned of poor people who had to walk hours longer each day to gather firewood from depleted forests. For both men, Christian duties that their upbringing had led them to regard as separate \u2014 taking care of the earth and taking care of the poor \u2014 merged into a morally urgent problem. \u201cWhy haven\u2019t I ever made this connection before?\u201d Mr. Sauder recalled asking himself.", "answer": "Christian", "sentence": "For an earnest young Christian named Ben Lowe, revelation came on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, in Africa.", "paragraph_sentence": " For an earnest young Christian named Ben Lowe, revelation came on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, in Africa. A relentless warming of the lake was reducing the catch of fish, the people were going hungry \u2014 and he had learned of scientific evidence that climate change was to blame. For the Rev. Brian Sauder, who grew up attending a small Anabaptist church in rural Illinois, the moment came in a college classroom. Studying the fallout from environmental degradation, he learned of poor people who had to walk hours longer each day to gather firewood from depleted forests. For both men, Christian duties that their upbringing had led them to regard as separate \u2014 taking care of the earth and taking care of the poor \u2014 merged into a morally urgent problem. \u201cWhy haven\u2019t I ever made this connection before?\u201d Mr. Sauder recalled asking himself.", "paragraph_answer": "For an earnest young Christian named Ben Lowe, revelation came on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, in Africa. A relentless warming of the lake was reducing the catch of fish, the people were going hungry \u2014 and he had learned of scientific evidence that climate change was to blame. For the Rev. Brian Sauder, who grew up attending a small Anabaptist church in rural Illinois, the moment came in a college classroom. Studying the fallout from environmental degradation, he learned of poor people who had to walk hours longer each day to gather firewood from depleted forests. For both men, Christian duties that their upbringing had led them to regard as separate \u2014 taking care of the earth and taking care of the poor \u2014 merged into a morally urgent problem. \u201cWhy haven\u2019t I ever made this connection before?\u201d Mr. Sauder recalled asking himself.", "sentence_answer": "For an earnest young Christian named Ben Lowe, revelation came on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, in Africa.", "paragraph_id": "5d705a33c8e4820a9b66ee29"} +{"question": "Who described Mr. Connell as a \"a Gary Cooper type\"?", "paragraph": "Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name. \u201cHe was a very good-looking guy,\u201d Mr. Seymour, 77, said of Mr. Connell. \u201cWe called him Smiling Jack. He always wore a leather flight jacket, had a little mustache, looked like the Smilin\u2019 Jack character in the comics\u201d \u2014 a macho aviator in a strip that ran from 1933 to 1973. \u201cHe was a Gary Cooper type all the way,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. \u201cVery spare in what he had to say. I\u2019m not quite sure where he lived. He may have been living in San Francisco and spending time in Sausalito. He wasn\u2019t boisterous, wasn\u2019t a big drinker. Just be in there, sit down, nursing whatever he was drinking.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Seymour", "sentence": "Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name. \u201cHe was a very good-looking guy,\u201d Mr. Seymour, 77, said of Mr. Connell. \u201cWe called him Smiling Jack. He always wore a leather flight jacket, had a little mustache, looked like the Smilin\u2019 Jack character in the comics\u201d \u2014 a macho aviator in a strip that ran from 1933 to 1973. \u201cHe was a Gary Cooper type all the way,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. \u201cVery spare in what he had to say. I\u2019m not quite sure where he lived. He may have been living in San Francisco and spending time in Sausalito. He wasn\u2019t boisterous, wasn\u2019t a big drinker. Just be in there, sit down, nursing whatever he was drinking.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": " Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name. \u201cHe was a very good-looking guy,\u201d Mr. Seymour, 77, said of Mr. Connell. \u201cWe called him Smiling Jack. He always wore a leather flight jacket, had a little mustache, looked like the Smilin\u2019 Jack character in the comics\u201d \u2014 a macho aviator in a strip that ran from 1933 to 1973. \u201cHe was a Gary Cooper type all the way,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. \u201cVery spare in what he had to say. I\u2019m not quite sure where he lived. He may have been living in San Francisco and spending time in Sausalito. He wasn\u2019t boisterous, wasn\u2019t a big drinker. Just be in there, sit down, nursing whatever he was drinking.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name.", "paragraph_id": "5d7017f8c8e4820a9b66c3e9"} +{"question": "What does Malta have with 65 countries?", "paragraph": "The tax system, in particular, has been a boon. Some foreign companies can be structured to pay 5 percent in corporate taxes. Malta also has double taxation treaties with 65 countries, allowing individuals and businesses to avoid being taxed in two places. Significant tax advantages and a pro-business regulator have created a booming financial services industry. It now represents 12 to 15 percent of the country\u2019s G.D.P., up from 6.3 percent in 2004. Online gambling companies have flocked to the island, as have hedge funds. With a strong corporate base, Malta sailed through the economic crisis relatively unscathed. The economy grew 3.5 percent in 2014. Unemployment is 5.8 percent, the fourth-lowest in Europe. Malta was looking to expand that economic growth through the citizenship program. Under the initial plan in 2013, the newly installed Labor Party government proposed selling passports for \u20ac650,000, with few other requirements for citizenship. Almost immediately, it drew protests. The country, critics argued, was not an economic basket case like other European nations trying similar programs. They also worried that the program would damage its reputation as an attractive place to do business. \u201cWe do not want to form part of a law which prostitutes Malta\u2019s identity and its citizenship,\u201d Mario de Marco, a vocal member of the opposition, said during the debate. The opposition took the program to the European Parliament in an effort to block it. While the Parliament condemned the program, it could do little else, because citizenship is controlled by national governments. To placate the Parliament and the opposition, the government raised the bar for citizenship. Strict due diligence standards were set to weed out money launderers and criminals. It also raised the cost and adopted a residency requirement. In addition to the \u20ac650,000 fee to the government, applicants must now invest \u20ac150,000 in government bonds, buy property for at least \u20ac350,000 or rent a place for at least \u20ac16,000 a year \u2014 all of which must be held for at least five years. \u201cThis is not \u2018tick the box,\u2019\u201d said Mr. Cardona, the chief of the program. Mr. Hyzler, the lawyer, and others note that the newcomers are establishing real links to Malta. They are setting up bank accounts and buying health insurance, both of which are required. They are also joining country clubs and donating to local charities, which is encouraged. \u201cClients genuinely want to do more than just make the investment,\u201d said Mark Stannard, managing director of the Maltese office of Henley & Partners, a residence and citizenship planning firm. He said a Saudi national with a Lebanese passport who had applied for Maltese citizenship had recently returned with a delegation of 12 to consider setting up businesses in aviation, life sciences and real estate.", "answer": "double taxation treaties", "sentence": "Malta also has double taxation treaties with 65 countries, allowing individuals and businesses to avoid being taxed in two places.", "paragraph_sentence": "The tax system, in particular, has been a boon. Some foreign companies can be structured to pay 5 percent in corporate taxes. Malta also has double taxation treaties with 65 countries, allowing individuals and businesses to avoid being taxed in two places. Significant tax advantages and a pro-business regulator have created a booming financial services industry. It now represents 12 to 15 percent of the country\u2019s G.D.P., up from 6.3 percent in 2004. Online gambling companies have flocked to the island, as have hedge funds. With a strong corporate base, Malta sailed through the economic crisis relatively unscathed. The economy grew 3.5 percent in 2014. Unemployment is 5.8 percent, the fourth-lowest in Europe. Malta was looking to expand that economic growth through the citizenship program. Under the initial plan in 2013, the newly installed Labor Party government proposed selling passports for \u20ac650,000, with few other requirements for citizenship. Almost immediately, it drew protests. The country, critics argued, was not an economic basket case like other European nations trying similar programs. They also worried that the program would damage its reputation as an attractive place to do business. \u201cWe do not want to form part of a law which prostitutes Malta\u2019s identity and its citizenship,\u201d Mario de Marco, a vocal member of the opposition, said during the debate. The opposition took the program to the European Parliament in an effort to block it. While the Parliament condemned the program, it could do little else, because citizenship is controlled by national governments. To placate the Parliament and the opposition, the government raised the bar for citizenship. Strict due diligence standards were set to weed out money launderers and criminals. It also raised the cost and adopted a residency requirement. In addition to the \u20ac650,000 fee to the government, applicants must now invest \u20ac150,000 in government bonds, buy property for at least \u20ac350,000 or rent a place for at least \u20ac16,000 a year \u2014 all of which must be held for at least five years. \u201cThis is not \u2018tick the box,\u2019\u201d said Mr. Cardona, the chief of the program. Mr. Hyzler, the lawyer, and others note that the newcomers are establishing real links to Malta. They are setting up bank accounts and buying health insurance, both of which are required. They are also joining country clubs and donating to local charities, which is encouraged. \u201cClients genuinely want to do more than just make the investment,\u201d said Mark Stannard, managing director of the Maltese office of Henley & Partners, a residence and citizenship planning firm. He said a Saudi national with a Lebanese passport who had applied for Maltese citizenship had recently returned with a delegation of 12 to consider setting up businesses in aviation, life sciences and real estate.", "paragraph_answer": "The tax system, in particular, has been a boon. Some foreign companies can be structured to pay 5 percent in corporate taxes. Malta also has double taxation treaties with 65 countries, allowing individuals and businesses to avoid being taxed in two places. Significant tax advantages and a pro-business regulator have created a booming financial services industry. It now represents 12 to 15 percent of the country\u2019s G.D.P., up from 6.3 percent in 2004. Online gambling companies have flocked to the island, as have hedge funds. With a strong corporate base, Malta sailed through the economic crisis relatively unscathed. The economy grew 3.5 percent in 2014. Unemployment is 5.8 percent, the fourth-lowest in Europe. Malta was looking to expand that economic growth through the citizenship program. Under the initial plan in 2013, the newly installed Labor Party government proposed selling passports for \u20ac650,000, with few other requirements for citizenship. Almost immediately, it drew protests. The country, critics argued, was not an economic basket case like other European nations trying similar programs. They also worried that the program would damage its reputation as an attractive place to do business. \u201cWe do not want to form part of a law which prostitutes Malta\u2019s identity and its citizenship,\u201d Mario de Marco, a vocal member of the opposition, said during the debate. The opposition took the program to the European Parliament in an effort to block it. While the Parliament condemned the program, it could do little else, because citizenship is controlled by national governments. To placate the Parliament and the opposition, the government raised the bar for citizenship. Strict due diligence standards were set to weed out money launderers and criminals. It also raised the cost and adopted a residency requirement. In addition to the \u20ac650,000 fee to the government, applicants must now invest \u20ac150,000 in government bonds, buy property for at least \u20ac350,000 or rent a place for at least \u20ac16,000 a year \u2014 all of which must be held for at least five years. \u201cThis is not \u2018tick the box,\u2019\u201d said Mr. Cardona, the chief of the program. Mr. Hyzler, the lawyer, and others note that the newcomers are establishing real links to Malta. They are setting up bank accounts and buying health insurance, both of which are required. They are also joining country clubs and donating to local charities, which is encouraged. \u201cClients genuinely want to do more than just make the investment,\u201d said Mark Stannard, managing director of the Maltese office of Henley & Partners, a residence and citizenship planning firm. He said a Saudi national with a Lebanese passport who had applied for Maltese citizenship had recently returned with a delegation of 12 to consider setting up businesses in aviation, life sciences and real estate.", "sentence_answer": "Malta also has double taxation treaties with 65 countries, allowing individuals and businesses to avoid being taxed in two places.", "paragraph_id": "5d701524c8e4820a9b66c11f"} +{"question": "What was the name of the zoo that sent the wolverine from Norway?", "paragraph": "\u201cShe said it was growling and stuff like that, but maybe they do that all the time, walk around and make noise,\u201d Mike Miller, executive director of the conservation center, said. A wildlife officer and a Port Authority police officer were summoned to Terminal C. The cage was carefully placed in a transport van, Mr. Pentangelo said, \u201cjust to add another level of security, so that the wolverine wasn\u2019t a threat to himself or the public.\u201d A new, uncompromised cage was procured from the Bronx Zoo, as was a wild animal veterinarian. The cages were put face to face and Kasper was encouraged to walk into the new one. \u201cHe balked,\u201d Mr. Pentangelo said. \u201cHe did not want to go. He made it very clear.\u201d The veterinarian administered a shot of ketamine, a tranquilizer. Kasper dropped off to sleep. The cage transfer was accomplished. And after an overnight stay at Terminal C, Kasper resumed his journey. Kristiansand Zoo in Norway, which had sent Kasper, was closed on Wednesday evening when a reporter called, and no one there could be reached.", "answer": "Kristiansand Zoo", "sentence": "Kristiansand Zoo in Norway, which had sent Kasper, was closed on Wednesday evening when a reporter called, and no one there could be reached.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cShe said it was growling and stuff like that, but maybe they do that all the time, walk around and make noise,\u201d Mike Miller, executive director of the conservation center, said. A wildlife officer and a Port Authority police officer were summoned to Terminal C. The cage was carefully placed in a transport van, Mr. Pentangelo said, \u201cjust to add another level of security, so that the wolverine wasn\u2019t a threat to himself or the public.\u201d A new, uncompromised cage was procured from the Bronx Zoo, as was a wild animal veterinarian. The cages were put face to face and Kasper was encouraged to walk into the new one. \u201cHe balked,\u201d Mr. Pentangelo said. \u201cHe did not want to go. He made it very clear.\u201d The veterinarian administered a shot of ketamine, a tranquilizer. Kasper dropped off to sleep. The cage transfer was accomplished. And after an overnight stay at Terminal C, Kasper resumed his journey. Kristiansand Zoo in Norway, which had sent Kasper, was closed on Wednesday evening when a reporter called, and no one there could be reached. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cShe said it was growling and stuff like that, but maybe they do that all the time, walk around and make noise,\u201d Mike Miller, executive director of the conservation center, said. A wildlife officer and a Port Authority police officer were summoned to Terminal C. The cage was carefully placed in a transport van, Mr. Pentangelo said, \u201cjust to add another level of security, so that the wolverine wasn\u2019t a threat to himself or the public.\u201d A new, uncompromised cage was procured from the Bronx Zoo, as was a wild animal veterinarian. The cages were put face to face and Kasper was encouraged to walk into the new one. \u201cHe balked,\u201d Mr. Pentangelo said. \u201cHe did not want to go. He made it very clear.\u201d The veterinarian administered a shot of ketamine, a tranquilizer. Kasper dropped off to sleep. The cage transfer was accomplished. And after an overnight stay at Terminal C, Kasper resumed his journey. Kristiansand Zoo in Norway, which had sent Kasper, was closed on Wednesday evening when a reporter called, and no one there could be reached.", "sentence_answer": " Kristiansand Zoo in Norway, which had sent Kasper, was closed on Wednesday evening when a reporter called, and no one there could be reached.", "paragraph_id": "5d702d96c8e4820a9b66db11"} +{"question": "Which movies were named best original and adaptive screenplay?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe Grand Budapest Hotel\u201d and \u201cThe Imitation Game\u201d were named best original and adapted screenplay, respectively, at the Writers Guild of America Awards, given out Saturday in Los Angeles and New York. The script for \u201cThe Grand Budapest Hotel,\u201d a comedic caper about a charismatic concierge and a young bellboy at a popular 1930s European ski resort, was written by Wes Anderson. \u201cThe Imitation Game\u201d was written by Graham Moore and based on Andrew Hodges\u2019s book about the British code-breaker Alan Turing. Other winners included Brian Knappenberger\u2019s \u201cThe Internet\u2019s Own Boy: The Story of Aaron Swartz,\u201d about a computer programming prodigy and information activist, for best documentary screenplay; Nic Pizzolatto\u2019s \u201cTrue Detective,\u201d the HBO mini-series that revisits a 1995 murder case in rural Louisiana 17 years later, for best drama series and best new series; and \u201cLouie,\u201d a fictionalized series starring the comedian Louis CK, for best comedy series (written by Louis CK and Pamela Adlon) and best episodic comedy.", "answer": "\u201cThe Grand Budapest Hotel\u201d and \u201cThe Imitation Game\u201d", "sentence": "\u201cThe Grand Budapest Hotel\u201d and \u201cThe Imitation Game\u201d were named best original and adapted screenplay, respectively, at the Writers Guild of America Awards, given out Saturday in Los Angeles and New York.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThe Grand Budapest Hotel\u201d and \u201cThe Imitation Game\u201d were named best original and adapted screenplay, respectively, at the Writers Guild of America Awards, given out Saturday in Los Angeles and New York. The script for \u201cThe Grand Budapest Hotel,\u201d a comedic caper about a charismatic concierge and a young bellboy at a popular 1930s European ski resort, was written by Wes Anderson. \u201cThe Imitation Game\u201d was written by Graham Moore and based on Andrew Hodges\u2019s book about the British code-breaker Alan Turing. Other winners included Brian Knappenberger\u2019s \u201cThe Internet\u2019s Own Boy: The Story of Aaron Swartz,\u201d about a computer programming prodigy and information activist, for best documentary screenplay; Nic Pizzolatto\u2019s \u201cTrue Detective,\u201d the HBO mini-series that revisits a 1995 murder case in rural Louisiana 17 years later, for best drama series and best new series; and \u201cLouie,\u201d a fictionalized series starring the comedian Louis CK, for best comedy series (written by Louis CK and Pamela Adlon) and best episodic comedy.", "paragraph_answer": " \u201cThe Grand Budapest Hotel\u201d and \u201cThe Imitation Game\u201d were named best original and adapted screenplay, respectively, at the Writers Guild of America Awards, given out Saturday in Los Angeles and New York. The script for \u201cThe Grand Budapest Hotel,\u201d a comedic caper about a charismatic concierge and a young bellboy at a popular 1930s European ski resort, was written by Wes Anderson. \u201cThe Imitation Game\u201d was written by Graham Moore and based on Andrew Hodges\u2019s book about the British code-breaker Alan Turing. Other winners included Brian Knappenberger\u2019s \u201cThe Internet\u2019s Own Boy: The Story of Aaron Swartz,\u201d about a computer programming prodigy and information activist, for best documentary screenplay; Nic Pizzolatto\u2019s \u201cTrue Detective,\u201d the HBO mini-series that revisits a 1995 murder case in rural Louisiana 17 years later, for best drama series and best new series; and \u201cLouie,\u201d a fictionalized series starring the comedian Louis CK, for best comedy series (written by Louis CK and Pamela Adlon) and best episodic comedy.", "sentence_answer": " \u201cThe Grand Budapest Hotel\u201d and \u201cThe Imitation Game\u201d were named best original and adapted screenplay, respectively, at the Writers Guild of America Awards, given out Saturday in Los Angeles and New York.", "paragraph_id": "5d703666c8e4820a9b66e015"} +{"question": "How long is the trail that loops around the lake?", "paragraph": "$1,033 SETTING: This floating house is on Lake Union, a freshwater lake in the middle of Seattle. The neighborhood, Eastlake, is a mix of dockside and waterfront communities and conventional single-family houses and condos on land. This particular house is in the lake\u2019s southernmost floating house community, which has about 50 residences spread across three docks. Shops and restaurants are concentrated in and around Eastlake Avenue, not far from the water; downtown Seattle is about four miles away. A six-mile-long trail loops around the lake, stopping at pocket parks along the way.", "answer": "six-mile", "sentence": "A six-mile -long trail loops around the lake, stopping at pocket parks along the way.", "paragraph_sentence": "$1,033 SETTING: This floating house is on Lake Union, a freshwater lake in the middle of Seattle. The neighborhood, Eastlake, is a mix of dockside and waterfront communities and conventional single-family houses and condos on land. This particular house is in the lake\u2019s southernmost floating house community, which has about 50 residences spread across three docks. Shops and restaurants are concentrated in and around Eastlake Avenue, not far from the water; downtown Seattle is about four miles away. A six-mile -long trail loops around the lake, stopping at pocket parks along the way. ", "paragraph_answer": "$1,033 SETTING: This floating house is on Lake Union, a freshwater lake in the middle of Seattle. The neighborhood, Eastlake, is a mix of dockside and waterfront communities and conventional single-family houses and condos on land. This particular house is in the lake\u2019s southernmost floating house community, which has about 50 residences spread across three docks. Shops and restaurants are concentrated in and around Eastlake Avenue, not far from the water; downtown Seattle is about four miles away. A six-mile -long trail loops around the lake, stopping at pocket parks along the way.", "sentence_answer": "A six-mile -long trail loops around the lake, stopping at pocket parks along the way.", "paragraph_id": "5d70109fc8e4820a9b66bd13"} +{"question": "Where did the rides end at?", "paragraph": "In my line of work, grimness of the mouth sets in after I\u2019ve eaten too many things that are trying so hard to impress that they lose touch with anything that comes close to pleasure. And each time I see a roomful of people handing hundreds or thousands of dollars over to a chef who stopped caring a long time ago, my mood turns distinctly Novemberish. Whaling jobs being harder to come by than in Melville\u2019s day, my sea voyages usually take the form of a short ride to a cheap restaurant where warm flavors from another part of the world will burn off my interior drizzle. Recently, these rides have ended at Chomp Chomp in Greenwich Village for radish cakes, noodle soups with transporting powers, coconut rice, triangles of golden beef-filled roti wet with curry sauce, and other treats from the food courts of Singapore.", "answer": "Chomp Chomp", "sentence": "Recently, these rides have ended at Chomp Chomp in Greenwich Village for radish cakes, noodle soups with transporting powers, coconut rice, triangles of golden beef-filled roti wet with curry sauce, and other treats from the food courts of Singapore.", "paragraph_sentence": "In my line of work, grimness of the mouth sets in after I\u2019ve eaten too many things that are trying so hard to impress that they lose touch with anything that comes close to pleasure. And each time I see a roomful of people handing hundreds or thousands of dollars over to a chef who stopped caring a long time ago, my mood turns distinctly Novemberish. Whaling jobs being harder to come by than in Melville\u2019s day, my sea voyages usually take the form of a short ride to a cheap restaurant where warm flavors from another part of the world will burn off my interior drizzle. Recently, these rides have ended at Chomp Chomp in Greenwich Village for radish cakes, noodle soups with transporting powers, coconut rice, triangles of golden beef-filled roti wet with curry sauce, and other treats from the food courts of Singapore. ", "paragraph_answer": "In my line of work, grimness of the mouth sets in after I\u2019ve eaten too many things that are trying so hard to impress that they lose touch with anything that comes close to pleasure. And each time I see a roomful of people handing hundreds or thousands of dollars over to a chef who stopped caring a long time ago, my mood turns distinctly Novemberish. Whaling jobs being harder to come by than in Melville\u2019s day, my sea voyages usually take the form of a short ride to a cheap restaurant where warm flavors from another part of the world will burn off my interior drizzle. Recently, these rides have ended at Chomp Chomp in Greenwich Village for radish cakes, noodle soups with transporting powers, coconut rice, triangles of golden beef-filled roti wet with curry sauce, and other treats from the food courts of Singapore.", "sentence_answer": "Recently, these rides have ended at Chomp Chomp in Greenwich Village for radish cakes, noodle soups with transporting powers, coconut rice, triangles of golden beef-filled roti wet with curry sauce, and other treats from the food courts of Singapore.", "paragraph_id": "5d7024e4c8e4820a9b66d15c"} +{"question": "Who presented the Otro Teatro last year?", "paragraph": "Luciana Achugar (through Dec. 19) Last year Ms. Achugar presented \u201cOtro Teatro\u201d at New York Live Arts, exploring what it would mean to \u201cgrow ourselves a new body.\u201d Since that ecstatic, anarchic ritual of a performance, she has continued the investigation of pleasure, desire and dance as an agent for change. The next and perhaps final phase is \u201cAn Epilogue for Otro Teatro: True Love,\u201d which takes over a studio at Gibney Dance\u2019s downtown location for three hours at a time. Thursdays through Saturdays at 7:30 p.m., Gibney Dance: Agnes Varis Performing Arts Center, 280 Broadway, near Chambers Street, Lower Manhattan, 646-837-6809, gibneydance.org. (Siobhan Burke)", "answer": "Luciana Achugar", "sentence": "Luciana Achugar (through Dec. 19)", "paragraph_sentence": " Luciana Achugar (through Dec. 19) Last year Ms. Achugar presented \u201cOtro Teatro\u201d at New York Live Arts, exploring what it would mean to \u201cgrow ourselves a new body.\u201d Since that ecstatic, anarchic ritual of a performance, she has continued the investigation of pleasure, desire and dance as an agent for change. The next and perhaps final phase is \u201cAn Epilogue for Otro Teatro: True Love,\u201d which takes over a studio at Gibney Dance\u2019s downtown location for three hours at a time. Thursdays through Saturdays at 7:30 p.m., Gibney Dance: Agnes Varis Performing Arts Center, 280 Broadway, near Chambers Street, Lower Manhattan, 646-837-6809, gibneydance.org. (Siobhan Burke)", "paragraph_answer": " Luciana Achugar (through Dec. 19) Last year Ms. Achugar presented \u201cOtro Teatro\u201d at New York Live Arts, exploring what it would mean to \u201cgrow ourselves a new body.\u201d Since that ecstatic, anarchic ritual of a performance, she has continued the investigation of pleasure, desire and dance as an agent for change. The next and perhaps final phase is \u201cAn Epilogue for Otro Teatro: True Love,\u201d which takes over a studio at Gibney Dance\u2019s downtown location for three hours at a time. Thursdays through Saturdays at 7:30 p.m., Gibney Dance: Agnes Varis Performing Arts Center, 280 Broadway, near Chambers Street, Lower Manhattan, 646-837-6809, gibneydance.org. (Siobhan Burke)", "sentence_answer": " Luciana Achugar (through Dec. 19)", "paragraph_id": "5d700e77c8e4820a9b66ba69"} +{"question": "The vote was to change it's definition of marriage to include what?", "paragraph": "An article on Wednesday about a vote by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) to change its definition of marriage to include same-sex marriage misstated the membership of the United Methodist Church. It is 12.8 million worldwide \u2014 not 5.5 million, which is the number outside the United States.", "answer": "to include same-sex marriage", "sentence": "An article on Wednesday about a vote by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) to change its definition of marriage to include same-sex marriage misstated the membership of the United Methodist Church.", "paragraph_sentence": " An article on Wednesday about a vote by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) to change its definition of marriage to include same-sex marriage misstated the membership of the United Methodist Church. It is 12.8 million worldwide \u2014 not 5.5 million, which is the number outside the United States.", "paragraph_answer": "An article on Wednesday about a vote by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) to change its definition of marriage to include same-sex marriage misstated the membership of the United Methodist Church. It is 12.8 million worldwide \u2014 not 5.5 million, which is the number outside the United States.", "sentence_answer": "An article on Wednesday about a vote by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) to change its definition of marriage to include same-sex marriage misstated the membership of the United Methodist Church.", "paragraph_id": "5d7050d0c8e4820a9b66eb50"} +{"question": "What number should I call to purchase \"Explorations of Love and Lust\" tickets?", "paragraph": "PEEKSKILL Hudson Valley Center for Contemporary Art \u201cTheological Explorations of Love and Lust,\u201d lecture by Deanne Mincer. April 8 at 6 p.m. $15 to $25. Hudson Valley Center for Contemporary Art, 1701 Main Street. 914-788-0100; hvcca.org. PURCHASE Neuberger Museum of Art of Purchase College An artist talk by Artie Vierkant. April 8 at 6:30 p.m. Free. \u201cPrestige, Identity and Power in Early Kuba Garments,\u201d gallery talk and participatory embroidery. April 12 at 2 p.m. $3 to $5. Neuberger Museum of Art of Purchase College, 735 Anderson Hill Road. 914-251-6100; www.neuberger.org. SCARSDALE Greenburgh Nature Center \u201cFree Energy: A Local Family Saves by Going Solar,\u201d lecture. April 8 at 7 p.m. Free. Greenburgh Nature Center, 99 Dromore Road. greenburghnaturecenter.org; 914-723-3470.", "answer": "914-788-0100", "sentence": "914-788-0100 ; hvcca.org. PURCHASE Neuberger Museum of Art of Purchase College An artist talk by Artie Vierkant.", "paragraph_sentence": "PEEKSKILL Hudson Valley Center for Contemporary Art \u201cTheological Explorations of Love and Lust,\u201d lecture by Deanne Mincer. April 8 at 6 p.m. $15 to $25. Hudson Valley Center for Contemporary Art, 1701 Main Street. 914-788-0100 ; hvcca.org. PURCHASE Neuberger Museum of Art of Purchase College An artist talk by Artie Vierkant. April 8 at 6:30 p.m. Free. \u201cPrestige, Identity and Power in Early Kuba Garments,\u201d gallery talk and participatory embroidery. April 12 at 2 p.m. $3 to $5. Neuberger Museum of Art of Purchase College, 735 Anderson Hill Road. 914-251-6100; www.neuberger.org. SCARSDALE Greenburgh Nature Center \u201cFree Energy: A Local Family Saves by Going Solar,\u201d lecture. April 8 at 7 p.m. Free. Greenburgh Nature Center, 99 Dromore Road. greenburghnaturecenter.org; 914-723-3470.", "paragraph_answer": "PEEKSKILL Hudson Valley Center for Contemporary Art \u201cTheological Explorations of Love and Lust,\u201d lecture by Deanne Mincer. April 8 at 6 p.m. $15 to $25. Hudson Valley Center for Contemporary Art, 1701 Main Street. 914-788-0100 ; hvcca.org. PURCHASE Neuberger Museum of Art of Purchase College An artist talk by Artie Vierkant. April 8 at 6:30 p.m. Free. \u201cPrestige, Identity and Power in Early Kuba Garments,\u201d gallery talk and participatory embroidery. April 12 at 2 p.m. $3 to $5. Neuberger Museum of Art of Purchase College, 735 Anderson Hill Road. 914-251-6100; www.neuberger.org. SCARSDALE Greenburgh Nature Center \u201cFree Energy: A Local Family Saves by Going Solar,\u201d lecture. April 8 at 7 p.m. Free. Greenburgh Nature Center, 99 Dromore Road. greenburghnaturecenter.org; 914-723-3470.", "sentence_answer": " 914-788-0100 ; hvcca.org. PURCHASE Neuberger Museum of Art of Purchase College An artist talk by Artie Vierkant.", "paragraph_id": "5d703516c8e4820a9b66df50"} +{"question": "Who is the Chief executive of BlackRock?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money,\u201d said Laurence D. Fink, the chief executive of BlackRock, who noted that three-quarters of the firm\u2019s clients were these types of buy-and-hold investors. \u201cWe are their agents, and we are investing money for them.\u201d Still, Hyun Song Shin, a top economist at the Bank for International Settlements, a banking and research center for central banks worldwide, argued on Wednesday that this relentless reach for yield by such investors might just as well signal a good old-fashioned investment bubble.", "answer": "Laurence D. Fink", "sentence": "\u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money,\u201d said Laurence D. Fink , the chief executive of BlackRock, who noted that three-quarters of the firm\u2019s clients were these types of buy-and-hold investors.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money,\u201d said Laurence D. Fink , the chief executive of BlackRock, who noted that three-quarters of the firm\u2019s clients were these types of buy-and-hold investors. \u201cWe are their agents, and we are investing money for them.\u201d Still, Hyun Song Shin, a top economist at the Bank for International Settlements, a banking and research center for central banks worldwide, argued on Wednesday that this relentless reach for yield by such investors might just as well signal a good old-fashioned investment bubble.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money,\u201d said Laurence D. Fink , the chief executive of BlackRock, who noted that three-quarters of the firm\u2019s clients were these types of buy-and-hold investors. \u201cWe are their agents, and we are investing money for them.\u201d Still, Hyun Song Shin, a top economist at the Bank for International Settlements, a banking and research center for central banks worldwide, argued on Wednesday that this relentless reach for yield by such investors might just as well signal a good old-fashioned investment bubble.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money,\u201d said Laurence D. Fink , the chief executive of BlackRock, who noted that three-quarters of the firm\u2019s clients were these types of buy-and-hold investors.", "paragraph_id": "5d7025e9c8e4820a9b66d21b"} +{"question": "What did he do?", "paragraph": "Augustus set Tschirnhaus up with a character named Johann Friedrich \u00adB\u00f6ttger, an apothecary\u2019s apprentice who came to public attention when he was observed turning silver into gold. Augustus kept him under guard for the next eight years, as B\u00f6ttger alternated between promising gold by the ton and escaping. Mercurial in both the figurative and literal sense (he ingested a lot of the substance), B\u00f6ttger\u2019s tempestuous, arrogant personality made him a trying collaborator, but when Augustus ordered him to help \u00adTschirnhaus discover how to make porcelain, he complied. Together, the men succeeded, whereupon the long-suffering Tschirnhaus promptly died.", "answer": "turning silver into gold", "sentence": "Augustus set Tschirnhaus up with a character named Johann Friedrich \u00adB\u00f6ttger, an apothecary\u2019s apprentice who came to public attention when he was observed turning silver into gold .", "paragraph_sentence": " Augustus set Tschirnhaus up with a character named Johann Friedrich \u00adB\u00f6ttger, an apothecary\u2019s apprentice who came to public attention when he was observed turning silver into gold . Augustus kept him under guard for the next eight years, as B\u00f6ttger alternated between promising gold by the ton and escaping. Mercurial in both the figurative and literal sense (he ingested a lot of the substance), B\u00f6ttger\u2019s tempestuous, arrogant personality made him a trying collaborator, but when Augustus ordered him to help \u00adTschirnhaus discover how to make porcelain, he complied. Together, the men succeeded, whereupon the long-suffering Tschirnhaus promptly died.", "paragraph_answer": "Augustus set Tschirnhaus up with a character named Johann Friedrich \u00adB\u00f6ttger, an apothecary\u2019s apprentice who came to public attention when he was observed turning silver into gold . Augustus kept him under guard for the next eight years, as B\u00f6ttger alternated between promising gold by the ton and escaping. Mercurial in both the figurative and literal sense (he ingested a lot of the substance), B\u00f6ttger\u2019s tempestuous, arrogant personality made him a trying collaborator, but when Augustus ordered him to help \u00adTschirnhaus discover how to make porcelain, he complied. Together, the men succeeded, whereupon the long-suffering Tschirnhaus promptly died.", "sentence_answer": "Augustus set Tschirnhaus up with a character named Johann Friedrich \u00adB\u00f6ttger, an apothecary\u2019s apprentice who came to public attention when he was observed turning silver into gold .", "paragraph_id": "5d7008c7c8e4820a9b66b0de"} +{"question": "how many under par was Charley Hoffman?", "paragraph": "Charley Hoffman took advantage of calmer afternoon conditions to take the first-round lead in the windswept Texas Open, shooting a five-under-par 67. Aaron Baddeley was second after a 68. Max Homa had a 69, and Phil Mickelson and Ryan Palmer each shot a 70. \u25a0 Mirim Lee birdied all four par-5 holes and finished with a bogey-free seven-under 65 to take the first-round lead in the Kia Classic in Carlsbad, Calif. Yani Tseng had a 66, and the top-ranked Lydia Ko, 17, was in a group two strokes back at 67.", "answer": "five-under-par", "sentence": "Charley Hoffman took advantage of calmer afternoon conditions to take the first-round lead in the windswept Texas Open, shooting a five-under-par 67.", "paragraph_sentence": " Charley Hoffman took advantage of calmer afternoon conditions to take the first-round lead in the windswept Texas Open, shooting a five-under-par 67. Aaron Baddeley was second after a 68. Max Homa had a 69, and Phil Mickelson and Ryan Palmer each shot a 70. \u25a0 Mirim Lee birdied all four par-5 holes and finished with a bogey-free seven-under 65 to take the first-round lead in the Kia Classic in Carlsbad, Calif. Yani Tseng had a 66, and the top-ranked Lydia Ko, 17, was in a group two strokes back at 67.", "paragraph_answer": "Charley Hoffman took advantage of calmer afternoon conditions to take the first-round lead in the windswept Texas Open, shooting a five-under-par 67. Aaron Baddeley was second after a 68. Max Homa had a 69, and Phil Mickelson and Ryan Palmer each shot a 70. \u25a0 Mirim Lee birdied all four par-5 holes and finished with a bogey-free seven-under 65 to take the first-round lead in the Kia Classic in Carlsbad, Calif. Yani Tseng had a 66, and the top-ranked Lydia Ko, 17, was in a group two strokes back at 67.", "sentence_answer": "Charley Hoffman took advantage of calmer afternoon conditions to take the first-round lead in the windswept Texas Open, shooting a five-under-par 67.", "paragraph_id": "5d700659c8e4820a9b66ab1c"} +{"question": "How fast was the train going?", "paragraph": "The witness told investigators that a crossing arm closed onto Ms. Brody\u2019s car, prompting her to walk outside and touch the gate shortly before getting back into the car and moving the vehicle forward, into the train\u2019s path. Thirty-nine seconds before the crash, Mr. Sumwalt said, warning lights at the crossing had illuminated \u2014 brightly enough to have been seen by drivers. Then the arms closed. Meanwhile, the approaching train sounded the proper warning cadence \u2014 two long blasts, followed by a short blast and a long blast. It was going 2 miles per hour under the speed limit, at 58 m.p.h., Mr. Sumwalt said.", "answer": "2 miles per hour under the speed limit, at 58 m.p.h.", "sentence": "It was going 2 miles per hour under the speed limit, at 58 m.p.h. , Mr. Sumwalt said.", "paragraph_sentence": "The witness told investigators that a crossing arm closed onto Ms. Brody\u2019s car, prompting her to walk outside and touch the gate shortly before getting back into the car and moving the vehicle forward, into the train\u2019s path. Thirty-nine seconds before the crash, Mr. Sumwalt said, warning lights at the crossing had illuminated \u2014 brightly enough to have been seen by drivers. Then the arms closed. Meanwhile, the approaching train sounded the proper warning cadence \u2014 two long blasts, followed by a short blast and a long blast. It was going 2 miles per hour under the speed limit, at 58 m.p.h. , Mr. Sumwalt said. ", "paragraph_answer": "The witness told investigators that a crossing arm closed onto Ms. Brody\u2019s car, prompting her to walk outside and touch the gate shortly before getting back into the car and moving the vehicle forward, into the train\u2019s path. Thirty-nine seconds before the crash, Mr. Sumwalt said, warning lights at the crossing had illuminated \u2014 brightly enough to have been seen by drivers. Then the arms closed. Meanwhile, the approaching train sounded the proper warning cadence \u2014 two long blasts, followed by a short blast and a long blast. It was going 2 miles per hour under the speed limit, at 58 m.p.h. , Mr. Sumwalt said.", "sentence_answer": "It was going 2 miles per hour under the speed limit, at 58 m.p.h. , Mr. Sumwalt said.", "paragraph_id": "5d7069bac8e4820a9b66f11e"} +{"question": "What position is Odubel Herrera?", "paragraph": "The damage began with an innocuous fly ball off the bat of Curtis Granderson that was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera. Granderson later scored, along with Yoenis Cespedes and Michael Cuddyer.", "answer": "center fielder", "sentence": "The damage began with an innocuous fly ball off the bat of Curtis Granderson that was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera.", "paragraph_sentence": " The damage began with an innocuous fly ball off the bat of Curtis Granderson that was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera. Granderson later scored, along with Yoenis Cespedes and Michael Cuddyer.", "paragraph_answer": "The damage began with an innocuous fly ball off the bat of Curtis Granderson that was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera. Granderson later scored, along with Yoenis Cespedes and Michael Cuddyer.", "sentence_answer": "The damage began with an innocuous fly ball off the bat of Curtis Granderson that was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera.", "paragraph_id": "5d701120c8e4820a9b66bd9f"} +{"question": "Where is Mike Condon from?", "paragraph": "Carey Price missed nine games earlier this season, but during his third game back, Wednesday against the Rangers, he aggravated the injury. He is expected to miss six weeks, putting the spotlight back on Mike Condon. A native of Needham, Mass., who played college hockey at Princeton, Condon started his journey to the Canadiens by trying out for an E.C.H.L. team during his spring break in 2013. After spending the past two seasons in the minor leagues, Condon beat out Dustin Tokarski in training camp for the backup job. Condon is 8-2-3 with a 2.19 goals-against and .916 save percentage, including a 5-2-2 record during Price\u2019s previous absence. He may be this season\u2019s Cam Talbot, the Rangers\u2019 late-blooming backup who held down the fort last season when Henrik Lundqvist missed almost two months.", "answer": "A native of Needham, Mass.", "sentence": "A native of Needham, Mass. , who played college hockey at Princeton, Condon started his journey to the Canadiens by trying out for an E.C.H.L. team during his spring break in 2013.", "paragraph_sentence": "Carey Price missed nine games earlier this season, but during his third game back, Wednesday against the Rangers, he aggravated the injury. He is expected to miss six weeks, putting the spotlight back on Mike Condon. A native of Needham, Mass. , who played college hockey at Princeton, Condon started his journey to the Canadiens by trying out for an E.C.H.L. team during his spring break in 2013. After spending the past two seasons in the minor leagues, Condon beat out Dustin Tokarski in training camp for the backup job. Condon is 8-2-3 with a 2.19 goals-against and .916 save percentage, including a 5-2-2 record during Price\u2019s previous absence. He may be this season\u2019s Cam Talbot, the Rangers\u2019 late-blooming backup who held down the fort last season when Henrik Lundqvist missed almost two months.", "paragraph_answer": "Carey Price missed nine games earlier this season, but during his third game back, Wednesday against the Rangers, he aggravated the injury. He is expected to miss six weeks, putting the spotlight back on Mike Condon. A native of Needham, Mass. , who played college hockey at Princeton, Condon started his journey to the Canadiens by trying out for an E.C.H.L. team during his spring break in 2013. After spending the past two seasons in the minor leagues, Condon beat out Dustin Tokarski in training camp for the backup job. Condon is 8-2-3 with a 2.19 goals-against and .916 save percentage, including a 5-2-2 record during Price\u2019s previous absence. He may be this season\u2019s Cam Talbot, the Rangers\u2019 late-blooming backup who held down the fort last season when Henrik Lundqvist missed almost two months.", "sentence_answer": " A native of Needham, Mass. , who played college hockey at Princeton, Condon started his journey to the Canadiens by trying out for an E.C.H.L. team during his spring break in 2013.", "paragraph_id": "5d7022a2c8e4820a9b66cec2"} +{"question": "What was the name of the lesser-known work that came after the subject in the passage?", "paragraph": "\u201cBlack Rage\u201d thrust Dr. Grier into the spotlight. Immediately after the book was published, KRON, the local NBC television station, followed him and Dr. Cobbs on a walk on Fillmore Street as they explained the issues discussed in the book. ABC broadcast a special on the book called \u201cTo Be Black.\u201d The prominent black scholar Kenneth B. Clark, a professor of social psychology at City College, criticized \u201cBlack Rage\u201d in The New York Times Book Review as simplistic, unscholarly and overly impressed with the originality of its findings. But most critics found the book readable, persuasive and sobering. The authors followed up with \u201cThe Jesus Bag\u201d (1971), a critical analysis of the role of religion in black life. It was not nearly as successful as \u201cBlack Rage.\u201d After serving as chairman of the department of psychiatry at Meharry Medical College in Nashville in the early 1970s, Dr. Grier started a psychiatric practice in San Diego, from which he retired in the 1990s.", "answer": "\u201cThe Jesus Bag\u201d", "sentence": "The authors followed up with \u201cThe Jesus Bag\u201d (1971), a critical analysis of the role of religion in black life.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cBlack Rage\u201d thrust Dr. Grier into the spotlight. Immediately after the book was published, KRON, the local NBC television station, followed him and Dr. Cobbs on a walk on Fillmore Street as they explained the issues discussed in the book. ABC broadcast a special on the book called \u201cTo Be Black.\u201d The prominent black scholar Kenneth B. Clark, a professor of social psychology at City College, criticized \u201cBlack Rage\u201d in The New York Times Book Review as simplistic, unscholarly and overly impressed with the originality of its findings. But most critics found the book readable, persuasive and sobering. The authors followed up with \u201cThe Jesus Bag\u201d (1971), a critical analysis of the role of religion in black life. It was not nearly as successful as \u201cBlack Rage.\u201d After serving as chairman of the department of psychiatry at Meharry Medical College in Nashville in the early 1970s, Dr. Grier started a psychiatric practice in San Diego, from which he retired in the 1990s.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cBlack Rage\u201d thrust Dr. Grier into the spotlight. Immediately after the book was published, KRON, the local NBC television station, followed him and Dr. Cobbs on a walk on Fillmore Street as they explained the issues discussed in the book. ABC broadcast a special on the book called \u201cTo Be Black.\u201d The prominent black scholar Kenneth B. Clark, a professor of social psychology at City College, criticized \u201cBlack Rage\u201d in The New York Times Book Review as simplistic, unscholarly and overly impressed with the originality of its findings. But most critics found the book readable, persuasive and sobering. The authors followed up with \u201cThe Jesus Bag\u201d (1971), a critical analysis of the role of religion in black life. It was not nearly as successful as \u201cBlack Rage.\u201d After serving as chairman of the department of psychiatry at Meharry Medical College in Nashville in the early 1970s, Dr. Grier started a psychiatric practice in San Diego, from which he retired in the 1990s.", "sentence_answer": "The authors followed up with \u201cThe Jesus Bag\u201d (1971), a critical analysis of the role of religion in black life.", "paragraph_id": "5d702007c8e4820a9b66cbbb"} +{"question": "Where did Mr. Harper-Mercer study?", "paragraph": "\u201cFact: Before my son was even born, I was reading out loud to him from Donald Trump\u2019s \u2018The Art of the Deal,\u2019\u201d she wrote. \u201cAnd as for the \u2018gesture effect,\u2019 I was practically a mime. And now my son invests in the stock market along with me, turns a profit and is working on a degree in finance. His language and reading skills are phenomenal. I tell you this because it\u2019s not too late for you to start helping your daughter.\u201d It is not clear where \u2014 or if \u2014 Mr. Harper-Mercer had pursued such a degree. Little has been disclosed about his studies at Umpqua. In California, Mr. Harper-Mercer was enrolled at El Camino College from 2010 to 2012, but officials there would not confirm whether he obtained any degree or certification. Both son and mother moved to Oregon about two years ago; Mr. Mercer said he had not seen either of them since then. Neighbors in the apartment building here where the mother and son lived said that Mr. Harper-Mercer rarely strayed far. They would see him getting the mail or walking down the road to buy a soda at a market, but said he did not appear to have a job in Roseburg and stayed home most of the day.", "answer": "El Camino College", "sentence": "In California, Mr. Harper-Mercer was enrolled at El Camino College from 2010 to 2012, but officials there would not confirm whether he obtained any degree or certification.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cFact: Before my son was even born, I was reading out loud to him from Donald Trump\u2019s \u2018The Art of the Deal,\u2019\u201d she wrote. \u201cAnd as for the \u2018gesture effect,\u2019 I was practically a mime. And now my son invests in the stock market along with me, turns a profit and is working on a degree in finance. His language and reading skills are phenomenal. I tell you this because it\u2019s not too late for you to start helping your daughter.\u201d It is not clear where \u2014 or if \u2014 Mr. Harper-Mercer had pursued such a degree. Little has been disclosed about his studies at Umpqua. In California, Mr. Harper-Mercer was enrolled at El Camino College from 2010 to 2012, but officials there would not confirm whether he obtained any degree or certification. Both son and mother moved to Oregon about two years ago; Mr. Mercer said he had not seen either of them since then. Neighbors in the apartment building here where the mother and son lived said that Mr. Harper-Mercer rarely strayed far. They would see him getting the mail or walking down the road to buy a soda at a market, but said he did not appear to have a job in Roseburg and stayed home most of the day.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cFact: Before my son was even born, I was reading out loud to him from Donald Trump\u2019s \u2018The Art of the Deal,\u2019\u201d she wrote. \u201cAnd as for the \u2018gesture effect,\u2019 I was practically a mime. And now my son invests in the stock market along with me, turns a profit and is working on a degree in finance. His language and reading skills are phenomenal. I tell you this because it\u2019s not too late for you to start helping your daughter.\u201d It is not clear where \u2014 or if \u2014 Mr. Harper-Mercer had pursued such a degree. Little has been disclosed about his studies at Umpqua. In California, Mr. Harper-Mercer was enrolled at El Camino College from 2010 to 2012, but officials there would not confirm whether he obtained any degree or certification. Both son and mother moved to Oregon about two years ago; Mr. Mercer said he had not seen either of them since then. Neighbors in the apartment building here where the mother and son lived said that Mr. Harper-Mercer rarely strayed far. They would see him getting the mail or walking down the road to buy a soda at a market, but said he did not appear to have a job in Roseburg and stayed home most of the day.", "sentence_answer": "In California, Mr. Harper-Mercer was enrolled at El Camino College from 2010 to 2012, but officials there would not confirm whether he obtained any degree or certification.", "paragraph_id": "5d704013c8e4820a9b66e4c1"} +{"question": "What was stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion?", "paragraph": "On a balmy September evening, the place was marked by the hushed whispers of diners trying to figure out their first dish, ourselves included. After a cursory, but necessary, explanation from one of the chefs, we all tucked into fresh tortellini stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion in an Iranian lemon bouillon with chunks of orange-hued Mimolette cheese. This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes, then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e. Sesame ice cream crowned with crumbled hazelnuts and fresh figs ended the meal. Going against the local grain, the wine offering is a careful edit of foreign producers. \u201cThe idea behind the wine was like our cooking: Make it as international as possible,\u201d Mr. Lahaut said.", "answer": "tortellini", "sentence": "After a cursory, but necessary, explanation from one of the chefs, we all tucked into fresh tortellini stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion in an Iranian lemon bouillon with chunks of orange-hued Mimolette cheese.", "paragraph_sentence": "On a balmy September evening, the place was marked by the hushed whispers of diners trying to figure out their first dish, ourselves included. After a cursory, but necessary, explanation from one of the chefs, we all tucked into fresh tortellini stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion in an Iranian lemon bouillon with chunks of orange-hued Mimolette cheese. This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes, then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e. Sesame ice cream crowned with crumbled hazelnuts and fresh figs ended the meal. Going against the local grain, the wine offering is a careful edit of foreign producers. \u201cThe idea behind the wine was like our cooking: Make it as international as possible,\u201d Mr. Lahaut said.", "paragraph_answer": "On a balmy September evening, the place was marked by the hushed whispers of diners trying to figure out their first dish, ourselves included. After a cursory, but necessary, explanation from one of the chefs, we all tucked into fresh tortellini stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion in an Iranian lemon bouillon with chunks of orange-hued Mimolette cheese. This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes, then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e. Sesame ice cream crowned with crumbled hazelnuts and fresh figs ended the meal. Going against the local grain, the wine offering is a careful edit of foreign producers. \u201cThe idea behind the wine was like our cooking: Make it as international as possible,\u201d Mr. Lahaut said.", "sentence_answer": "After a cursory, but necessary, explanation from one of the chefs, we all tucked into fresh tortellini stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion in an Iranian lemon bouillon with chunks of orange-hued Mimolette cheese.", "paragraph_id": "5d704e57c8e4820a9b66ea93"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700880c8e4820a9b66b029"} +{"question": "Where did I attend university?", "paragraph": "She taught a course on Shakespeare\u2019s tragedies: \u201cLear,\u201d \u201cMacbeth,\u201d \u201cOthello.\u201d It was by far my favorite class at the University of North Carolina, which I attended in the mid-1980s, though I couldn\u2019t and can\u2019t think of any bluntly practical application for it, not unless you\u2019re bound for a career on the stage or in academia. I headed in neither direction. So I guess I was just wasting my time, at least according to a seemingly growing chorus of politicians and others whose metrics for higher education are skill acquisition and job placement.", "answer": "University of North Carolina", "sentence": "It was by far my favorite class at the University of North Carolina , which I attended in the mid-1980s, though I couldn\u2019t and can\u2019t think of any bluntly practical application for it, not unless you\u2019re bound for a career on the stage or in academia.", "paragraph_sentence": "She taught a course on Shakespeare\u2019s tragedies: \u201cLear,\u201d \u201cMacbeth,\u201d \u201cOthello.\u201d It was by far my favorite class at the University of North Carolina , which I attended in the mid-1980s, though I couldn\u2019t and can\u2019t think of any bluntly practical application for it, not unless you\u2019re bound for a career on the stage or in academia. I headed in neither direction. So I guess I was just wasting my time, at least according to a seemingly growing chorus of politicians and others whose metrics for higher education are skill acquisition and job placement.", "paragraph_answer": "She taught a course on Shakespeare\u2019s tragedies: \u201cLear,\u201d \u201cMacbeth,\u201d \u201cOthello.\u201d It was by far my favorite class at the University of North Carolina , which I attended in the mid-1980s, though I couldn\u2019t and can\u2019t think of any bluntly practical application for it, not unless you\u2019re bound for a career on the stage or in academia. I headed in neither direction. So I guess I was just wasting my time, at least according to a seemingly growing chorus of politicians and others whose metrics for higher education are skill acquisition and job placement.", "sentence_answer": "It was by far my favorite class at the University of North Carolina , which I attended in the mid-1980s, though I couldn\u2019t and can\u2019t think of any bluntly practical application for it, not unless you\u2019re bound for a career on the stage or in academia.", "paragraph_id": "5d7021a3c8e4820a9b66cd97"} +{"question": "How does he describe these issues, besides difficult?", "paragraph": "First, these issues are difficult and personal, and I don\u2019t presume that my approach is always right. Second, details matter. My closest gay friends are fairly secular. But I would be uncomfortable attending same-sex vows in the style of a Catholic mass \u2014 or being hired to photograph such a ceremony. I don\u2019t think that discomfort should be grounds for shutting down a business. Well, that discomfort may seem religious, but segregationists felt justified by scripture too. They got over it; their churches got over it; so will yours.", "answer": "personal", "sentence": "First, these issues are difficult and personal , and I don\u2019t presume that my approach is always right.", "paragraph_sentence": " First, these issues are difficult and personal , and I don\u2019t presume that my approach is always right. Second, details matter. My closest gay friends are fairly secular. But I would be uncomfortable attending same-sex vows in the style of a Catholic mass \u2014 or being hired to photograph such a ceremony. I don\u2019t think that discomfort should be grounds for shutting down a business. Well, that discomfort may seem religious, but segregationists felt justified by scripture too. They got over it; their churches got over it; so will yours.", "paragraph_answer": "First, these issues are difficult and personal , and I don\u2019t presume that my approach is always right. Second, details matter. My closest gay friends are fairly secular. But I would be uncomfortable attending same-sex vows in the style of a Catholic mass \u2014 or being hired to photograph such a ceremony. I don\u2019t think that discomfort should be grounds for shutting down a business. Well, that discomfort may seem religious, but segregationists felt justified by scripture too. They got over it; their churches got over it; so will yours.", "sentence_answer": "First, these issues are difficult and personal , and I don\u2019t presume that my approach is always right.", "paragraph_id": "5d702c35c8e4820a9b66d9cb"} +{"question": "What time is \"Modern Family\" on?", "paragraph": "9 P.M. (ABC) MODERN FAMILY Jay (Ed O\u2019Neill) and Claire (Julie Bowen) have creative differences when they shoot a commercial for Pritchett Closets in response to their competitor\u2019s clever advertisement. Phil (Ty Burrell), Manny (Rico Rodriguez) and Luke (Nolan Gould) set out to destroy the drone used by a neighbor to spy on Gloria (Sofia Vergara) as she sunbathes. In \u201cblack-ish,\u201d at 9:30, Dre (Anthony Anderson) tries to make up for his last-minute wedding with Bow (Tracee Ellis Ross) by planning an elaborate vow-renewal for their 15th anniversary. Then her hippie parents (Anna Deavere Smith and Beau Bridges) show up unannounced. 9 P.M. (Fox) EMPIRE Cookie (Taraji P. Henson, left) declares war when she learns how Anika (Grace Gealey) back-stabbed her. Lucious (Terrence Howard) confronts his longtime rival, Billy Beretti (Judd Nelson). And the Lyon sons go to extremes to save Empire Entertainment.", "answer": "9 P.M.", "sentence": "9 P.M. (ABC) MODERN FAMILY Jay (Ed O\u2019Neill) and Claire (Julie Bowen) have creative differences when they shoot a commercial for Pritchett Closets in response to their competitor\u2019s clever advertisement.", "paragraph_sentence": " 9 P.M. (ABC) MODERN FAMILY Jay (Ed O\u2019Neill) and Claire (Julie Bowen) have creative differences when they shoot a commercial for Pritchett Closets in response to their competitor\u2019s clever advertisement. Phil (Ty Burrell), Manny (Rico Rodriguez) and Luke (Nolan Gould) set out to destroy the drone used by a neighbor to spy on Gloria (Sofia Vergara) as she sunbathes. In \u201cblack-ish,\u201d at 9:30, Dre (Anthony Anderson) tries to make up for his last-minute wedding with Bow (Tracee Ellis Ross) by planning an elaborate vow-renewal for their 15th anniversary. Then her hippie parents (Anna Deavere Smith and Beau Bridges) show up unannounced. 9 P.M. (Fox) EMPIRE Cookie (Taraji P. Henson, left) declares war when she learns how Anika (Grace Gealey) back-stabbed her. Lucious (Terrence Howard) confronts his longtime rival, Billy Beretti (Judd Nelson). And the Lyon sons go to extremes to save Empire Entertainment.", "paragraph_answer": " 9 P.M. (ABC) MODERN FAMILY Jay (Ed O\u2019Neill) and Claire (Julie Bowen) have creative differences when they shoot a commercial for Pritchett Closets in response to their competitor\u2019s clever advertisement. Phil (Ty Burrell), Manny (Rico Rodriguez) and Luke (Nolan Gould) set out to destroy the drone used by a neighbor to spy on Gloria (Sofia Vergara) as she sunbathes. In \u201cblack-ish,\u201d at 9:30, Dre (Anthony Anderson) tries to make up for his last-minute wedding with Bow (Tracee Ellis Ross) by planning an elaborate vow-renewal for their 15th anniversary. Then her hippie parents (Anna Deavere Smith and Beau Bridges) show up unannounced. 9 P.M. (Fox) EMPIRE Cookie (Taraji P. Henson, left) declares war when she learns how Anika (Grace Gealey) back-stabbed her. Lucious (Terrence Howard) confronts his longtime rival, Billy Beretti (Judd Nelson). And the Lyon sons go to extremes to save Empire Entertainment.", "sentence_answer": " 9 P.M. (ABC) MODERN FAMILY Jay (Ed O\u2019Neill) and Claire (Julie Bowen) have creative differences when they shoot a commercial for Pritchett Closets in response to their competitor\u2019s clever advertisement.", "paragraph_id": "5d70517cc8e4820a9b66eb8a"} +{"question": "Where is Richard Avedon's photography being displayed?", "paragraph": "The plan in the magazine\u2019s 1970s heyday, said Joe Armstrong, its publisher and president during that period, \u201cwas to build Time-Life, do what Henry Luce did, but for a younger generation.\u201d Rolling Stone was breaking new ground, and printing things others would not print, he said. \u201cWe were covering rock \u2019n\u2019 roll music when your parents liked orchestra music,\u201d he said. \u201cWe were against the war in Vietnam, and everybody over 30 was for it. We were covering the drug culture. Nobody else was doing it.\u201d Tom Wolfe published his novel \u201cThe Bonfire of the Vanities\u201d in installments in the magazine. The photographer Annie Leibovitz became a star there. Richard Avedon traveled the country to shoot dozens of portraits of the people he felt ran America, a collection now with the Metropolitan Museum of Art. And Mr. Thompson made his own style of gonzo journalism. Rolling Stone has gone through tumultuous periods before, said Robert Draper, the author of \u201cRolling Stone Magazine: The Uncensored History.\u201d It has survived internal strife, often surrounding the mercurial Mr. Wenner, questions about its finances and the threat of MTV, which many thought would end it.", "answer": "Metropolitan Museum of Art", "sentence": "Richard Avedon traveled the country to shoot dozens of portraits of the people he felt ran America, a collection now with the Metropolitan Museum of Art .", "paragraph_sentence": "The plan in the magazine\u2019s 1970s heyday, said Joe Armstrong, its publisher and president during that period, \u201cwas to build Time-Life, do what Henry Luce did, but for a younger generation.\u201d Rolling Stone was breaking new ground, and printing things others would not print, he said. \u201cWe were covering rock \u2019n\u2019 roll music when your parents liked orchestra music,\u201d he said. \u201cWe were against the war in Vietnam, and everybody over 30 was for it. We were covering the drug culture. Nobody else was doing it.\u201d Tom Wolfe published his novel \u201cThe Bonfire of the Vanities\u201d in installments in the magazine. The photographer Annie Leibovitz became a star there. Richard Avedon traveled the country to shoot dozens of portraits of the people he felt ran America, a collection now with the Metropolitan Museum of Art . And Mr. Thompson made his own style of gonzo journalism. Rolling Stone has gone through tumultuous periods before, said Robert Draper, the author of \u201cRolling Stone Magazine: The Uncensored History.\u201d It has survived internal strife, often surrounding the mercurial Mr. Wenner, questions about its finances and the threat of MTV, which many thought would end it.", "paragraph_answer": "The plan in the magazine\u2019s 1970s heyday, said Joe Armstrong, its publisher and president during that period, \u201cwas to build Time-Life, do what Henry Luce did, but for a younger generation.\u201d Rolling Stone was breaking new ground, and printing things others would not print, he said. \u201cWe were covering rock \u2019n\u2019 roll music when your parents liked orchestra music,\u201d he said. \u201cWe were against the war in Vietnam, and everybody over 30 was for it. We were covering the drug culture. Nobody else was doing it.\u201d Tom Wolfe published his novel \u201cThe Bonfire of the Vanities\u201d in installments in the magazine. The photographer Annie Leibovitz became a star there. Richard Avedon traveled the country to shoot dozens of portraits of the people he felt ran America, a collection now with the Metropolitan Museum of Art . And Mr. Thompson made his own style of gonzo journalism. Rolling Stone has gone through tumultuous periods before, said Robert Draper, the author of \u201cRolling Stone Magazine: The Uncensored History.\u201d It has survived internal strife, often surrounding the mercurial Mr. Wenner, questions about its finances and the threat of MTV, which many thought would end it.", "sentence_answer": "Richard Avedon traveled the country to shoot dozens of portraits of the people he felt ran America, a collection now with the Metropolitan Museum of Art .", "paragraph_id": "5d7006d5c8e4820a9b66ac16"} +{"question": "who is in charge of Redstone's health decisions?", "paragraph": "In the suit, filed last week, Manuela Herzer, who once had a romantic relationship with Mr. Redstone, said that he had been unable to \u201ccommunicate reliably or competently manage his own health care\u201d for weeks. The petition specifically asked that the court decide whether Ms. Herzer was improperly removed on Oct. 16 from control of an advanced health care directive that put her in charge of his health decisions. Philippe Dauman, the chief executive of Viacom, has since been put in control of Mr. Redstone\u2019s medical care. The petition included personal details, including claims that Mr. Redstone is incontinent, requires suctioning to remove phlegm up to 20 times day, is \u201cobsessed with eating steak\u201d even while on a feeding tube, and \u201cdemands, to the extent he can be understood, to engage in sexual activity every day.\u201d", "answer": "Philippe Dauman,", "sentence": "Philippe Dauman, the chief executive of Viacom, has since been put in control of Mr. Redstone\u2019s medical care.", "paragraph_sentence": "In the suit, filed last week, Manuela Herzer, who once had a romantic relationship with Mr. Redstone, said that he had been unable to \u201ccommunicate reliably or competently manage his own health care\u201d for weeks. The petition specifically asked that the court decide whether Ms. Herzer was improperly removed on Oct. 16 from control of an advanced health care directive that put her in charge of his health decisions. Philippe Dauman, the chief executive of Viacom, has since been put in control of Mr. Redstone\u2019s medical care. The petition included personal details, including claims that Mr. Redstone is incontinent, requires suctioning to remove phlegm up to 20 times day, is \u201cobsessed with eating steak\u201d even while on a feeding tube, and \u201cdemands, to the extent he can be understood, to engage in sexual activity every day.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "In the suit, filed last week, Manuela Herzer, who once had a romantic relationship with Mr. Redstone, said that he had been unable to \u201ccommunicate reliably or competently manage his own health care\u201d for weeks. The petition specifically asked that the court decide whether Ms. Herzer was improperly removed on Oct. 16 from control of an advanced health care directive that put her in charge of his health decisions. Philippe Dauman, the chief executive of Viacom, has since been put in control of Mr. Redstone\u2019s medical care. The petition included personal details, including claims that Mr. Redstone is incontinent, requires suctioning to remove phlegm up to 20 times day, is \u201cobsessed with eating steak\u201d even while on a feeding tube, and \u201cdemands, to the extent he can be understood, to engage in sexual activity every day.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Philippe Dauman, the chief executive of Viacom, has since been put in control of Mr. Redstone\u2019s medical care.", "paragraph_id": "5d70251fc8e4820a9b66d1a5"} +{"question": "Who is Tom Freston?", "paragraph": "\u201cI think first of all that making mistakes is key to doing anything right,\u201d Gus Wenner said in response. Bringing on great people, he said, is paramount. \u201cGiven my youth or inexperience, that is probably more important than it would be otherwise.\u201d Those he seeks advice from, he said, include Tom Freston, the former chief executive of Viacom who many credit with helping make Vice into a rising media powerhouse. Gus Wenner has been hiring coders and designers, working on Wenner Media\u2019s digital infrastructure, seeking out partnerships and pushing more deeply into video. (One of the videos on the site features Mr. Wenner, in 2013, playing guitar and singing in a band he formed with Scout Willis, a daughter of the actor Bruce Willis.) He feels his father\u2019s focus is easily adaptable to a more current vision. \u201cOur mission is to tell great stories, and the lens of what we do just becomes much broader,\u201d he said.", "answer": "former chief executive of Viacom", "sentence": "Those he seeks advice from, he said, include Tom Freston, the former chief executive of Viacom who many credit with helping make Vice into a rising media powerhouse.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI think first of all that making mistakes is key to doing anything right,\u201d Gus Wenner said in response. Bringing on great people, he said, is paramount. \u201cGiven my youth or inexperience, that is probably more important than it would be otherwise.\u201d Those he seeks advice from, he said, include Tom Freston, the former chief executive of Viacom who many credit with helping make Vice into a rising media powerhouse. Gus Wenner has been hiring coders and designers, working on Wenner Media\u2019s digital infrastructure, seeking out partnerships and pushing more deeply into video. (One of the videos on the site features Mr. Wenner, in 2013, playing guitar and singing in a band he formed with Scout Willis, a daughter of the actor Bruce Willis.) He feels his father\u2019s focus is easily adaptable to a more current vision. \u201cOur mission is to tell great stories, and the lens of what we do just becomes much broader,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI think first of all that making mistakes is key to doing anything right,\u201d Gus Wenner said in response. Bringing on great people, he said, is paramount. \u201cGiven my youth or inexperience, that is probably more important than it would be otherwise.\u201d Those he seeks advice from, he said, include Tom Freston, the former chief executive of Viacom who many credit with helping make Vice into a rising media powerhouse. Gus Wenner has been hiring coders and designers, working on Wenner Media\u2019s digital infrastructure, seeking out partnerships and pushing more deeply into video. (One of the videos on the site features Mr. Wenner, in 2013, playing guitar and singing in a band he formed with Scout Willis, a daughter of the actor Bruce Willis.) He feels his father\u2019s focus is easily adaptable to a more current vision. \u201cOur mission is to tell great stories, and the lens of what we do just becomes much broader,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "Those he seeks advice from, he said, include Tom Freston, the former chief executive of Viacom who many credit with helping make Vice into a rising media powerhouse.", "paragraph_id": "5d700b80c8e4820a9b66b638"} +{"question": "what can lead to extreme pollution in a short time?", "paragraph": "Pope Francis is a wonderful example of how to be a truly good person. But if we had followed his line of analysis, neither the Asian economic miracle nor the technology-based American energy revolution would have happened. There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term (China), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence.", "answer": "industrialization", "sentence": "There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term (China), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence.", "paragraph_sentence": "Pope Francis is a wonderful example of how to be a truly good person. But if we had followed his line of analysis, neither the Asian economic miracle nor the technology-based American energy revolution would have happened. There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term (China), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence. ", "paragraph_answer": "Pope Francis is a wonderful example of how to be a truly good person. But if we had followed his line of analysis, neither the Asian economic miracle nor the technology-based American energy revolution would have happened. There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term (China), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence.", "sentence_answer": "There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term (China), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence.", "paragraph_id": "5d701229c8e4820a9b66be8d"} +{"question": "When people cut down on meat, of what did they eat more?", "paragraph": "So, as the guidelines have recommended cutting down on meat, especially red meat, this meant that many people began to increase their consumption of carbohydrates. Decades later, it\u2019s not hard to find evidence that this might have been a bad move. Many now believe that excessive carbohydrate consumption may be contributing to the obesity and diabetes epidemics. A Cochrane Review of all randomized controlled trials of reduced or modified dietary fat interventions found that replacing fat with carbohydrates does not protect even against cardiovascular problems, let alone death. Interestingly, the new dietary recommendations may acknowledge this as well, dropping the recommendation to limit overall fat consumption in favor of a more refined recommendation to limit only saturated fat. Even that recommendation is hotly contested by some, though. The committee is also bending a bit on salt, putting less emphasis on the 1,500-milligram daily limit on sodium for special populations, in light of the mounting evidence that too little sodium may be as bad as too much, if not worse.", "answer": "carbohydrates", "sentence": "So, as the guidelines have recommended cutting down on meat, especially red meat, this meant that many people began to increase their consumption of carbohydrates .", "paragraph_sentence": " So, as the guidelines have recommended cutting down on meat, especially red meat, this meant that many people began to increase their consumption of carbohydrates . Decades later, it\u2019s not hard to find evidence that this might have been a bad move. Many now believe that excessive carbohydrate consumption may be contributing to the obesity and diabetes epidemics. A Cochrane Review of all randomized controlled trials of reduced or modified dietary fat interventions found that replacing fat with carbohydrates does not protect even against cardiovascular problems, let alone death. Interestingly, the new dietary recommendations may acknowledge this as well, dropping the recommendation to limit overall fat consumption in favor of a more refined recommendation to limit only saturated fat. Even that recommendation is hotly contested by some, though. The committee is also bending a bit on salt, putting less emphasis on the 1,500-milligram daily limit on sodium for special populations, in light of the mounting evidence that too little sodium may be as bad as too much, if not worse.", "paragraph_answer": "So, as the guidelines have recommended cutting down on meat, especially red meat, this meant that many people began to increase their consumption of carbohydrates . Decades later, it\u2019s not hard to find evidence that this might have been a bad move. Many now believe that excessive carbohydrate consumption may be contributing to the obesity and diabetes epidemics. A Cochrane Review of all randomized controlled trials of reduced or modified dietary fat interventions found that replacing fat with carbohydrates does not protect even against cardiovascular problems, let alone death. Interestingly, the new dietary recommendations may acknowledge this as well, dropping the recommendation to limit overall fat consumption in favor of a more refined recommendation to limit only saturated fat. Even that recommendation is hotly contested by some, though. The committee is also bending a bit on salt, putting less emphasis on the 1,500-milligram daily limit on sodium for special populations, in light of the mounting evidence that too little sodium may be as bad as too much, if not worse.", "sentence_answer": "So, as the guidelines have recommended cutting down on meat, especially red meat, this meant that many people began to increase their consumption of carbohydrates .", "paragraph_id": "5d701c85c8e4820a9b66c7f7"} +{"question": "Who authored the book Great Yorkshire Beer?", "paragraph": "\u201cEverybody in the know drinks halves,\u201d said Leigh Linley, author of \u201cGreat Yorkshire Beer,\u201d when I met him in the nearby city of Leeds the next day, referring to the half-pint serving glass, instead of the more traditional imperial pint. \u201cWith the amount of choice we have in Yorkshire, it is perfectly acceptable to drink halves and treat each night out as a giant beer festival.\u201d Indeed, I\u2019d heard for years about the pleasures of Yorkshire beer, starting with storied ale breweries like Samuel Smith\u2019s, founded in 1758, and Timothy Taylor, founded a century later. In addition to traditional English ales, the county is also home to up-and-coming craft breweries that produce more modern styles, as well as some of Britain\u2019s \u2019s most beloved pubs and bars. Armed with Mr. Linley\u2019s book, I decided to take a six-day trip across much of West, South and North Yorkshire this spring, and soak up a sense of this northern English county and its renowned beer culture.", "answer": "Leigh Linley", "sentence": "\u201cEverybody in the know drinks halves,\u201d said Leigh Linley , author of \u201cGreat Yorkshire Beer,\u201d when I met him in the nearby city of Leeds the next day, referring to the half-pint serving glass, instead of the more traditional imperial pint.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cEverybody in the know drinks halves,\u201d said Leigh Linley , author of \u201cGreat Yorkshire Beer,\u201d when I met him in the nearby city of Leeds the next day, referring to the half-pint serving glass, instead of the more traditional imperial pint. \u201cWith the amount of choice we have in Yorkshire, it is perfectly acceptable to drink halves and treat each night out as a giant beer festival.\u201d Indeed, I\u2019d heard for years about the pleasures of Yorkshire beer, starting with storied ale breweries like Samuel Smith\u2019s, founded in 1758, and Timothy Taylor, founded a century later. In addition to traditional English ales, the county is also home to up-and-coming craft breweries that produce more modern styles, as well as some of Britain\u2019s \u2019s most beloved pubs and bars. Armed with Mr. Linley\u2019s book, I decided to take a six-day trip across much of West, South and North Yorkshire this spring, and soak up a sense of this northern English county and its renowned beer culture.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cEverybody in the know drinks halves,\u201d said Leigh Linley , author of \u201cGreat Yorkshire Beer,\u201d when I met him in the nearby city of Leeds the next day, referring to the half-pint serving glass, instead of the more traditional imperial pint. \u201cWith the amount of choice we have in Yorkshire, it is perfectly acceptable to drink halves and treat each night out as a giant beer festival.\u201d Indeed, I\u2019d heard for years about the pleasures of Yorkshire beer, starting with storied ale breweries like Samuel Smith\u2019s, founded in 1758, and Timothy Taylor, founded a century later. In addition to traditional English ales, the county is also home to up-and-coming craft breweries that produce more modern styles, as well as some of Britain\u2019s \u2019s most beloved pubs and bars. Armed with Mr. Linley\u2019s book, I decided to take a six-day trip across much of West, South and North Yorkshire this spring, and soak up a sense of this northern English county and its renowned beer culture.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cEverybody in the know drinks halves,\u201d said Leigh Linley , author of \u201cGreat Yorkshire Beer,\u201d when I met him in the nearby city of Leeds the next day, referring to the half-pint serving glass, instead of the more traditional imperial pint.", "paragraph_id": "5d70367fc8e4820a9b66e028"} +{"question": "What ethnic descent is Ms. Leong of?", "paragraph": "Nevertheless, even as parts of Park Slope are increasingly buffed to a high polish, the area still offers a variety of experience. After living much of the last six decades in the North Slope townhouse her seamstress mother had bought in 1949, Lorraine Leong, a health care administrator, decamped to the southwestern fringe of the neighborhood in 2012, paying $693,000 for a two-bedroom condominium on 12th Street and Fourth Avenue, a thoroughfare where blocky residential buildings have sprung up since a 2003 rezoning. Her son, a \u201cfoodie\u201d who lives upstairs, keeps her informed, she said, about \u201call the great restaurants opening up\u201d on Fifth Avenue and Flatbush Avenue. \u201cFourth and Fifth Avenues have that diverse mix that Brooklyn always had, and it\u2019s very appealing to me,\u201d said Ms. Leong, who is of Chinese descent. \u201cThere are Italians and Latinos still around, and a guy on my corner sells tacos from a little stand for a dollar. You don\u2019t want to lose that.\u201d", "answer": "Chinese", "sentence": "\u201cFourth and Fifth Avenues have that diverse mix that Brooklyn always had, and it\u2019s very appealing to me,\u201d said Ms. Leong, who is of Chinese descent.", "paragraph_sentence": "Nevertheless, even as parts of Park Slope are increasingly buffed to a high polish, the area still offers a variety of experience. After living much of the last six decades in the North Slope townhouse her seamstress mother had bought in 1949, Lorraine Leong, a health care administrator, decamped to the southwestern fringe of the neighborhood in 2012, paying $693,000 for a two-bedroom condominium on 12th Street and Fourth Avenue, a thoroughfare where blocky residential buildings have sprung up since a 2003 rezoning. Her son, a \u201cfoodie\u201d who lives upstairs, keeps her informed, she said, about \u201call the great restaurants opening up\u201d on Fifth Avenue and Flatbush Avenue. \u201cFourth and Fifth Avenues have that diverse mix that Brooklyn always had, and it\u2019s very appealing to me,\u201d said Ms. Leong, who is of Chinese descent. \u201cThere are Italians and Latinos still around, and a guy on my corner sells tacos from a little stand for a dollar. You don\u2019t want to lose that.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Nevertheless, even as parts of Park Slope are increasingly buffed to a high polish, the area still offers a variety of experience. After living much of the last six decades in the North Slope townhouse her seamstress mother had bought in 1949, Lorraine Leong, a health care administrator, decamped to the southwestern fringe of the neighborhood in 2012, paying $693,000 for a two-bedroom condominium on 12th Street and Fourth Avenue, a thoroughfare where blocky residential buildings have sprung up since a 2003 rezoning. Her son, a \u201cfoodie\u201d who lives upstairs, keeps her informed, she said, about \u201call the great restaurants opening up\u201d on Fifth Avenue and Flatbush Avenue. \u201cFourth and Fifth Avenues have that diverse mix that Brooklyn always had, and it\u2019s very appealing to me,\u201d said Ms. Leong, who is of Chinese descent. \u201cThere are Italians and Latinos still around, and a guy on my corner sells tacos from a little stand for a dollar. You don\u2019t want to lose that.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cFourth and Fifth Avenues have that diverse mix that Brooklyn always had, and it\u2019s very appealing to me,\u201d said Ms. Leong, who is of Chinese descent.", "paragraph_id": "5d708db0c8e4820a9b66f553"} +{"question": "The ban would of affected people on what list?", "paragraph": "Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list? Nah. Let\u2019s go for it.", "answer": "terrorist watch", "sentence": "Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list?", "paragraph_sentence": " Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list? Nah. Let\u2019s go for it.", "paragraph_answer": "Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list? Nah. Let\u2019s go for it.", "sentence_answer": "Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list?", "paragraph_id": "5d7017a4c8e4820a9b66c3a6"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700b49c8e4820a9b66b5e7"} +{"question": "Who did Kaba find to be very engaging and always smiling?", "paragraph": "\u201cHe knew the menu, so he took charge with the ordering, but not in an arrogant, controlling way,\u201d she said. \u201cHe was very polite, and I thought to myself that unless I find out that this guy is totally crazy, he\u2019s the perfect guy for me.\u201d Mr. Kaba found Ms. Dawson to be very engaging and always smiling. \u201cShe made me feel very comfortable,\u201d he said. So they planned a second date a few days later, at the driving range at Chelsea Piers, where they shared their first kiss. \u201cI\u2019m an average golfer, but she didn\u2019t know how to play the game at all, so I looked even better in her eyes,\u201d Mr. Kaba said.", "answer": "Ms. Dawson", "sentence": "Mr. Kaba found Ms. Dawson to be very engaging and always smiling.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cHe knew the menu, so he took charge with the ordering, but not in an arrogant, controlling way,\u201d she said. \u201cHe was very polite, and I thought to myself that unless I find out that this guy is totally crazy, he\u2019s the perfect guy for me.\u201d Mr. Kaba found Ms. Dawson to be very engaging and always smiling. \u201cShe made me feel very comfortable,\u201d he said. So they planned a second date a few days later, at the driving range at Chelsea Piers, where they shared their first kiss. \u201cI\u2019m an average golfer, but she didn\u2019t know how to play the game at all, so I looked even better in her eyes,\u201d Mr. Kaba said.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cHe knew the menu, so he took charge with the ordering, but not in an arrogant, controlling way,\u201d she said. \u201cHe was very polite, and I thought to myself that unless I find out that this guy is totally crazy, he\u2019s the perfect guy for me.\u201d Mr. Kaba found Ms. Dawson to be very engaging and always smiling. \u201cShe made me feel very comfortable,\u201d he said. So they planned a second date a few days later, at the driving range at Chelsea Piers, where they shared their first kiss. \u201cI\u2019m an average golfer, but she didn\u2019t know how to play the game at all, so I looked even better in her eyes,\u201d Mr. Kaba said.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Kaba found Ms. Dawson to be very engaging and always smiling.", "paragraph_id": "5d702732c8e4820a9b66d4f7"} +{"question": "Who is one of David Cameron's supporters?", "paragraph": "The right-wing Sun, still Britain\u2019s most popular newspaper, said in an editorial that \u201cif there are possible votes in it, Miliband\u2019s there \u2014 spouting off in a comical Mockney accent,\u201d a fake Cockney accent, \u201cabout sticking it to the tax-dodging corporations.\u201d Prime Minister David Cameron, the Conservative Party leader, said earlier: \u201cRussell Brand is a joke. Ed Miliband, to hang out with Russell Brand, he\u2019s a joke.\u201d But Mr. Miliband was unbowed. He told reporters, \u201cI will do anything and engage with anyone to try and persuade people to vote.\u201d And his supporters, including the Guardian commentator Owen Jones, praised his effort to reach those Britons who feel alienated by politicians and the system in general. In a coda to the interview, Mr. Brand praised Mr. Miliband for being \u201cprepared to come round here and talk to us.\u201d", "answer": "Owen Jones", "sentence": "And his supporters, including the Guardian commentator Owen Jones , praised his effort to reach those Britons who feel alienated by politicians and the system in general.", "paragraph_sentence": "The right-wing Sun, still Britain\u2019s most popular newspaper, said in an editorial that \u201cif there are possible votes in it, Miliband\u2019s there \u2014 spouting off in a comical Mockney accent,\u201d a fake Cockney accent, \u201cabout sticking it to the tax-dodging corporations.\u201d Prime Minister David Cameron, the Conservative Party leader, said earlier: \u201cRussell Brand is a joke. Ed Miliband, to hang out with Russell Brand, he\u2019s a joke.\u201d But Mr. Miliband was unbowed. He told reporters, \u201cI will do anything and engage with anyone to try and persuade people to vote.\u201d And his supporters, including the Guardian commentator Owen Jones , praised his effort to reach those Britons who feel alienated by politicians and the system in general. In a coda to the interview, Mr. Brand praised Mr. Miliband for being \u201cprepared to come round here and talk to us.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The right-wing Sun, still Britain\u2019s most popular newspaper, said in an editorial that \u201cif there are possible votes in it, Miliband\u2019s there \u2014 spouting off in a comical Mockney accent,\u201d a fake Cockney accent, \u201cabout sticking it to the tax-dodging corporations.\u201d Prime Minister David Cameron, the Conservative Party leader, said earlier: \u201cRussell Brand is a joke. Ed Miliband, to hang out with Russell Brand, he\u2019s a joke.\u201d But Mr. Miliband was unbowed. He told reporters, \u201cI will do anything and engage with anyone to try and persuade people to vote.\u201d And his supporters, including the Guardian commentator Owen Jones , praised his effort to reach those Britons who feel alienated by politicians and the system in general. In a coda to the interview, Mr. Brand praised Mr. Miliband for being \u201cprepared to come round here and talk to us.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "And his supporters, including the Guardian commentator Owen Jones , praised his effort to reach those Britons who feel alienated by politicians and the system in general.", "paragraph_id": "5d70545bc8e4820a9b66ec68"} +{"question": "How far was Emmett thrown when struck by a car?", "paragraph": "In her pictures of her own family \u2014 like \u201cDamaged Child,\u201d with its implication of battering, and \u201cFlour Paste,\u201d in which Jessie\u2019s legs resemble a burn victim\u2019s \u2014 Mann punches the buttons of her viewers. Upon discovering that she has stage-managed a scene, some people feel cheated, as if their emotions have been trifled with. \u201cI hope you can get past that,\u201d she argues. \u201cYou learn something about yourself and your own fears. Everyone surely has all those fears that I have for my children.\u201d Mann has been criticized for treating violence with an esthete\u2019s dispassion, for bringing out the subtle texture of blood and bruises without offering a clear political statement along the way. The imagery of death fascinates her. A picture of Virginia with a black eye moved her for a long time because \u201cyou couldn\u2019t tell if she was living or dead. It looked like one of those Victorian post-mortem photographs.\u201d In 1987, Emmett was struck by a car and thrown 50 feet. Though he escaped critical injury, Mann saw the real thing as a warning not to pretend again. Still, \u201cImmediate Family\u201d includes a picture from 1989 that may be the most gruesome so far: a nude Virginia seeming to have hanged herself by a rope from a tree.", "answer": "50 feet", "sentence": "In 1987, Emmett was struck by a car and thrown 50 feet .", "paragraph_sentence": "In her pictures of her own family \u2014 like \u201cDamaged Child,\u201d with its implication of battering, and \u201cFlour Paste,\u201d in which Jessie\u2019s legs resemble a burn victim\u2019s \u2014 Mann punches the buttons of her viewers. Upon discovering that she has stage-managed a scene, some people feel cheated, as if their emotions have been trifled with. \u201cI hope you can get past that,\u201d she argues. \u201cYou learn something about yourself and your own fears. Everyone surely has all those fears that I have for my children.\u201d Mann has been criticized for treating violence with an esthete\u2019s dispassion, for bringing out the subtle texture of blood and bruises without offering a clear political statement along the way. The imagery of death fascinates her. A picture of Virginia with a black eye moved her for a long time because \u201cyou couldn\u2019t tell if she was living or dead. It looked like one of those Victorian post-mortem photographs.\u201d In 1987, Emmett was struck by a car and thrown 50 feet . Though he escaped critical injury, Mann saw the real thing as a warning not to pretend again. Still, \u201cImmediate Family\u201d includes a picture from 1989 that may be the most gruesome so far: a nude Virginia seeming to have hanged herself by a rope from a tree.", "paragraph_answer": "In her pictures of her own family \u2014 like \u201cDamaged Child,\u201d with its implication of battering, and \u201cFlour Paste,\u201d in which Jessie\u2019s legs resemble a burn victim\u2019s \u2014 Mann punches the buttons of her viewers. Upon discovering that she has stage-managed a scene, some people feel cheated, as if their emotions have been trifled with. \u201cI hope you can get past that,\u201d she argues. \u201cYou learn something about yourself and your own fears. Everyone surely has all those fears that I have for my children.\u201d Mann has been criticized for treating violence with an esthete\u2019s dispassion, for bringing out the subtle texture of blood and bruises without offering a clear political statement along the way. The imagery of death fascinates her. A picture of Virginia with a black eye moved her for a long time because \u201cyou couldn\u2019t tell if she was living or dead. It looked like one of those Victorian post-mortem photographs.\u201d In 1987, Emmett was struck by a car and thrown 50 feet . Though he escaped critical injury, Mann saw the real thing as a warning not to pretend again. Still, \u201cImmediate Family\u201d includes a picture from 1989 that may be the most gruesome so far: a nude Virginia seeming to have hanged herself by a rope from a tree.", "sentence_answer": "In 1987, Emmett was struck by a car and thrown 50 feet .", "paragraph_id": "5d700a93c8e4820a9b66b498"} +{"question": "What did President Obama once say?", "paragraph": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "answer": "elections have consequences.", "sentence": "As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014.", "paragraph_sentence": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "paragraph_answer": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "sentence_answer": "As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014.", "paragraph_id": "5d705881c8e4820a9b66edc4"} +{"question": "How many homers does Young have?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe pitching staff is probably the biggest deal,\u201d Yankees outfielder Chris Young said. \u201cThe back-end bullpen guys, I think that plays a big part in how you feel as the game\u2019s progressing. If you\u2019re up or down a couple of runs, do you feel like you\u2019re still in the game? If you\u2019re up by three runs but you\u2019re still not really sure if you have a hold on the game yet, you start to press, and things happen.\u201d Young was an All-Star for Arizona in 2010, when he was 26. He may never reach that level again, but he has hit well for the Yankees and is almost an everyday player. Manager Joe Girardi has found a way to get 10 players at least 70 plate appearances each, an important skill with a veteran roster. Young was out of Sunday\u2019s starting lineup, but even after a pinch-hit strikeout, he was hitting .313 with six homers and 12 runs batted in. He offered no reason for his improvement from recent seasons other than the comfort of playing for the Yankees, with whom he enjoys the daily grind.", "answer": "six homers", "sentence": "Young was out of Sunday\u2019s starting lineup, but even after a pinch-hit strikeout, he was hitting .313 with six homers and 12 runs batted in.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe pitching staff is probably the biggest deal,\u201d Yankees outfielder Chris Young said. \u201cThe back-end bullpen guys, I think that plays a big part in how you feel as the game\u2019s progressing. If you\u2019re up or down a couple of runs, do you feel like you\u2019re still in the game? If you\u2019re up by three runs but you\u2019re still not really sure if you have a hold on the game yet, you start to press, and things happen.\u201d Young was an All-Star for Arizona in 2010, when he was 26. He may never reach that level again, but he has hit well for the Yankees and is almost an everyday player. Manager Joe Girardi has found a way to get 10 players at least 70 plate appearances each, an important skill with a veteran roster. Young was out of Sunday\u2019s starting lineup, but even after a pinch-hit strikeout, he was hitting .313 with six homers and 12 runs batted in. He offered no reason for his improvement from recent seasons other than the comfort of playing for the Yankees, with whom he enjoys the daily grind.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe pitching staff is probably the biggest deal,\u201d Yankees outfielder Chris Young said. \u201cThe back-end bullpen guys, I think that plays a big part in how you feel as the game\u2019s progressing. If you\u2019re up or down a couple of runs, do you feel like you\u2019re still in the game? If you\u2019re up by three runs but you\u2019re still not really sure if you have a hold on the game yet, you start to press, and things happen.\u201d Young was an All-Star for Arizona in 2010, when he was 26. He may never reach that level again, but he has hit well for the Yankees and is almost an everyday player. Manager Joe Girardi has found a way to get 10 players at least 70 plate appearances each, an important skill with a veteran roster. Young was out of Sunday\u2019s starting lineup, but even after a pinch-hit strikeout, he was hitting .313 with six homers and 12 runs batted in. He offered no reason for his improvement from recent seasons other than the comfort of playing for the Yankees, with whom he enjoys the daily grind.", "sentence_answer": "Young was out of Sunday\u2019s starting lineup, but even after a pinch-hit strikeout, he was hitting .313 with six homers and 12 runs batted in.", "paragraph_id": "5d702c5cc8e4820a9b66d9ff"} +{"question": "How old is Rep. Ryan?", "paragraph": "Of course, most lawmakers in Washington spend long periods away from family. But by declaring the preservation of his family life a key concern in taking on a job that is a seven-day-a-week venture \u2014 the sort of job he sought once before, in 2012, when he was the Republican vice-presidential nominee \u2014 Mr. Ryan, 45, may be ushering in a new era for a position traditionally held by older congressmen who spent years rising through party ranks. \u201cIn U.S. society, we often talk about \u2018working moms\u2019 but not about \u2018working dads,\u2019 and the work-life policies that organizations do provide are often considered as being mainly for women,\u201d said Erika Kirby a professor of communication studies and an authority on work-life issues at Creighton University in Omaha. \u201cSo I think Representative Ryan\u2019s call for protecting his family time within a demanding job is extremely significant.\u201d", "answer": "45", "sentence": "But by declaring the preservation of his family life a key concern in taking on a job that is a seven-day-a-week venture \u2014 the sort of job he sought once before, in 2012, when he was the Republican vice-presidential nominee \u2014 Mr. Ryan, 45 , may be ushering in a new era for a position traditionally held by older congressmen who spent years rising through party ranks.", "paragraph_sentence": "Of course, most lawmakers in Washington spend long periods away from family. But by declaring the preservation of his family life a key concern in taking on a job that is a seven-day-a-week venture \u2014 the sort of job he sought once before, in 2012, when he was the Republican vice-presidential nominee \u2014 Mr. Ryan, 45 , may be ushering in a new era for a position traditionally held by older congressmen who spent years rising through party ranks. \u201cIn U.S. society, we often talk about \u2018working moms\u2019 but not about \u2018working dads,\u2019 and the work-life policies that organizations do provide are often considered as being mainly for women,\u201d said Erika Kirby a professor of communication studies and an authority on work-life issues at Creighton University in Omaha. \u201cSo I think Representative Ryan\u2019s call for protecting his family time within a demanding job is extremely significant.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Of course, most lawmakers in Washington spend long periods away from family. But by declaring the preservation of his family life a key concern in taking on a job that is a seven-day-a-week venture \u2014 the sort of job he sought once before, in 2012, when he was the Republican vice-presidential nominee \u2014 Mr. Ryan, 45 , may be ushering in a new era for a position traditionally held by older congressmen who spent years rising through party ranks. \u201cIn U.S. society, we often talk about \u2018working moms\u2019 but not about \u2018working dads,\u2019 and the work-life policies that organizations do provide are often considered as being mainly for women,\u201d said Erika Kirby a professor of communication studies and an authority on work-life issues at Creighton University in Omaha. \u201cSo I think Representative Ryan\u2019s call for protecting his family time within a demanding job is extremely significant.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "But by declaring the preservation of his family life a key concern in taking on a job that is a seven-day-a-week venture \u2014 the sort of job he sought once before, in 2012, when he was the Republican vice-presidential nominee \u2014 Mr. Ryan, 45 , may be ushering in a new era for a position traditionally held by older congressmen who spent years rising through party ranks.", "paragraph_id": "5d700632c8e4820a9b66aabb"} +{"question": "Who will host the European soccer championship?", "paragraph": "\u201cI have decided that he is not available for selection,\u201d the president of France\u2019s soccer federation, No\u00ebl Le Gra\u00ebt, said Thursday. He called dropping Benzema a \u201cheartbreaking\u201d decision. Benzema cannot play for France, Le Gra\u00ebt said, until the case is resolved. France will host the European soccer championship in June, the biggest tournament held there since the 1998 World Cup. A tape obtained by Europe 1 Radio of a conversation between Benzema and a friend included several apparently damning comments, the BBC reported, including Benzema\u2019s saying that he said to Valbuena, \u201cIf you want the video to be destroyed, my friend comes up to see you in Lyon and you sort it out face to face with him.\u201d", "answer": "France", "sentence": "\u201cI have decided that he is not available for selection,\u201d the president of France \u2019s soccer federation, No\u00ebl Le Gra\u00ebt, said Thursday.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cI have decided that he is not available for selection,\u201d the president of France \u2019s soccer federation, No\u00ebl Le Gra\u00ebt, said Thursday. He called dropping Benzema a \u201cheartbreaking\u201d decision. Benzema cannot play for France, Le Gra\u00ebt said, until the case is resolved. France will host the European soccer championship in June, the biggest tournament held there since the 1998 World Cup. A tape obtained by Europe 1 Radio of a conversation between Benzema and a friend included several apparently damning comments, the BBC reported, including Benzema\u2019s saying that he said to Valbuena, \u201cIf you want the video to be destroyed, my friend comes up to see you in Lyon and you sort it out face to face with him.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI have decided that he is not available for selection,\u201d the president of France \u2019s soccer federation, No\u00ebl Le Gra\u00ebt, said Thursday. He called dropping Benzema a \u201cheartbreaking\u201d decision. Benzema cannot play for France, Le Gra\u00ebt said, until the case is resolved. France will host the European soccer championship in June, the biggest tournament held there since the 1998 World Cup. A tape obtained by Europe 1 Radio of a conversation between Benzema and a friend included several apparently damning comments, the BBC reported, including Benzema\u2019s saying that he said to Valbuena, \u201cIf you want the video to be destroyed, my friend comes up to see you in Lyon and you sort it out face to face with him.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI have decided that he is not available for selection,\u201d the president of France \u2019s soccer federation, No\u00ebl Le Gra\u00ebt, said Thursday.", "paragraph_id": "5d7005b7c8e4820a9b66a970"} +{"question": "What did Mr. Christie fear New Jersey would be responsible for under the killed 2010 plan?", "paragraph": "Stephen J. Gardner, Amtrak\u2019s executive vice president for the Northeast Corridor business development, said, \u201cThe investment levels necessary to stabilize and improve the Northeast Corridor need to grow substantially both from New Jersey Transit and others if the railroad\u2019s performance is to get better.\u201d In a radio interview last week, Mr. Christie defended his decision in 2010 to kill a plan to build new tunnels under the Hudson River, saying he feared New Jersey would be responsible for cost overruns. Mr. Christie, a Republican who is running for president, said if he got the job, he would ask his transportation secretary and the governors of New York and New Jersey to each give an equal share toward building new tunnels.", "answer": "cost overruns", "sentence": "In a radio interview last week, Mr. Christie defended his decision in 2010 to kill a plan to build new tunnels under the Hudson River, saying he feared New Jersey would be responsible for cost overruns .", "paragraph_sentence": "Stephen J. Gardner, Amtrak\u2019s executive vice president for the Northeast Corridor business development, said, \u201cThe investment levels necessary to stabilize and improve the Northeast Corridor need to grow substantially both from New Jersey Transit and others if the railroad\u2019s performance is to get better.\u201d In a radio interview last week, Mr. Christie defended his decision in 2010 to kill a plan to build new tunnels under the Hudson River, saying he feared New Jersey would be responsible for cost overruns . Mr. Christie, a Republican who is running for president, said if he got the job, he would ask his transportation secretary and the governors of New York and New Jersey to each give an equal share toward building new tunnels.", "paragraph_answer": "Stephen J. Gardner, Amtrak\u2019s executive vice president for the Northeast Corridor business development, said, \u201cThe investment levels necessary to stabilize and improve the Northeast Corridor need to grow substantially both from New Jersey Transit and others if the railroad\u2019s performance is to get better.\u201d In a radio interview last week, Mr. Christie defended his decision in 2010 to kill a plan to build new tunnels under the Hudson River, saying he feared New Jersey would be responsible for cost overruns . Mr. Christie, a Republican who is running for president, said if he got the job, he would ask his transportation secretary and the governors of New York and New Jersey to each give an equal share toward building new tunnels.", "sentence_answer": "In a radio interview last week, Mr. Christie defended his decision in 2010 to kill a plan to build new tunnels under the Hudson River, saying he feared New Jersey would be responsible for cost overruns .", "paragraph_id": "5d702258c8e4820a9b66ce5e"} +{"question": "Who gave a statement in the article?", "paragraph": "Under the agreement, the Port Authority and Amtrak will provide staff for the corporation, and the authority will arrange for office space and logistical support. The corporation will own the new tunnel and enter into operating agreements with railroads to use it. Mr. Foxx said the governing structure would help advance the project quickly. \u201cWhen I sounded the alarm this summer, my goal was to get the necessary parties to the table,\u201d he said. \u201cNow, that table is set.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Foxx", "sentence": "Mr. Foxx said the governing structure would help advance the project quickly.", "paragraph_sentence": "Under the agreement, the Port Authority and Amtrak will provide staff for the corporation, and the authority will arrange for office space and logistical support. The corporation will own the new tunnel and enter into operating agreements with railroads to use it. Mr. Foxx said the governing structure would help advance the project quickly. \u201cWhen I sounded the alarm this summer, my goal was to get the necessary parties to the table,\u201d he said. \u201cNow, that table is set.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Under the agreement, the Port Authority and Amtrak will provide staff for the corporation, and the authority will arrange for office space and logistical support. The corporation will own the new tunnel and enter into operating agreements with railroads to use it. Mr. Foxx said the governing structure would help advance the project quickly. \u201cWhen I sounded the alarm this summer, my goal was to get the necessary parties to the table,\u201d he said. \u201cNow, that table is set.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Mr. Foxx said the governing structure would help advance the project quickly.", "paragraph_id": "5d700563c8e4820a9b66a8e0"} +{"question": "What militias have made rapid inroads?", "paragraph": "This border-straddling ISIS sanctuary must be eliminated, just as the Afghan safe haven of Al Qaeda was after 9/11 (before the disastrous distraction of Iraq). Raqqa is much closer to Europe than Tora Bora. ISIS has effective terrorists but indifferent soldiers. They are beatable. Kurdish militias \u2014 not the U.S. military by any means \u2014 have made rapid inroads. They and other local forces can help. But Obama does not have the will. \u201cLet\u2019s assume we send 50,000 troops into Syria,\u201d he said in Turkey. \u201cWhat happens when there\u2019s a terrorist attack generated from Yemen?\u201d That\u2019s a straw-man game unworthy of the president. Its subtext: Because you can\u2019t solve all the problems of the world, solve none. ISIS in Syria and Iraq is the core of the terrorist threat to Europe and America today. So destroy it.", "answer": "Kurdish", "sentence": "Kurdish militias \u2014 not the U.S. military by any means \u2014 have made rapid inroads.", "paragraph_sentence": "This border-straddling ISIS sanctuary must be eliminated, just as the Afghan safe haven of Al Qaeda was after 9/11 (before the disastrous distraction of Iraq). Raqqa is much closer to Europe than Tora Bora. ISIS has effective terrorists but indifferent soldiers. They are beatable. Kurdish militias \u2014 not the U.S. military by any means \u2014 have made rapid inroads. They and other local forces can help. But Obama does not have the will. \u201cLet\u2019s assume we send 50,000 troops into Syria,\u201d he said in Turkey. \u201cWhat happens when there\u2019s a terrorist attack generated from Yemen?\u201d That\u2019s a straw-man game unworthy of the president. Its subtext: Because you can\u2019t solve all the problems of the world, solve none. ISIS in Syria and Iraq is the core of the terrorist threat to Europe and America today. So destroy it.", "paragraph_answer": "This border-straddling ISIS sanctuary must be eliminated, just as the Afghan safe haven of Al Qaeda was after 9/11 (before the disastrous distraction of Iraq). Raqqa is much closer to Europe than Tora Bora. ISIS has effective terrorists but indifferent soldiers. They are beatable. Kurdish militias \u2014 not the U.S. military by any means \u2014 have made rapid inroads. They and other local forces can help. But Obama does not have the will. \u201cLet\u2019s assume we send 50,000 troops into Syria,\u201d he said in Turkey. \u201cWhat happens when there\u2019s a terrorist attack generated from Yemen?\u201d That\u2019s a straw-man game unworthy of the president. Its subtext: Because you can\u2019t solve all the problems of the world, solve none. ISIS in Syria and Iraq is the core of the terrorist threat to Europe and America today. So destroy it.", "sentence_answer": " Kurdish militias \u2014 not the U.S. military by any means \u2014 have made rapid inroads.", "paragraph_id": "5d703d51c8e4820a9b66e378"} +{"question": "What did Joan Shelley devote much of her set to?", "paragraph": "Although \u201cElectric Ursa\u201d was released just last September, Ms. Shelley devoted much of her set to new songs that were no less resonant and, perhaps, a little more concrete. One, with a melody that would have suited the Carter Family, captured the moment in a breakup when the thought of freedom balances a sense of loss. In that song, and throughout the set, she was open yet composed, never pushing or overplaying the music; she let the songs speak for themselves. With its quiet purity, the music held the club audience rapt.", "answer": "new songs", "sentence": "Although \u201cElectric Ursa\u201d was released just last September, Ms. Shelley devoted much of her set to new songs that were no less resonant and, perhaps, a little more concrete.", "paragraph_sentence": " Although \u201cElectric Ursa\u201d was released just last September, Ms. Shelley devoted much of her set to new songs that were no less resonant and, perhaps, a little more concrete. One, with a melody that would have suited the Carter Family, captured the moment in a breakup when the thought of freedom balances a sense of loss. In that song, and throughout the set, she was open yet composed, never pushing or overplaying the music; she let the songs speak for themselves. With its quiet purity, the music held the club audience rapt.", "paragraph_answer": "Although \u201cElectric Ursa\u201d was released just last September, Ms. Shelley devoted much of her set to new songs that were no less resonant and, perhaps, a little more concrete. One, with a melody that would have suited the Carter Family, captured the moment in a breakup when the thought of freedom balances a sense of loss. In that song, and throughout the set, she was open yet composed, never pushing or overplaying the music; she let the songs speak for themselves. With its quiet purity, the music held the club audience rapt.", "sentence_answer": "Although \u201cElectric Ursa\u201d was released just last September, Ms. Shelley devoted much of her set to new songs that were no less resonant and, perhaps, a little more concrete.", "paragraph_id": "5d7045a9c8e4820a9b66e7e8"} +{"question": "Who missed two free throws?", "paragraph": "\u201cI\u2019ve always felt like that was part of my job as the point guard,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd truthfully, in my head, I am trying to stay calm and be sure I\u2019m thinking straight.\u201d Trice\u2019s measured approach to the game was evident at least three times in the regional final. Near the end of regulation, after his teammate Marvin Clark Jr. missed two free throws, shots that might have clinched the victory for Michigan State, Trice went to Clark at the next whistle \u2014 with the game still very much in doubt. \u201cI told him that those misses weren\u2019t going to lose us the game,\u201d Trice said. \u201cI told him he was going to get another big rebound or another chance to help us win. We needed him now so we could win.\u201d", "answer": "teammate Marvin Clark Jr", "sentence": "Near the end of regulation, after his teammate Marvin Clark Jr .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI\u2019ve always felt like that was part of my job as the point guard,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd truthfully, in my head, I am trying to stay calm and be sure I\u2019m thinking straight.\u201d Trice\u2019s measured approach to the game was evident at least three times in the regional final. Near the end of regulation, after his teammate Marvin Clark Jr . missed two free throws, shots that might have clinched the victory for Michigan State, Trice went to Clark at the next whistle \u2014 with the game still very much in doubt. \u201cI told him that those misses weren\u2019t going to lose us the game,\u201d Trice said. \u201cI told him he was going to get another big rebound or another chance to help us win. We needed him now so we could win.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI\u2019ve always felt like that was part of my job as the point guard,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd truthfully, in my head, I am trying to stay calm and be sure I\u2019m thinking straight.\u201d Trice\u2019s measured approach to the game was evident at least three times in the regional final. Near the end of regulation, after his teammate Marvin Clark Jr . missed two free throws, shots that might have clinched the victory for Michigan State, Trice went to Clark at the next whistle \u2014 with the game still very much in doubt. \u201cI told him that those misses weren\u2019t going to lose us the game,\u201d Trice said. \u201cI told him he was going to get another big rebound or another chance to help us win. We needed him now so we could win.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Near the end of regulation, after his teammate Marvin Clark Jr .", "paragraph_id": "5d700527c8e4820a9b66a888"} +{"question": "What did Mr Baquet think they too readily agreed to as far as government requests?", "paragraph": "The revelations about American wrongdoing in the Senate torture report, and, earlier, about the National Security Agency\u2019s surveillance abuses, have taught The Times a lesson, Mr. Baquet said. \u201cWe\u2019ve learned the perils of not monitoring and policing warfare\u201d as rigorously as possible, and of too readily agreeing to government requests to withhold information.", "answer": "withhold information", "sentence": "\u201cWe\u2019ve learned the perils of not monitoring and policing warfare\u201d as rigorously as possible, and of too readily agreeing to government requests to withhold information .", "paragraph_sentence": "The revelations about American wrongdoing in the Senate torture report, and, earlier, about the National Security Agency\u2019s surveillance abuses, have taught The Times a lesson, Mr. Baquet said. \u201cWe\u2019ve learned the perils of not monitoring and policing warfare\u201d as rigorously as possible, and of too readily agreeing to government requests to withhold information . ", "paragraph_answer": "The revelations about American wrongdoing in the Senate torture report, and, earlier, about the National Security Agency\u2019s surveillance abuses, have taught The Times a lesson, Mr. Baquet said. \u201cWe\u2019ve learned the perils of not monitoring and policing warfare\u201d as rigorously as possible, and of too readily agreeing to government requests to withhold information .", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe\u2019ve learned the perils of not monitoring and policing warfare\u201d as rigorously as possible, and of too readily agreeing to government requests to withhold information .", "paragraph_id": "5d7033c1c8e4820a9b66deca"} +{"question": "What does Ms. Bedford say coloring is not as scary as?", "paragraph": "Ms. Basford has become something of a literary celebrity in South Korea, where \u201cSecret Garden\u201d has sold more than 430,000 copies, she says. The craze was kicked off in part, it seems, by a Korean pop star, Kim Ki-bum, who posted a delicately colored-in floral pattern from Ms. Basford\u2019s book on Instagram, where he has 1.8 million followers. Part of the apparent appeal is the tactile, interactive nature of the books, which offer respite to the screen-weary. \u201cPeople are really excited to do something analog and creative, at a time when we\u2019re all so overwhelmed by screens and the Internet,\u201d she said. \u201cAnd coloring is not as scary as a blank sheet of paper or canvas. It\u2019s a great way to de-stress.\u201d", "answer": "a blank sheet of paper or canvas", "sentence": "\u201cAnd coloring is not as scary as a blank sheet of paper or canvas .", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Basford has become something of a literary celebrity in South Korea, where \u201cSecret Garden\u201d has sold more than 430,000 copies, she says. The craze was kicked off in part, it seems, by a Korean pop star, Kim Ki-bum, who posted a delicately colored-in floral pattern from Ms. Basford\u2019s book on Instagram, where he has 1.8 million followers. Part of the apparent appeal is the tactile, interactive nature of the books, which offer respite to the screen-weary. \u201cPeople are really excited to do something analog and creative, at a time when we\u2019re all so overwhelmed by screens and the Internet,\u201d she said. \u201cAnd coloring is not as scary as a blank sheet of paper or canvas . It\u2019s a great way to de-stress.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Basford has become something of a literary celebrity in South Korea, where \u201cSecret Garden\u201d has sold more than 430,000 copies, she says. The craze was kicked off in part, it seems, by a Korean pop star, Kim Ki-bum, who posted a delicately colored-in floral pattern from Ms. Basford\u2019s book on Instagram, where he has 1.8 million followers. Part of the apparent appeal is the tactile, interactive nature of the books, which offer respite to the screen-weary. \u201cPeople are really excited to do something analog and creative, at a time when we\u2019re all so overwhelmed by screens and the Internet,\u201d she said. \u201cAnd coloring is not as scary as a blank sheet of paper or canvas . It\u2019s a great way to de-stress.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cAnd coloring is not as scary as a blank sheet of paper or canvas .", "paragraph_id": "5d70230bc8e4820a9b66cf25"} +{"question": "What mountain range is shown in the film?", "paragraph": "Before long, the men are tramping through the desert, where step by step, over one and then another crest, they walk and periodically speak, sharing meals and assorted dangers. With the director of photography Guillaume Deffontaines, Mr. Oelhoffen conveys the striking, multicolored glories of this rough landscape, with all its sun-shot gradations of red and brown, without descending into picture-postcard banality. (The movie was shot in the Atlas Mountains of Morocco.) Many of the movie\u2019s most effective scenes involve the men just walking through this extraordinary landscape, the warring splendor and harshness of their surroundings \u2014 equally inviting and foreboding \u2014 as seemingly at odds as the attraction-repulsion that initially defines Daru and Mohamed\u2019s relationship.", "answer": "the Atlas Mountains", "sentence": "(The movie was shot in the Atlas Mountains of Morocco.)", "paragraph_sentence": "Before long, the men are tramping through the desert, where step by step, over one and then another crest, they walk and periodically speak, sharing meals and assorted dangers. With the director of photography Guillaume Deffontaines, Mr. Oelhoffen conveys the striking, multicolored glories of this rough landscape, with all its sun-shot gradations of red and brown, without descending into picture-postcard banality. (The movie was shot in the Atlas Mountains of Morocco.) Many of the movie\u2019s most effective scenes involve the men just walking through this extraordinary landscape, the warring splendor and harshness of their surroundings \u2014 equally inviting and foreboding \u2014 as seemingly at odds as the attraction-repulsion that initially defines Daru and Mohamed\u2019s relationship.", "paragraph_answer": "Before long, the men are tramping through the desert, where step by step, over one and then another crest, they walk and periodically speak, sharing meals and assorted dangers. With the director of photography Guillaume Deffontaines, Mr. Oelhoffen conveys the striking, multicolored glories of this rough landscape, with all its sun-shot gradations of red and brown, without descending into picture-postcard banality. (The movie was shot in the Atlas Mountains of Morocco.) Many of the movie\u2019s most effective scenes involve the men just walking through this extraordinary landscape, the warring splendor and harshness of their surroundings \u2014 equally inviting and foreboding \u2014 as seemingly at odds as the attraction-repulsion that initially defines Daru and Mohamed\u2019s relationship.", "sentence_answer": "(The movie was shot in the Atlas Mountains of Morocco.)", "paragraph_id": "5d709167c8e4820a9b66f5a5"} +{"question": "How many cloud company customers does Intel track?", "paragraph": "\u201cAbout 30 percent of our server business is now to cloud companies, and growing at a fast clip,\u201d said Diane Bryant, head of Intel\u2019s data center group, in a recent interview. \u201cIt\u2019s the new opportunity for our revenue stream.\u201d Intel is trying to enter the mobile business and sensors too, so far with little impact. The shift to more data center chips means lots of things will change for Intel, not least the kinds of customers it works with. Intel\u2019s mix of cloud-computing customers shows how much influence is wielded by just a handful of big operations. Of 200 cloud company customers that Intel tracks, just seven take one-third of those chips: Google, Amazon Web Services, Microsoft and Facebook, as well as Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent of China. While the rest are now growing at twice the rate of the top seven, Ms. Bryant said, the big companies are unusually demanding customers, even designing their own chip modifications to make their global clouds work better.", "answer": "200", "sentence": "Of 200 cloud company customers that Intel tracks, just seven take one-third of those chips: Google, Amazon Web Services, Microsoft and Facebook, as well as Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent of China.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cAbout 30 percent of our server business is now to cloud companies, and growing at a fast clip,\u201d said Diane Bryant, head of Intel\u2019s data center group, in a recent interview. \u201cIt\u2019s the new opportunity for our revenue stream.\u201d Intel is trying to enter the mobile business and sensors too, so far with little impact. The shift to more data center chips means lots of things will change for Intel, not least the kinds of customers it works with. Intel\u2019s mix of cloud-computing customers shows how much influence is wielded by just a handful of big operations. Of 200 cloud company customers that Intel tracks, just seven take one-third of those chips: Google, Amazon Web Services, Microsoft and Facebook, as well as Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent of China. While the rest are now growing at twice the rate of the top seven, Ms. Bryant said, the big companies are unusually demanding customers, even designing their own chip modifications to make their global clouds work better.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cAbout 30 percent of our server business is now to cloud companies, and growing at a fast clip,\u201d said Diane Bryant, head of Intel\u2019s data center group, in a recent interview. \u201cIt\u2019s the new opportunity for our revenue stream.\u201d Intel is trying to enter the mobile business and sensors too, so far with little impact. The shift to more data center chips means lots of things will change for Intel, not least the kinds of customers it works with. Intel\u2019s mix of cloud-computing customers shows how much influence is wielded by just a handful of big operations. Of 200 cloud company customers that Intel tracks, just seven take one-third of those chips: Google, Amazon Web Services, Microsoft and Facebook, as well as Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent of China. While the rest are now growing at twice the rate of the top seven, Ms. Bryant said, the big companies are unusually demanding customers, even designing their own chip modifications to make their global clouds work better.", "sentence_answer": "Of 200 cloud company customers that Intel tracks, just seven take one-third of those chips: Google, Amazon Web Services, Microsoft and Facebook, as well as Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent of China.", "paragraph_id": "5d70202dc8e4820a9b66cbd7"} +{"question": "Who are the couple trying to reason with?", "paragraph": "Ms. Shurrab says she is focusing her appeals on Mr. Abbas, not Israel, because \u201che\u2019s responsible for the Palestinian people.\u201d She imagines that Palestinian officials could somehow intervene on her behalf since they coordinate with Israel on security issues. Nabil Abu Rudeineh, Mr. Abbas\u2019s spokesman, did not return a text message. The president\u2019s media department did not respond to an email inquiry. Xavier Abu Eid of the Palestine Liberation Organization, which Mr. Abbas also heads, said in an email that the couple was in \u201can awful situation that reflects the nightmare that thousands of Palestinian families have due to Israeli apartheid policies,\u201d which \u201chave been dramatically radicalized in the last few years.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Abbas", "sentence": "Ms. Shurrab says she is focusing her appeals on Mr. Abbas , not Israel, because \u201che\u2019s responsible for the Palestinian people.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Ms. Shurrab says she is focusing her appeals on Mr. Abbas , not Israel, because \u201che\u2019s responsible for the Palestinian people.\u201d She imagines that Palestinian officials could somehow intervene on her behalf since they coordinate with Israel on security issues. Nabil Abu Rudeineh, Mr. Abbas\u2019s spokesman, did not return a text message. The president\u2019s media department did not respond to an email inquiry. Xavier Abu Eid of the Palestine Liberation Organization, which Mr. Abbas also heads, said in an email that the couple was in \u201can awful situation that reflects the nightmare that thousands of Palestinian families have due to Israeli apartheid policies,\u201d which \u201chave been dramatically radicalized in the last few years.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Shurrab says she is focusing her appeals on Mr. Abbas , not Israel, because \u201che\u2019s responsible for the Palestinian people.\u201d She imagines that Palestinian officials could somehow intervene on her behalf since they coordinate with Israel on security issues. Nabil Abu Rudeineh, Mr. Abbas\u2019s spokesman, did not return a text message. The president\u2019s media department did not respond to an email inquiry. Xavier Abu Eid of the Palestine Liberation Organization, which Mr. Abbas also heads, said in an email that the couple was in \u201can awful situation that reflects the nightmare that thousands of Palestinian families have due to Israeli apartheid policies,\u201d which \u201chave been dramatically radicalized in the last few years.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Shurrab says she is focusing her appeals on Mr. Abbas , not Israel, because \u201che\u2019s responsible for the Palestinian people.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d704febc8e4820a9b66eb15"} +{"question": "At what event can you do morning meditation with global leaders?", "paragraph": "Will it? Meditation is exploding in popularity. There are classes to learn meditation in all its flavors: mindfulness-based stress reduction, transcendental meditation, Zen and more. There are meditation events with power-networking opportunities built in. Drop by The Path in New York, and you can mingle with people in tech, film, fashion and the arts. Pay a visit to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, and you get to do an early morning guided meditation with global leaders. As Arianna Huffington has said, C.E.O.s are increasingly coming out of the closet \u2014 as meditators. Before we\u2019re all swept into this fad, we ought to ask why meditation is useful. So I polled a group of meditation researchers, teachers and practitioners on why they recommend it. I liked their answers, but none of them were unique to meditation. Every benefit of the practice can be gained through other activities. This is the conclusion from an analysis of 47 trials of meditation programs, published last year in JAMA Internal Medicine: \u201cWe found no evidence that meditation programs were better than any active treatment (i.e., drugs, exercise and other behavioral therapies).\u201d", "answer": "World Economic Forum", "sentence": "Pay a visit to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, and you get to do an early morning guided meditation with global leaders.", "paragraph_sentence": "Will it? Meditation is exploding in popularity. There are classes to learn meditation in all its flavors: mindfulness-based stress reduction, transcendental meditation, Zen and more. There are meditation events with power-networking opportunities built in. Drop by The Path in New York, and you can mingle with people in tech, film, fashion and the arts. Pay a visit to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, and you get to do an early morning guided meditation with global leaders. As Arianna Huffington has said, C.E.O.s are increasingly coming out of the closet \u2014 as meditators. Before we\u2019re all swept into this fad, we ought to ask why meditation is useful. So I polled a group of meditation researchers, teachers and practitioners on why they recommend it. I liked their answers, but none of them were unique to meditation. Every benefit of the practice can be gained through other activities. This is the conclusion from an analysis of 47 trials of meditation programs, published last year in JAMA Internal Medicine: \u201cWe found no evidence that meditation programs were better than any active treatment (i.e., drugs, exercise and other behavioral therapies).\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Will it? Meditation is exploding in popularity. There are classes to learn meditation in all its flavors: mindfulness-based stress reduction, transcendental meditation, Zen and more. There are meditation events with power-networking opportunities built in. Drop by The Path in New York, and you can mingle with people in tech, film, fashion and the arts. Pay a visit to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, and you get to do an early morning guided meditation with global leaders. As Arianna Huffington has said, C.E.O.s are increasingly coming out of the closet \u2014 as meditators. Before we\u2019re all swept into this fad, we ought to ask why meditation is useful. So I polled a group of meditation researchers, teachers and practitioners on why they recommend it. I liked their answers, but none of them were unique to meditation. Every benefit of the practice can be gained through other activities. This is the conclusion from an analysis of 47 trials of meditation programs, published last year in JAMA Internal Medicine: \u201cWe found no evidence that meditation programs were better than any active treatment (i.e., drugs, exercise and other behavioral therapies).\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Pay a visit to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, and you get to do an early morning guided meditation with global leaders.", "paragraph_id": "5d702270c8e4820a9b66ce87"} +{"question": "What position does Thomas become a hall of famer for playing?", "paragraph": "Dolan announced that Thomas, a Hall of Fame point guard, would serve as president of the W.N.B.A.\u2019s Liberty, the city\u2019s women\u2019s basketball team. \u201cWe believe Isiah belongs in basketball,\u201d Madison Square Garden officials said in a statement, \u201cand are grateful that he has committed his considerable talent to help the Liberty succeed.\u201d This statement is fine as far as it goes, particularly if you\u2019ve suffered catastrophic memory loss. Thomas and Dolan last roamed together in the corporate suites at the Garden in 2008. A year before that, a jury found that Thomas had sexually harassed a team executive in the crudest of terms. The executive, now known professionally as Anucha Browne, testified that Thomas had used misogynistic slurs. When she complained to top officials at the Garden, Dolan personally insisted on firing her. Who among us does not believe in repentance and second chances? I called to ask the Garden about Thomas and the boss. Have the two men repented? Do they have second thoughts? Or have they rethought their first thoughts? This email statement arrived in my inbox:", "answer": "point guard", "sentence": "Dolan announced that Thomas, a Hall of Fame point guard , would serve as president of the W.N.B.A.\u2019s Liberty, the city\u2019s women\u2019s basketball team.", "paragraph_sentence": " Dolan announced that Thomas, a Hall of Fame point guard , would serve as president of the W.N.B.A.\u2019s Liberty, the city\u2019s women\u2019s basketball team. \u201cWe believe Isiah belongs in basketball,\u201d Madison Square Garden officials said in a statement, \u201cand are grateful that he has committed his considerable talent to help the Liberty succeed.\u201d This statement is fine as far as it goes, particularly if you\u2019ve suffered catastrophic memory loss. Thomas and Dolan last roamed together in the corporate suites at the Garden in 2008. A year before that, a jury found that Thomas had sexually harassed a team executive in the crudest of terms. The executive, now known professionally as Anucha Browne, testified that Thomas had used misogynistic slurs. When she complained to top officials at the Garden, Dolan personally insisted on firing her. Who among us does not believe in repentance and second chances? I called to ask the Garden about Thomas and the boss. Have the two men repented? Do they have second thoughts? Or have they rethought their first thoughts? This email statement arrived in my inbox:", "paragraph_answer": "Dolan announced that Thomas, a Hall of Fame point guard , would serve as president of the W.N.B.A.\u2019s Liberty, the city\u2019s women\u2019s basketball team. \u201cWe believe Isiah belongs in basketball,\u201d Madison Square Garden officials said in a statement, \u201cand are grateful that he has committed his considerable talent to help the Liberty succeed.\u201d This statement is fine as far as it goes, particularly if you\u2019ve suffered catastrophic memory loss. Thomas and Dolan last roamed together in the corporate suites at the Garden in 2008. A year before that, a jury found that Thomas had sexually harassed a team executive in the crudest of terms. The executive, now known professionally as Anucha Browne, testified that Thomas had used misogynistic slurs. When she complained to top officials at the Garden, Dolan personally insisted on firing her. Who among us does not believe in repentance and second chances? I called to ask the Garden about Thomas and the boss. Have the two men repented? Do they have second thoughts? Or have they rethought their first thoughts? This email statement arrived in my inbox:", "sentence_answer": "Dolan announced that Thomas, a Hall of Fame point guard , would serve as president of the W.N.B.A.\u2019s Liberty, the city\u2019s women\u2019s basketball team.", "paragraph_id": "5d7041a2c8e4820a9b66e5b3"} +{"question": "Who claims to be fighting for middle-class families?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe are fighting for the future of middle-class families,\u201d said Representative Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut. \u201cThese trade deals make it much easier for corporations to send American jobs overseas.\u201d Over the past 20 years, Connecticut has lost more than 96,000 manufacturing jobs, she said, because of agreements that failed to protect American workers. Sanders told the assembled media that while he liked the president\u2019s speech, \u201che was wrong on one major issue, and that is the Trans-Pacific Partnership.\u201d He added, \u201cI do not believe that continuing a set of bad policies, policies that have failed, makes any sense at all.\u201d", "answer": "agreements that failed to protect American workers", "sentence": "Over the past 20 years, Connecticut has lost more than 96,000 manufacturing jobs, she said, because of agreements that failed to protect American workers .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe are fighting for the future of middle-class families,\u201d said Representative Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut. \u201cThese trade deals make it much easier for corporations to send American jobs overseas.\u201d Over the past 20 years, Connecticut has lost more than 96,000 manufacturing jobs, she said, because of agreements that failed to protect American workers . Sanders told the assembled media that while he liked the president\u2019s speech, \u201che was wrong on one major issue, and that is the Trans-Pacific Partnership.\u201d He added, \u201cI do not believe that continuing a set of bad policies, policies that have failed, makes any sense at all.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe are fighting for the future of middle-class families,\u201d said Representative Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut. \u201cThese trade deals make it much easier for corporations to send American jobs overseas.\u201d Over the past 20 years, Connecticut has lost more than 96,000 manufacturing jobs, she said, because of agreements that failed to protect American workers . Sanders told the assembled media that while he liked the president\u2019s speech, \u201che was wrong on one major issue, and that is the Trans-Pacific Partnership.\u201d He added, \u201cI do not believe that continuing a set of bad policies, policies that have failed, makes any sense at all.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Over the past 20 years, Connecticut has lost more than 96,000 manufacturing jobs, she said, because of agreements that failed to protect American workers .", "paragraph_id": "5d7013a8c8e4820a9b66c03b"} +{"question": "In what city is Lionel Messi expected to play once he is no longer injured?", "paragraph": "The only must-see club match this weekend \u2014 other than Cambuur\u2019s visit to mighty Ajax on Saturday, of course \u2014 is the season\u2019s first Cl\u00e1sico: Barcelona at Real Madrid on Saturday (12:15 p.m., beIN). And the only story to pay attention to related to that is Lionel Messi\u2019s health; Messi has been out for months with a knee injury, but he trained with Barcelona\u2019s B team over the weekend \u2014 reportedly looking sharp \u2014 and may make his return in Madrid. That would surely spice up things a bit.", "answer": "Madrid", "sentence": "The only must-see club match this weekend \u2014 other than Cambuur\u2019s visit to mighty Ajax on Saturday, of course \u2014 is the season\u2019s first Cl\u00e1sico: Barcelona at Real Madrid on Saturday (12:15 p.m., beIN).", "paragraph_sentence": " The only must-see club match this weekend \u2014 other than Cambuur\u2019s visit to mighty Ajax on Saturday, of course \u2014 is the season\u2019s first Cl\u00e1sico: Barcelona at Real Madrid on Saturday (12:15 p.m., beIN). And the only story to pay attention to related to that is Lionel Messi\u2019s health; Messi has been out for months with a knee injury, but he trained with Barcelona\u2019s B team over the weekend \u2014 reportedly looking sharp \u2014 and may make his return in Madrid. That would surely spice up things a bit.", "paragraph_answer": "The only must-see club match this weekend \u2014 other than Cambuur\u2019s visit to mighty Ajax on Saturday, of course \u2014 is the season\u2019s first Cl\u00e1sico: Barcelona at Real Madrid on Saturday (12:15 p.m., beIN). And the only story to pay attention to related to that is Lionel Messi\u2019s health; Messi has been out for months with a knee injury, but he trained with Barcelona\u2019s B team over the weekend \u2014 reportedly looking sharp \u2014 and may make his return in Madrid. That would surely spice up things a bit.", "sentence_answer": "The only must-see club match this weekend \u2014 other than Cambuur\u2019s visit to mighty Ajax on Saturday, of course \u2014 is the season\u2019s first Cl\u00e1sico: Barcelona at Real Madrid on Saturday (12:15 p.m., beIN).", "paragraph_id": "5d7063dfc8e4820a9b66f06c"} +{"question": "Who is Tom F. Allon?", "paragraph": "\u201cYou may recall a few years ago the Tom Cruise movie \u2018Minority Report,\u2019 when he was sitting on that glass screen moving all those things around,\u201d Mr. Bratton said. \u201cA few years ago that would have seemed magical. Now, this is real.\u201d His answer about his own future, in response to a question by Tom F. Allon, the president of City & State, at a breakfast in Midtown Manhattan, shed light on just how open Mr. Bratton is to the concept of exiting public service. Mr. de Blasio, in fact, in reacting to the comments, hit political tones in using words usually reserved for when people announce a departure.", "answer": "president of City & State", "sentence": "His answer about his own future, in response to a question by Tom F. Allon, the president of City & State , at a breakfast in Midtown Manhattan, shed light on just how open Mr. Bratton is to the concept of exiting public service.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cYou may recall a few years ago the Tom Cruise movie \u2018Minority Report,\u2019 when he was sitting on that glass screen moving all those things around,\u201d Mr. Bratton said. \u201cA few years ago that would have seemed magical. Now, this is real.\u201d His answer about his own future, in response to a question by Tom F. Allon, the president of City & State , at a breakfast in Midtown Manhattan, shed light on just how open Mr. Bratton is to the concept of exiting public service. Mr. de Blasio, in fact, in reacting to the comments, hit political tones in using words usually reserved for when people announce a departure.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cYou may recall a few years ago the Tom Cruise movie \u2018Minority Report,\u2019 when he was sitting on that glass screen moving all those things around,\u201d Mr. Bratton said. \u201cA few years ago that would have seemed magical. Now, this is real.\u201d His answer about his own future, in response to a question by Tom F. Allon, the president of City & State , at a breakfast in Midtown Manhattan, shed light on just how open Mr. Bratton is to the concept of exiting public service. Mr. de Blasio, in fact, in reacting to the comments, hit political tones in using words usually reserved for when people announce a departure.", "sentence_answer": "His answer about his own future, in response to a question by Tom F. Allon, the president of City & State , at a breakfast in Midtown Manhattan, shed light on just how open Mr. Bratton is to the concept of exiting public service.", "paragraph_id": "5d702325c8e4820a9b66cf4e"} +{"question": "Who captured a military post?", "paragraph": "The scene unfolded almost a month after President Bashar al-Assad, in a rare public speech, had vowed to send reinforcements to rescue the holdouts, declaring, \u201cThe army will arrive soon to these heroes.\u201d Afterward, insurgents, including members of the Nusra Front, which is affiliated with Al Qaeda, captured the gutted hospital, completing their takeover of the town of Jisr al-Shoughour, a crucial location on the road from the mostly insurgent-held province of Idlib toward the government\u2019s strongholds on the coast. The loss of the hospital came two days after Islamic State militants drove government forces out of the desert town of Palmyra in central Syria in a lightning attack that has shocked the country. In addition, on Friday, the Islamic State group, also known as ISIS or ISIL, seized a military outpost near Palmyra, after its takeover on Thursday of a border crossing between Syria and Iraq farther east.", "answer": "ISIS or ISIL", "sentence": "In addition, on Friday, the Islamic State group, also known as ISIS or ISIL , seized a military outpost near Palmyra, after its takeover on Thursday of a border crossing between Syria and Iraq farther east.", "paragraph_sentence": "The scene unfolded almost a month after President Bashar al-Assad, in a rare public speech, had vowed to send reinforcements to rescue the holdouts, declaring, \u201cThe army will arrive soon to these heroes.\u201d Afterward, insurgents, including members of the Nusra Front, which is affiliated with Al Qaeda, captured the gutted hospital, completing their takeover of the town of Jisr al-Shoughour, a crucial location on the road from the mostly insurgent-held province of Idlib toward the government\u2019s strongholds on the coast. The loss of the hospital came two days after Islamic State militants drove government forces out of the desert town of Palmyra in central Syria in a lightning attack that has shocked the country. In addition, on Friday, the Islamic State group, also known as ISIS or ISIL , seized a military outpost near Palmyra, after its takeover on Thursday of a border crossing between Syria and Iraq farther east. ", "paragraph_answer": "The scene unfolded almost a month after President Bashar al-Assad, in a rare public speech, had vowed to send reinforcements to rescue the holdouts, declaring, \u201cThe army will arrive soon to these heroes.\u201d Afterward, insurgents, including members of the Nusra Front, which is affiliated with Al Qaeda, captured the gutted hospital, completing their takeover of the town of Jisr al-Shoughour, a crucial location on the road from the mostly insurgent-held province of Idlib toward the government\u2019s strongholds on the coast. The loss of the hospital came two days after Islamic State militants drove government forces out of the desert town of Palmyra in central Syria in a lightning attack that has shocked the country. In addition, on Friday, the Islamic State group, also known as ISIS or ISIL , seized a military outpost near Palmyra, after its takeover on Thursday of a border crossing between Syria and Iraq farther east.", "sentence_answer": "In addition, on Friday, the Islamic State group, also known as ISIS or ISIL , seized a military outpost near Palmyra, after its takeover on Thursday of a border crossing between Syria and Iraq farther east.", "paragraph_id": "5d702514c8e4820a9b66d19a"} +{"question": "Who is pushing these reforms?", "paragraph": "The House bill invests millions of extra dollars in a questionable missile defense program. It continues to prohibit Mr. Obama from shutting down the Guant\u00e1namo Bay military prison in Cuba. And it fails to address some of the sensible reforms pushed by a diverse group of defense experts, like reducing the number of private contractors working for the Pentagon and closing excess military bases in the United States. These could save billions of dollars. The country faces daunting security challenges \u2014 from the Islamic State to Russia in Ukraine and China in the South China Sea. But throwing money at the military doesn\u2019t guarantee security, especially when it is spent on programs that don\u2019t make the country safer and is denied to programs that enhance security.", "answer": "diverse group of defense experts", "sentence": "a diverse group of defense experts , like reducing the number of private contractors working for the Pentagon and closing excess military bases in the United States.", "paragraph_sentence": "The House bill invests millions of extra dollars in a questionable missile defense program. It continues to prohibit Mr. Obama from shutting down the Guant\u00e1namo Bay military prison in Cuba. And it fails to address some of the sensible reforms pushed by a diverse group of defense experts , like reducing the number of private contractors working for the Pentagon and closing excess military bases in the United States. These could save billions of dollars. The country faces daunting security challenges \u2014 from the Islamic State to Russia in Ukraine and China in the South China Sea. But throwing money at the military doesn\u2019t guarantee security, especially when it is spent on programs that don\u2019t make the country safer and is denied to programs that enhance security.", "paragraph_answer": "The House bill invests millions of extra dollars in a questionable missile defense program. It continues to prohibit Mr. Obama from shutting down the Guant\u00e1namo Bay military prison in Cuba. And it fails to address some of the sensible reforms pushed by a diverse group of defense experts , like reducing the number of private contractors working for the Pentagon and closing excess military bases in the United States. These could save billions of dollars. The country faces daunting security challenges \u2014 from the Islamic State to Russia in Ukraine and China in the South China Sea. But throwing money at the military doesn\u2019t guarantee security, especially when it is spent on programs that don\u2019t make the country safer and is denied to programs that enhance security.", "sentence_answer": "a diverse group of defense experts , like reducing the number of private contractors working for the Pentagon and closing excess military bases in the United States.", "paragraph_id": "5d70052ac8e4820a9b66a891"} +{"question": "What does a Wi-Fi extender do?", "paragraph": "One caveat: If you use a slower Internet service like DSL, you can probably hold on to a router for longer than three years. A newer router can still be useful because of the improved wireless range, but you won\u2019t experience a big difference in speeds. If your house is so large that a new router won\u2019t be able to cover every inch with a great Wi-Fi signal, you could install a Wi-Fi extender, which enhances an existing Wi-Fi connection to increase coverage. Powerline networking, which converts a house\u2019s electrical wiring into a wired Internet connection, is another option, but you\u2019ll have to check if your home supports it. As for Mr. McConnell, the retired engineer eventually solved his Wi-Fi headache by setting up his devices to stay on the 5 GHz radio band. To get a Wi-Fi signal to his iPad in the bedroom, he also set up an extender. Now everything is smooth sailing, he said. \u201cI\u2019ve got my life back,\u201d he said.", "answer": "enhances an existing Wi-Fi connection to increase coverage", "sentence": "If your house is so large that a new router won\u2019t be able to cover every inch with a great Wi-Fi signal, you could install a Wi-Fi extender, which enhances an existing Wi-Fi connection to increase coverage .", "paragraph_sentence": "One caveat: If you use a slower Internet service like DSL, you can probably hold on to a router for longer than three years. A newer router can still be useful because of the improved wireless range, but you won\u2019t experience a big difference in speeds. If your house is so large that a new router won\u2019t be able to cover every inch with a great Wi-Fi signal, you could install a Wi-Fi extender, which enhances an existing Wi-Fi connection to increase coverage . Powerline networking, which converts a house\u2019s electrical wiring into a wired Internet connection, is another option, but you\u2019ll have to check if your home supports it. As for Mr. McConnell, the retired engineer eventually solved his Wi-Fi headache by setting up his devices to stay on the 5 GHz radio band. To get a Wi-Fi signal to his iPad in the bedroom, he also set up an extender. Now everything is smooth sailing, he said. \u201cI\u2019ve got my life back,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "One caveat: If you use a slower Internet service like DSL, you can probably hold on to a router for longer than three years. A newer router can still be useful because of the improved wireless range, but you won\u2019t experience a big difference in speeds. If your house is so large that a new router won\u2019t be able to cover every inch with a great Wi-Fi signal, you could install a Wi-Fi extender, which enhances an existing Wi-Fi connection to increase coverage . Powerline networking, which converts a house\u2019s electrical wiring into a wired Internet connection, is another option, but you\u2019ll have to check if your home supports it. As for Mr. McConnell, the retired engineer eventually solved his Wi-Fi headache by setting up his devices to stay on the 5 GHz radio band. To get a Wi-Fi signal to his iPad in the bedroom, he also set up an extender. Now everything is smooth sailing, he said. \u201cI\u2019ve got my life back,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "If your house is so large that a new router won\u2019t be able to cover every inch with a great Wi-Fi signal, you could install a Wi-Fi extender, which enhances an existing Wi-Fi connection to increase coverage .", "paragraph_id": "5d70577dc8e4820a9b66ed7a"} +{"question": "How many years ago did President Bashar al-Assad use chemical weapons?", "paragraph": "The French President, Fran\u00e7ois Hollande, says France is \u201cat war\u201d against \u201ca jihadi army.\u201d France will be \u201cpitiless.\u201d There will be \u201cno respite, no truce.\u201d More than two years ago, after President Bashar al-Assad used chemical weapons, Hollande was ready to bomb Syria alongside President Obama. Then Obama wavered. Hesitation has been Obama\u2019s modus operandi on Syria. Now there are body bags in Paris. Since 2013, ISIS has come to terrorize the world. Hollande will travel to Washington and Moscow next week in an attempt to forge a broad coalition to act \u201cdecisively\u201d against it. If the President Obama he finds is the same Obama who spoke in Turkey on Monday, the French president will be disappointed. The contrast between Hollande\u2019s fire and Obama\u2019s flatness as he insisted he would not put American troops on the ground to defeat ISIS was one of the stranger aspects of being in Paris this week.", "answer": "two", "sentence": "More than two years ago, after President Bashar al-Assad used chemical weapons, Hollande was ready to bomb Syria alongside President Obama.", "paragraph_sentence": "The French President, Fran\u00e7ois Hollande, says France is \u201cat war\u201d against \u201ca jihadi army.\u201d France will be \u201cpitiless.\u201d There will be \u201cno respite, no truce.\u201d More than two years ago, after President Bashar al-Assad used chemical weapons, Hollande was ready to bomb Syria alongside President Obama. Then Obama wavered. Hesitation has been Obama\u2019s modus operandi on Syria. Now there are body bags in Paris. Since 2013, ISIS has come to terrorize the world. Hollande will travel to Washington and Moscow next week in an attempt to forge a broad coalition to act \u201cdecisively\u201d against it. If the President Obama he finds is the same Obama who spoke in Turkey on Monday, the French president will be disappointed. The contrast between Hollande\u2019s fire and Obama\u2019s flatness as he insisted he would not put American troops on the ground to defeat ISIS was one of the stranger aspects of being in Paris this week.", "paragraph_answer": "The French President, Fran\u00e7ois Hollande, says France is \u201cat war\u201d against \u201ca jihadi army.\u201d France will be \u201cpitiless.\u201d There will be \u201cno respite, no truce.\u201d More than two years ago, after President Bashar al-Assad used chemical weapons, Hollande was ready to bomb Syria alongside President Obama. Then Obama wavered. Hesitation has been Obama\u2019s modus operandi on Syria. Now there are body bags in Paris. Since 2013, ISIS has come to terrorize the world. Hollande will travel to Washington and Moscow next week in an attempt to forge a broad coalition to act \u201cdecisively\u201d against it. If the President Obama he finds is the same Obama who spoke in Turkey on Monday, the French president will be disappointed. The contrast between Hollande\u2019s fire and Obama\u2019s flatness as he insisted he would not put American troops on the ground to defeat ISIS was one of the stranger aspects of being in Paris this week.", "sentence_answer": "More than two years ago, after President Bashar al-Assad used chemical weapons, Hollande was ready to bomb Syria alongside President Obama.", "paragraph_id": "5d703c61c8e4820a9b66e309"} +{"question": "When was Sandy's life celebrated?", "paragraph": "And just the other day, Robyn went on, Emily had been chatting in the kitchen with her mother and Bev. After Emily walked out, Sandy turned to Bev and asked, \u201cWho is that person\u2019s mother?\u201d \u201cYou are,\u201d Bev said, trying not to cry. \u201cI thought so,\u201d Sandy said. \u201dI thought it might be me.\u201d Emily now understood that Sandy was deteriorating rapidly. Karen organized a small gathering on Sunday, May 18, to celebrate Sandy\u2019s life. It was very intimate, just Sandy, Daryl, Emily, Karen, Bev and Robyn. (Jeremy had moved out West and still wasn\u2019t in contact with his family, though Sandy and Daryl left a voice mail message to let him know when Sandy would die.) At the gathering, Daryl \u00adtalked about a lawsuit that the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission filed in 1972 against AT&T for sex discrimination in its recruitment practices, in which he and Sandy took the stand together to testify as a team.", "answer": "May 18", "sentence": "Karen organized a small gathering on Sunday, May 18 , to celebrate Sandy\u2019s life.", "paragraph_sentence": "And just the other day, Robyn went on, Emily had been chatting in the kitchen with her mother and Bev. After Emily walked out, Sandy turned to Bev and asked, \u201cWho is that person\u2019s mother?\u201d \u201cYou are,\u201d Bev said, trying not to cry. \u201cI thought so,\u201d Sandy said. \u201d I thought it might be me.\u201d Emily now understood that Sandy was deteriorating rapidly. Karen organized a small gathering on Sunday, May 18 , to celebrate Sandy\u2019s life. It was very intimate, just Sandy, Daryl, Emily, Karen, Bev and Robyn. (Jeremy had moved out West and still wasn\u2019t in contact with his family, though Sandy and Daryl left a voice mail message to let him know when Sandy would die.) At the gathering, Daryl \u00adtalked about a lawsuit that the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission filed in 1972 against AT&T for sex discrimination in its recruitment practices, in which he and Sandy took the stand together to testify as a team.", "paragraph_answer": "And just the other day, Robyn went on, Emily had been chatting in the kitchen with her mother and Bev. After Emily walked out, Sandy turned to Bev and asked, \u201cWho is that person\u2019s mother?\u201d \u201cYou are,\u201d Bev said, trying not to cry. \u201cI thought so,\u201d Sandy said. \u201dI thought it might be me.\u201d Emily now understood that Sandy was deteriorating rapidly. Karen organized a small gathering on Sunday, May 18 , to celebrate Sandy\u2019s life. It was very intimate, just Sandy, Daryl, Emily, Karen, Bev and Robyn. (Jeremy had moved out West and still wasn\u2019t in contact with his family, though Sandy and Daryl left a voice mail message to let him know when Sandy would die.) At the gathering, Daryl \u00adtalked about a lawsuit that the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission filed in 1972 against AT&T for sex discrimination in its recruitment practices, in which he and Sandy took the stand together to testify as a team.", "sentence_answer": "Karen organized a small gathering on Sunday, May 18 , to celebrate Sandy\u2019s life.", "paragraph_id": "5d7043cec8e4820a9b66e70e"} +{"question": "Which major company made the announcement to purchase Home DePot?", "paragraph": "Major markets in Europe ended mixed. France\u2019s CAC 40 rose 0.4 percent and Germany\u2019s DAX edged up 0.2 percent. Britain\u2019s FTSE 100 closed with a loss of 0.2 percent. In the United States, Staples announced that it was buying Office Depot for $6 billion in a widely anticipated merger of the two largest office supply retailers. The cash-and-stock deal comes a little more than a year after Office Depot merged with OfficeMax, and still needs approval from regulators. Staples shares dropped $2.28, or 12 percent, to $16.73.", "answer": "Staples", "sentence": "In the United States, Staples announced that it was buying Office Depot for $6 billion in a widely anticipated merger of the two largest office supply retailers.", "paragraph_sentence": "Major markets in Europe ended mixed. France\u2019s CAC 40 rose 0.4 percent and Germany\u2019s DAX edged up 0.2 percent. Britain\u2019s FTSE 100 closed with a loss of 0.2 percent. In the United States, Staples announced that it was buying Office Depot for $6 billion in a widely anticipated merger of the two largest office supply retailers. The cash-and-stock deal comes a little more than a year after Office Depot merged with OfficeMax, and still needs approval from regulators. Staples shares dropped $2.28, or 12 percent, to $16.73.", "paragraph_answer": "Major markets in Europe ended mixed. France\u2019s CAC 40 rose 0.4 percent and Germany\u2019s DAX edged up 0.2 percent. Britain\u2019s FTSE 100 closed with a loss of 0.2 percent. In the United States, Staples announced that it was buying Office Depot for $6 billion in a widely anticipated merger of the two largest office supply retailers. The cash-and-stock deal comes a little more than a year after Office Depot merged with OfficeMax, and still needs approval from regulators. Staples shares dropped $2.28, or 12 percent, to $16.73.", "sentence_answer": "In the United States, Staples announced that it was buying Office Depot for $6 billion in a widely anticipated merger of the two largest office supply retailers.", "paragraph_id": "5d703907c8e4820a9b66e164"} +{"question": "Who saw the SUV move onto the tracks?", "paragraph": "At the briefing, Mr. Sumwalt said that investigators reviewing the workings of the rail crossing found that the warning lights, the alarm and the gate arms were all functioning at the time of the crash. In an interview with investigators on Thursday, the engineer operating the train said he saw the S.U.V. moving onto the tracks as the northbound train approached the crossing at Commerce Street. The engineer\u2019s account of the car\u2019s moving into the path of the train was consistent with the account of a man who said he was in the car behind Ms. Brody\u2019s, and who was interviewed by reporters after the crash and by investigators for the federal safety board on Thursday.", "answer": "engineer operating the train", "sentence": "In an interview with investigators on Thursday, the engineer operating the train said he saw the S.U.V. moving onto the tracks as the northbound train approached the crossing at Commerce Street.", "paragraph_sentence": "At the briefing, Mr. Sumwalt said that investigators reviewing the workings of the rail crossing found that the warning lights, the alarm and the gate arms were all functioning at the time of the crash. In an interview with investigators on Thursday, the engineer operating the train said he saw the S.U.V. moving onto the tracks as the northbound train approached the crossing at Commerce Street. The engineer\u2019s account of the car\u2019s moving into the path of the train was consistent with the account of a man who said he was in the car behind Ms. Brody\u2019s, and who was interviewed by reporters after the crash and by investigators for the federal safety board on Thursday.", "paragraph_answer": "At the briefing, Mr. Sumwalt said that investigators reviewing the workings of the rail crossing found that the warning lights, the alarm and the gate arms were all functioning at the time of the crash. In an interview with investigators on Thursday, the engineer operating the train said he saw the S.U.V. moving onto the tracks as the northbound train approached the crossing at Commerce Street. The engineer\u2019s account of the car\u2019s moving into the path of the train was consistent with the account of a man who said he was in the car behind Ms. Brody\u2019s, and who was interviewed by reporters after the crash and by investigators for the federal safety board on Thursday.", "sentence_answer": "In an interview with investigators on Thursday, the engineer operating the train said he saw the S.U.V. moving onto the tracks as the northbound train approached the crossing at Commerce Street.", "paragraph_id": "5d706862c8e4820a9b66f102"} +{"question": "What is spareness itself?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe Birth of the World,\u201d Joan Mir\u00f3\u2019s clairvoyant masterpiece from 1927, presaged much of postwar American painting \u2014 the early date can elicit a double take when you see it at the Museum of Modern Art. Its expansive surface of thin gray pours and washes, and the delicate lines and shapes in black, red and white that dance across them, open a pathway to so much: the automatic drawing of Surrealism, the frank painterliness and scale of Abstract Expressionism and the lightness and elegance of Color Field painting. So when Mir\u00f3 (1893-1983) took tips from the Abstract Expressionists on his first trip to New York in 1947 and again in 1959, he was learning from artists who had already learned from him. This fascinating show proposes that encountering New York painting enabled Mir\u00f3 to lose some of his refinement and play up a roughness and scale only intermittently visible before. Rather than delicate and nib thin, his lines thickened, brightened and became more dominant, no longer subservient to shapes. \u201cBird in the Night\u201d is spareness itself: not much more than an open black ovoid and a looping red wishbone that effortlessly summon nest, egg and occupant. Elsewhere Mir\u00f3 improvised layer upon layer, adding a parade of harlequin creatures over a big brown splash of runny paint in \u201cFigures, Birds,\u201d and in \u201cWoman and Bird in the Night,\u201d girdling a series of colorful dots and scribbles in black. Nearly every canvas here is a different excursion into paint, materiality and poetic suggestion. The ensemble enlarges and contemporizes Mir\u00f3, especially in a commercial gallery\u2019s relatively intimate viewing conditions.", "answer": "Bird in the Night", "sentence": "\u201c Bird in the Night \u201d is spareness itself: not much more than an open black ovoid and a looping red wishbone that effortlessly summon nest, egg and occupant.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe Birth of the World,\u201d Joan Mir\u00f3\u2019s clairvoyant masterpiece from 1927, presaged much of postwar American painting \u2014 the early date can elicit a double take when you see it at the Museum of Modern Art. Its expansive surface of thin gray pours and washes, and the delicate lines and shapes in black, red and white that dance across them, open a pathway to so much: the automatic drawing of Surrealism, the frank painterliness and scale of Abstract Expressionism and the lightness and elegance of Color Field painting. So when Mir\u00f3 (1893-1983) took tips from the Abstract Expressionists on his first trip to New York in 1947 and again in 1959, he was learning from artists who had already learned from him. This fascinating show proposes that encountering New York painting enabled Mir\u00f3 to lose some of his refinement and play up a roughness and scale only intermittently visible before. Rather than delicate and nib thin, his lines thickened, brightened and became more dominant, no longer subservient to shapes. \u201c Bird in the Night \u201d is spareness itself: not much more than an open black ovoid and a looping red wishbone that effortlessly summon nest, egg and occupant. Elsewhere Mir\u00f3 improvised layer upon layer, adding a parade of harlequin creatures over a big brown splash of runny paint in \u201cFigures, Birds,\u201d and in \u201cWoman and Bird in the Night,\u201d girdling a series of colorful dots and scribbles in black. Nearly every canvas here is a different excursion into paint, materiality and poetic suggestion. The ensemble enlarges and contemporizes Mir\u00f3, especially in a commercial gallery\u2019s relatively intimate viewing conditions.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe Birth of the World,\u201d Joan Mir\u00f3\u2019s clairvoyant masterpiece from 1927, presaged much of postwar American painting \u2014 the early date can elicit a double take when you see it at the Museum of Modern Art. Its expansive surface of thin gray pours and washes, and the delicate lines and shapes in black, red and white that dance across them, open a pathway to so much: the automatic drawing of Surrealism, the frank painterliness and scale of Abstract Expressionism and the lightness and elegance of Color Field painting. So when Mir\u00f3 (1893-1983) took tips from the Abstract Expressionists on his first trip to New York in 1947 and again in 1959, he was learning from artists who had already learned from him. This fascinating show proposes that encountering New York painting enabled Mir\u00f3 to lose some of his refinement and play up a roughness and scale only intermittently visible before. Rather than delicate and nib thin, his lines thickened, brightened and became more dominant, no longer subservient to shapes. \u201c Bird in the Night \u201d is spareness itself: not much more than an open black ovoid and a looping red wishbone that effortlessly summon nest, egg and occupant. Elsewhere Mir\u00f3 improvised layer upon layer, adding a parade of harlequin creatures over a big brown splash of runny paint in \u201cFigures, Birds,\u201d and in \u201cWoman and Bird in the Night,\u201d girdling a series of colorful dots and scribbles in black. Nearly every canvas here is a different excursion into paint, materiality and poetic suggestion. The ensemble enlarges and contemporizes Mir\u00f3, especially in a commercial gallery\u2019s relatively intimate viewing conditions.", "sentence_answer": "\u201c Bird in the Night \u201d is spareness itself: not much more than an open black ovoid and a looping red wishbone that effortlessly summon nest, egg and occupant.", "paragraph_id": "5d70102dc8e4820a9b66bc4e"} +{"question": "What does Mr. Fernandez's hair look like?", "paragraph": "\u201cThey all come to the salon before going out,\u201d Mr. Fernand\u00e9z said of his nearly 20 clients a night. His own balding hair closely cropped, Mr. Fernand\u00e9z said he started in a state-run barbershop but had creative differences with his partners. \u201cBack then there was no styling and they wouldn\u2019t even wash hair,\u201d he remembered. \u201cI wanted to be different.\u201d His dream is to start a chain and help bring Cuban men\u2019s style back to the glory days. \u201cIt\u2019s like the \u201950s in Havana,\u201d Pavel Premdes, 26, said as he had his hair touched upward in a \u201cGrease\u201d-like wave. \u201cDorian is bringing it back.\u201d As another client showed off a cellphone picture of his girlfriend in librarian glasses straddling a pool table, an assistant to Mr. Fernand\u00e9z stood under an elevated glass chamber that looks like the cockpit of a helicopter that had crashed into the salon. It is used for hair straightening.", "answer": "balding hair closely cropped", "sentence": "His own balding hair closely cropped , Mr. Fernand\u00e9z said he started in a state-run barbershop but had creative differences with his partners.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThey all come to the salon before going out,\u201d Mr. Fernand\u00e9z said of his nearly 20 clients a night. His own balding hair closely cropped , Mr. Fernand\u00e9z said he started in a state-run barbershop but had creative differences with his partners. \u201cBack then there was no styling and they wouldn\u2019t even wash hair,\u201d he remembered. \u201cI wanted to be different.\u201d His dream is to start a chain and help bring Cuban men\u2019s style back to the glory days. \u201cIt\u2019s like the \u201950s in Havana,\u201d Pavel Premdes, 26, said as he had his hair touched upward in a \u201cGrease\u201d-like wave. \u201cDorian is bringing it back.\u201d As another client showed off a cellphone picture of his girlfriend in librarian glasses straddling a pool table, an assistant to Mr. Fernand\u00e9z stood under an elevated glass chamber that looks like the cockpit of a helicopter that had crashed into the salon. It is used for hair straightening.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThey all come to the salon before going out,\u201d Mr. Fernand\u00e9z said of his nearly 20 clients a night. His own balding hair closely cropped , Mr. Fernand\u00e9z said he started in a state-run barbershop but had creative differences with his partners. \u201cBack then there was no styling and they wouldn\u2019t even wash hair,\u201d he remembered. \u201cI wanted to be different.\u201d His dream is to start a chain and help bring Cuban men\u2019s style back to the glory days. \u201cIt\u2019s like the \u201950s in Havana,\u201d Pavel Premdes, 26, said as he had his hair touched upward in a \u201cGrease\u201d-like wave. \u201cDorian is bringing it back.\u201d As another client showed off a cellphone picture of his girlfriend in librarian glasses straddling a pool table, an assistant to Mr. Fernand\u00e9z stood under an elevated glass chamber that looks like the cockpit of a helicopter that had crashed into the salon. It is used for hair straightening.", "sentence_answer": "His own balding hair closely cropped , Mr. Fernand\u00e9z said he started in a state-run barbershop but had creative differences with his partners.", "paragraph_id": "5d70081bc8e4820a9b66af51"} +{"question": "Who is starring in the play, \"National Theater Live: The Audience\"?", "paragraph": "MASHANTUCKET Comix at Foxwoods Greer Barnes. June 25 through 27. $15 to $40. Comix at Foxwoods, 350 Trolley Line Boulevard. comixatfoxwoods.com; 866-646-0609. Film HARTFORD Cinestudio A screening of Julie Taymor\u2019s production of \u201cA Midsummer Night\u2019s Dream.\u201d June 21 and 27 at 2:30 p.m. $12 and $20. \u201cThe Last Waltz\u201d (1976), directed by Martin Scorsese. June 26 through July 2. $7 and $9. \u201cNational Theater Live: \u2018The Audience,\u2019 \u201d screening of the play starring Helen Mirren. June 28 at 2:30 p.m. $12 and $20. Cinestudio, 300 Summit Street. 860-297-2463; cinestudio.org.", "answer": "Helen Mirren", "sentence": "\u201cNational Theater Live: \u2018The Audience,\u2019 \u201d screening of the play starring Helen Mirren .", "paragraph_sentence": "MASHANTUCKET Comix at Foxwoods Greer Barnes. June 25 through 27. $15 to $40. Comix at Foxwoods, 350 Trolley Line Boulevard. comixatfoxwoods.com; 866-646-0609. Film HARTFORD Cinestudio A screening of Julie Taymor\u2019s production of \u201cA Midsummer Night\u2019s Dream.\u201d June 21 and 27 at 2:30 p.m. $12 and $20. \u201cThe Last Waltz\u201d (1976), directed by Martin Scorsese. June 26 through July 2. $7 and $9. \u201cNational Theater Live: \u2018The Audience,\u2019 \u201d screening of the play starring Helen Mirren . June 28 at 2:30 p.m. $12 and $20. Cinestudio, 300 Summit Street. 860-297-2463; cinestudio.org.", "paragraph_answer": "MASHANTUCKET Comix at Foxwoods Greer Barnes. June 25 through 27. $15 to $40. Comix at Foxwoods, 350 Trolley Line Boulevard. comixatfoxwoods.com; 866-646-0609. Film HARTFORD Cinestudio A screening of Julie Taymor\u2019s production of \u201cA Midsummer Night\u2019s Dream.\u201d June 21 and 27 at 2:30 p.m. $12 and $20. \u201cThe Last Waltz\u201d (1976), directed by Martin Scorsese. June 26 through July 2. $7 and $9. \u201cNational Theater Live: \u2018The Audience,\u2019 \u201d screening of the play starring Helen Mirren . June 28 at 2:30 p.m. $12 and $20. Cinestudio, 300 Summit Street. 860-297-2463; cinestudio.org.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cNational Theater Live: \u2018The Audience,\u2019 \u201d screening of the play starring Helen Mirren .", "paragraph_id": "5d7089cac8e4820a9b66f4b5"} +{"question": "Was there any agreement on the border control?", "paragraph": "\u201cThere is no agreement on border control at all, and this is the weakest part,\u201d she told reporters in Brussels during a European Union summit meeting. \u201cIt\u2019s a very partial solution,\u201d she added. \u201cWe already had a very bad experience of not implementing Minsk 1. We\u2019ll see what Minsk 2 will mean.\u201d", "answer": "no", "sentence": "\u201cThere is no agreement on border control at all, and this is the weakest part,\u201d she told reporters in Brussels during a European Union summit meeting.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThere is no agreement on border control at all, and this is the weakest part,\u201d she told reporters in Brussels during a European Union summit meeting. \u201cIt\u2019s a very partial solution,\u201d she added. \u201cWe already had a very bad experience of not implementing Minsk 1. We\u2019ll see what Minsk 2 will mean.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThere is no agreement on border control at all, and this is the weakest part,\u201d she told reporters in Brussels during a European Union summit meeting. \u201cIt\u2019s a very partial solution,\u201d she added. \u201cWe already had a very bad experience of not implementing Minsk 1. We\u2019ll see what Minsk 2 will mean.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThere is no agreement on border control at all, and this is the weakest part,\u201d she told reporters in Brussels during a European Union summit meeting.", "paragraph_id": "5d702502c8e4820a9b66d18f"} +{"question": "What country held was the kite festival shown in the opening episode?", "paragraph": "Was that venerable PBS venturing into the lowbrow world of veterinary television this week? Yes, it was, and Dr. Jeff should take a lesson. A three-part series called \u201cOperation Wild,\u201d which began on Wednesday on PBS, brings us stirring stories of veterinary teams around the globe engaged in unusual high-tech efforts to save sick or injured wild animals. The methods employed are often adapted from human medical care. The opening episode included the stories of an elephant in Laos that had been shot in the leg, a gorilla at a wildlife sanctuary in Cameroon with a damaged wrist, and an annual kite-flying festival in India that leaves hundreds of birds injured by the kite strings. Next week\u2019s installment offers efforts to give a rhinoceros a skin graft and to restore the sight of an orangutan.", "answer": "India", "sentence": "The opening episode included the stories of an elephant in Laos that had been shot in the leg, a gorilla at a wildlife sanctuary in Cameroon with a damaged wrist, and an annual kite-flying festival in India that leaves hundreds of birds injured by the kite strings.", "paragraph_sentence": "Was that venerable PBS venturing into the lowbrow world of veterinary television this week? Yes, it was, and Dr. Jeff should take a lesson. A three-part series called \u201cOperation Wild,\u201d which began on Wednesday on PBS, brings us stirring stories of veterinary teams around the globe engaged in unusual high-tech efforts to save sick or injured wild animals. The methods employed are often adapted from human medical care. The opening episode included the stories of an elephant in Laos that had been shot in the leg, a gorilla at a wildlife sanctuary in Cameroon with a damaged wrist, and an annual kite-flying festival in India that leaves hundreds of birds injured by the kite strings. Next week\u2019s installment offers efforts to give a rhinoceros a skin graft and to restore the sight of an orangutan.", "paragraph_answer": "Was that venerable PBS venturing into the lowbrow world of veterinary television this week? Yes, it was, and Dr. Jeff should take a lesson. A three-part series called \u201cOperation Wild,\u201d which began on Wednesday on PBS, brings us stirring stories of veterinary teams around the globe engaged in unusual high-tech efforts to save sick or injured wild animals. The methods employed are often adapted from human medical care. The opening episode included the stories of an elephant in Laos that had been shot in the leg, a gorilla at a wildlife sanctuary in Cameroon with a damaged wrist, and an annual kite-flying festival in India that leaves hundreds of birds injured by the kite strings. Next week\u2019s installment offers efforts to give a rhinoceros a skin graft and to restore the sight of an orangutan.", "sentence_answer": "The opening episode included the stories of an elephant in Laos that had been shot in the leg, a gorilla at a wildlife sanctuary in Cameroon with a damaged wrist, and an annual kite-flying festival in India that leaves hundreds of birds injured by the kite strings.", "paragraph_id": "5d703ae9c8e4820a9b66e261"} +{"question": "What show is Jeremy Clarkson associated with?", "paragraph": "LONDON \u2014 Jeremy Clarkson has reached the end of the road, at least with the BBC. Mr. Clarkson, the popular and moneymaking host of BBC\u2019s \u201cTop Gear,\u201d an entertainment show built around cars and British macho, was told on Wednesday that his contract, which is up at the end of March, will not be renewed, the BBC said. The decision comes after Mr. Clarkson, 54, was accused of verbally and physically attacking a BBC producer, Oisin Tymon, after Mr. Clarkson returned to a Yorkshire hotel after a late-night drinking session to find that there was no hot food served at that hour. Mr. Tymon was treated at a hospital for his injuries but has not pressed charges against Mr. Clarkson. After the BBC was informed of what it initially called \u201ca fracas,\u201d Mr. Clarkson was suspended on March 10 and the last three episodes of this season of the popular \u201cTop Gear\u201d program were postponed. After an investigation, the BBC director general, Tony Hall, said in a statement, \u201cIt is with great regret that I have told Jeremy Clarkson today that the BBC will not be renewing his contract.\u201d", "answer": "Top Gear", "sentence": "Mr. Clarkson, the popular and moneymaking host of BBC\u2019s \u201c Top Gear ,\u201d an entertainment show built around cars and British macho, was told on Wednesday that his contract, which is up at the end of March, will not be renewed, the BBC said.", "paragraph_sentence": "LONDON \u2014 Jeremy Clarkson has reached the end of the road, at least with the BBC. Mr. Clarkson, the popular and moneymaking host of BBC\u2019s \u201c Top Gear ,\u201d an entertainment show built around cars and British macho, was told on Wednesday that his contract, which is up at the end of March, will not be renewed, the BBC said. The decision comes after Mr. Clarkson, 54, was accused of verbally and physically attacking a BBC producer, Oisin Tymon, after Mr. Clarkson returned to a Yorkshire hotel after a late-night drinking session to find that there was no hot food served at that hour. Mr. Tymon was treated at a hospital for his injuries but has not pressed charges against Mr. Clarkson. After the BBC was informed of what it initially called \u201ca fracas,\u201d Mr. Clarkson was suspended on March 10 and the last three episodes of this season of the popular \u201cTop Gear\u201d program were postponed. After an investigation, the BBC director general, Tony Hall, said in a statement, \u201cIt is with great regret that I have told Jeremy Clarkson today that the BBC will not be renewing his contract.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "LONDON \u2014 Jeremy Clarkson has reached the end of the road, at least with the BBC. Mr. Clarkson, the popular and moneymaking host of BBC\u2019s \u201c Top Gear ,\u201d an entertainment show built around cars and British macho, was told on Wednesday that his contract, which is up at the end of March, will not be renewed, the BBC said. The decision comes after Mr. Clarkson, 54, was accused of verbally and physically attacking a BBC producer, Oisin Tymon, after Mr. Clarkson returned to a Yorkshire hotel after a late-night drinking session to find that there was no hot food served at that hour. Mr. Tymon was treated at a hospital for his injuries but has not pressed charges against Mr. Clarkson. After the BBC was informed of what it initially called \u201ca fracas,\u201d Mr. Clarkson was suspended on March 10 and the last three episodes of this season of the popular \u201cTop Gear\u201d program were postponed. After an investigation, the BBC director general, Tony Hall, said in a statement, \u201cIt is with great regret that I have told Jeremy Clarkson today that the BBC will not be renewing his contract.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Clarkson, the popular and moneymaking host of BBC\u2019s \u201c Top Gear ,\u201d an entertainment show built around cars and British macho, was told on Wednesday that his contract, which is up at the end of March, will not be renewed, the BBC said.", "paragraph_id": "5d7005f7c8e4820a9b66aa30"} +{"question": "What is Khameni's complaint about the negotitations?", "paragraph": "\u201cThey say new things in the negotiations,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei told the military graduates. \u201cRegarding inspections, we have said that we will not let foreigners inspect any military center.\u201d Like last summer, when he vowed that Iran would ultimately build an industrial-scale uranium enrichment capability \u2014 with 190,000 centrifuges, or 10 times the number now installed \u2014 the ayatollah\u2019s comments are bound to cause deep complications for Iran\u2019s negotiators, led by Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif.", "answer": "They say new things", "sentence": "\u201c They say new things in the negotiations,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei told the military graduates.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201c They say new things in the negotiations,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei told the military graduates. \u201cRegarding inspections, we have said that we will not let foreigners inspect any military center.\u201d Like last summer, when he vowed that Iran would ultimately build an industrial-scale uranium enrichment capability \u2014 with 190,000 centrifuges, or 10 times the number now installed \u2014 the ayatollah\u2019s comments are bound to cause deep complications for Iran\u2019s negotiators, led by Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201c They say new things in the negotiations,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei told the military graduates. \u201cRegarding inspections, we have said that we will not let foreigners inspect any military center.\u201d Like last summer, when he vowed that Iran would ultimately build an industrial-scale uranium enrichment capability \u2014 with 190,000 centrifuges, or 10 times the number now installed \u2014 the ayatollah\u2019s comments are bound to cause deep complications for Iran\u2019s negotiators, led by Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif.", "sentence_answer": "\u201c They say new things in the negotiations,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei told the military graduates.", "paragraph_id": "5d70183cc8e4820a9b66c43a"} +{"question": "How do you start?", "paragraph": "Perhaps the smartest decision-making app I\u2019ve used is ChoiceMap, because it\u2019s both really easy to use and it makes it feel as if your decision has been intelligently considered by the app\u2019s algorithms. ChoiceMap, which is free for iOS, tries to make the process as smooth as possible. To start, you describe a choice to make or use one of the app\u2019s many templates on diverse topics, like choosing baby names or which phone carrier to use. Once you have described the decision to be made, and typed in all the outcomes that could result, the app lets you explain all the factors that influence your thinking. If you\u2019re trying to decide where to go for a vacation, for example, cost may be the biggest factor.", "answer": "the decision to be made, and typed in all the outco", "sentence": "Once you have described the decision to be made, and typed in all the outco mes that could result, the app lets you explain all the factors that influence your thinking.", "paragraph_sentence": "Perhaps the smartest decision-making app I\u2019ve used is ChoiceMap, because it\u2019s both really easy to use and it makes it feel as if your decision has been intelligently considered by the app\u2019s algorithms. ChoiceMap, which is free for iOS, tries to make the process as smooth as possible. To start, you describe a choice to make or use one of the app\u2019s many templates on diverse topics, like choosing baby names or which phone carrier to use. Once you have described the decision to be made, and typed in all the outco mes that could result, the app lets you explain all the factors that influence your thinking. If you\u2019re trying to decide where to go for a vacation, for example, cost may be the biggest factor.", "paragraph_answer": "Perhaps the smartest decision-making app I\u2019ve used is ChoiceMap, because it\u2019s both really easy to use and it makes it feel as if your decision has been intelligently considered by the app\u2019s algorithms. ChoiceMap, which is free for iOS, tries to make the process as smooth as possible. To start, you describe a choice to make or use one of the app\u2019s many templates on diverse topics, like choosing baby names or which phone carrier to use. Once you have described the decision to be made, and typed in all the outco mes that could result, the app lets you explain all the factors that influence your thinking. If you\u2019re trying to decide where to go for a vacation, for example, cost may be the biggest factor.", "sentence_answer": "Once you have described the decision to be made, and typed in all the outco mes that could result, the app lets you explain all the factors that influence your thinking.", "paragraph_id": "5d705a4dc8e4820a9b66ee45"} +{"question": "What time is Morton Feldman's Piano and String Quartet performing at on Sunday?", "paragraph": "This week night offers a couple of strong concert choices. On Sunday, you can head to Spectrum, a very cozy space on the Lower East Side, for Morton Feldman\u2019s late, visionary Piano and String Quartet, featuring the pianist Joseph Branciforte and string players drawn from several ensembles: Christopher Otto, Pauline Kim Harris, John Pickford Richards and Mariel Roberts. (9 p.m., 121 Ludlow Street, second floor, spectrumnyc.com.) And on Thursday there\u2019s the second installment in the Argento Chamber Ensemble\u2019s Mahler as New York Contemporary series, which this time pairs the chamber arrangement of \u201cDas Lied von der Erde\u201d with recent works by Oliver Schneller and Jesse Jones. (7:30 p.m., Park Avenue Armory, 643 Park Avenue, at 67th Street, 212-933-5812, argentomusic.com.)", "answer": "9 p.m.", "sentence": "( 9 p.m. , 121 Ludlow Street, second floor, spectrumnyc.com.)", "paragraph_sentence": "This week night offers a couple of strong concert choices. On Sunday, you can head to Spectrum, a very cozy space on the Lower East Side, for Morton Feldman\u2019s late, visionary Piano and String Quartet, featuring the pianist Joseph Branciforte and string players drawn from several ensembles: Christopher Otto, Pauline Kim Harris, John Pickford Richards and Mariel Roberts. ( 9 p.m. , 121 Ludlow Street, second floor, spectrumnyc.com.) And on Thursday there\u2019s the second installment in the Argento Chamber Ensemble\u2019s Mahler as New York Contemporary series, which this time pairs the chamber arrangement of \u201cDas Lied von der Erde\u201d with recent works by Oliver Schneller and Jesse Jones. (7:30 p.m., Park Avenue Armory, 643 Park Avenue, at 67th Street, 212-933-5812, argentomusic.com.)", "paragraph_answer": "This week night offers a couple of strong concert choices. On Sunday, you can head to Spectrum, a very cozy space on the Lower East Side, for Morton Feldman\u2019s late, visionary Piano and String Quartet, featuring the pianist Joseph Branciforte and string players drawn from several ensembles: Christopher Otto, Pauline Kim Harris, John Pickford Richards and Mariel Roberts. ( 9 p.m. , 121 Ludlow Street, second floor, spectrumnyc.com.) And on Thursday there\u2019s the second installment in the Argento Chamber Ensemble\u2019s Mahler as New York Contemporary series, which this time pairs the chamber arrangement of \u201cDas Lied von der Erde\u201d with recent works by Oliver Schneller and Jesse Jones. (7:30 p.m., Park Avenue Armory, 643 Park Avenue, at 67th Street, 212-933-5812, argentomusic.com.)", "sentence_answer": "( 9 p.m. , 121 Ludlow Street, second floor, spectrumnyc.com.)", "paragraph_id": "5d7043a0c8e4820a9b66e6e9"} +{"question": "What condition was Mr Alexander in when he was returned to his cell?", "paragraph": "The officer then put the bag over his head and started beating him again, Mr. Alexander said. He said the interrogation lasted about 20 minutes, and he was then taken, bleeding, back to his cell. Later, Mr. Alexander said, the same officer \u201cbegan quietly taunting and threatening me, telling me, \u2018Don\u2019t worry, Fat Boy, we\u2019ll be seeing you really soon.\u2019 \u201d In a letter to Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services, Mr. Aponte, who also worked in the tailor shop, described going through a similar interrogation two days later.", "answer": "bleeding", "sentence": "He said the interrogation lasted about 20 minutes, and he was then taken, bleeding , back to his cell.", "paragraph_sentence": "The officer then put the bag over his head and started beating him again, Mr. Alexander said. He said the interrogation lasted about 20 minutes, and he was then taken, bleeding , back to his cell. Later, Mr. Alexander said, the same officer \u201cbegan quietly taunting and threatening me, telling me, \u2018Don\u2019t worry, Fat Boy, we\u2019ll be seeing you really soon.\u2019 \u201d In a letter to Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services, Mr. Aponte, who also worked in the tailor shop, described going through a similar interrogation two days later.", "paragraph_answer": "The officer then put the bag over his head and started beating him again, Mr. Alexander said. He said the interrogation lasted about 20 minutes, and he was then taken, bleeding , back to his cell. Later, Mr. Alexander said, the same officer \u201cbegan quietly taunting and threatening me, telling me, \u2018Don\u2019t worry, Fat Boy, we\u2019ll be seeing you really soon.\u2019 \u201d In a letter to Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services, Mr. Aponte, who also worked in the tailor shop, described going through a similar interrogation two days later.", "sentence_answer": "He said the interrogation lasted about 20 minutes, and he was then taken, bleeding , back to his cell.", "paragraph_id": "5d7079c8c8e4820a9b66f2fa"} +{"question": "Who would write an article stating women weren't equal?", "paragraph": "PG: How did people respond when you first raised concerns about equality for women? GS: They were either disinterested or said it was impossible. My classic experience was an editor who said, \u201cO.K., you can publish an article saying women are equal.\u201d But right next to it, he would publish an article that said that they weren\u2019t \u2014 to be objective. RBG: The concern was that if a woman was doing gender equality, her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished. It was considered frivolous.", "answer": "an editor", "sentence": "My classic experience was an editor who said, \u201cO.K., you can publish an article saying women are equal.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "PG: How did people respond when you first raised concerns about equality for women? GS: They were either disinterested or said it was impossible. My classic experience was an editor who said, \u201cO.K., you can publish an article saying women are equal.\u201d But right next to it, he would publish an article that said that they weren\u2019t \u2014 to be objective. RBG: The concern was that if a woman was doing gender equality, her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished. It was considered frivolous.", "paragraph_answer": "PG: How did people respond when you first raised concerns about equality for women? GS: They were either disinterested or said it was impossible. My classic experience was an editor who said, \u201cO.K., you can publish an article saying women are equal.\u201d But right next to it, he would publish an article that said that they weren\u2019t \u2014 to be objective. RBG: The concern was that if a woman was doing gender equality, her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished. It was considered frivolous.", "sentence_answer": "My classic experience was an editor who said, \u201cO.K., you can publish an article saying women are equal.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d705f17c8e4820a9b66eff4"} +{"question": "what rate can landlords charge for an apartment once it reaches a monthly threshold of $2500?", "paragraph": "Mr. de Blasio has also called for the elimination of a provision of the rent-stabilization law that allows landlords to charge market rates once a rent-regulated unit reaches a monthly threshold of $2,500. It accounts for nearly two-thirds of the stabilized apartments lost each year.", "answer": "market rates", "sentence": "Mr. de Blasio has also called for the elimination of a provision of the rent-stabilization law that allows landlords to charge market rates once a rent-regulated unit reaches a monthly threshold of $2,500.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. de Blasio has also called for the elimination of a provision of the rent-stabilization law that allows landlords to charge market rates once a rent-regulated unit reaches a monthly threshold of $2,500. It accounts for nearly two-thirds of the stabilized apartments lost each year.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. de Blasio has also called for the elimination of a provision of the rent-stabilization law that allows landlords to charge market rates once a rent-regulated unit reaches a monthly threshold of $2,500. It accounts for nearly two-thirds of the stabilized apartments lost each year.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. de Blasio has also called for the elimination of a provision of the rent-stabilization law that allows landlords to charge market rates once a rent-regulated unit reaches a monthly threshold of $2,500.", "paragraph_id": "5d7021b2c8e4820a9b66cdc4"} +{"question": "Where is the button for the doorbell located?", "paragraph": "The doorbell at the Mann home in Lexington, Va., is a small, black, wrought-iron breast. Visitors announce themselves by pressing a red nipple within the raised areola. Like the red-metal dragons that line the driveway or the 20-by-24-inch blowups of the children in the foyer or the photograph on the living room wall of Sally Mann\u2019s father, dead in his bathrobe, the doorbell seems designed to give a start to the uninitiated and to put some comic distance between the occupants and their neighbors. The same attitude of defiance is there in the cover portrait of \u201cImmediate Family.\u201d Bare-chested with arms crossed or akimbo, the three little Manns level their gaze at the world. Children and house both project the sensibilities of Sally Mann herself. A 41-year-old dark-haired beauty whose turned-up nose accentuates a natural hauteur, she is a cool mom. With her brood safely strapped in, she drives a black BMW 735i, very fast, and favors a subdued, asexual preppy look \u2014 turtle-necks and T-shirts, cut-off shorts, dirty Reeboks. Lexington is a genteel town, site of Stonewall Jackson\u2019s house, Washington and Lee University and the Virginia Military Institute. Born and raised here, married to the same man for 22 years, Mann is secure enough in her surroundings to take liberties with the mores of a place only 50 miles from the headquarters of the Rev. Jerry Falwell and his Moral Majority. \u201cI think the South depends on its eccentrics,\u201d she says one summer afternoon on the back porch as Jessie and Virginia weave in and out of the house. (Emmett is away at camp.) \u201cIt loves them, and it rewards them in lots of ways. This community allows itself to be scandalized by me and by my work, but they love it. What else would they do if it wasn\u2019t for me? I take being iconoclastic sort of seriously. It\u2019s my role here.\u201d Ex-\u201ddirt hippies\u201d who still grow much of their own food and until a decade and a half ago barely made enough money to pay taxes, Sally and Larry Mann are a tight couple. Both \u201cImmediate Family\u201d and \u201cAt Twelve,\u201d her portraits of local girls on the cusp of puberty, are dedicated to him. While she has pursued her photography career with singleminded purpose, he has been a blacksmith and a two-term City Councilman; recently, he got a law degree. His office in town is 10 minutes away, and he walks home nearly every day for lunch. Their house has an airy mood of understated comfort, its three levels overlooking a wisteria arbor and a well-tended vegetable garden in a yard that slopes down to a creek. Rope swings and hammocks hang from ash-leaved maples. The decor includes photographs by Diane Arbus and Emmet Gowin, both important figures for Mann; walls of books; marble torsos of nude women; finches in cages and flying free; the skeletons of lizards and cats. An expansion completed this year provides each child his or her own room; Sally and Larry reside in a connecting wing, which also houses her new darkroom and offices. To meet the demand for her work, she can now afford to hire an assistant. The slow, wet air of southern Virginia in July and August, when even the trees perspire, serves as a backdrop for Mann\u2019s idylls of leisure. \u201cEven though I take pictures of my children, they\u2019re still about here,\u201d she says. \u201cIt exerts a hold on me that I can\u2019t define.\u201d", "answer": "within the raised areola", "sentence": "Visitors announce themselves by pressing a red nipple within the raised areola .", "paragraph_sentence": "The doorbell at the Mann home in Lexington, Va., is a small, black, wrought-iron breast. Visitors announce themselves by pressing a red nipple within the raised areola . Like the red-metal dragons that line the driveway or the 20-by-24-inch blowups of the children in the foyer or the photograph on the living room wall of Sally Mann\u2019s father, dead in his bathrobe, the doorbell seems designed to give a start to the uninitiated and to put some comic distance between the occupants and their neighbors. The same attitude of defiance is there in the cover portrait of \u201cImmediate Family.\u201d Bare-chested with arms crossed or akimbo, the three little Manns level their gaze at the world. Children and house both project the sensibilities of Sally Mann herself. A 41-year-old dark-haired beauty whose turned-up nose accentuates a natural hauteur, she is a cool mom. With her brood safely strapped in, she drives a black BMW 735i, very fast, and favors a subdued, asexual preppy look \u2014 turtle-necks and T-shirts, cut-off shorts, dirty Reeboks. Lexington is a genteel town, site of Stonewall Jackson\u2019s house, Washington and Lee University and the Virginia Military Institute. Born and raised here, married to the same man for 22 years, Mann is secure enough in her surroundings to take liberties with the mores of a place only 50 miles from the headquarters of the Rev. Jerry Falwell and his Moral Majority. \u201cI think the South depends on its eccentrics,\u201d she says one summer afternoon on the back porch as Jessie and Virginia weave in and out of the house. (Emmett is away at camp.) \u201cIt loves them, and it rewards them in lots of ways. This community allows itself to be scandalized by me and by my work, but they love it. What else would they do if it wasn\u2019t for me? I take being iconoclastic sort of seriously. It\u2019s my role here.\u201d Ex-\u201ddirt hippies\u201d who still grow much of their own food and until a decade and a half ago barely made enough money to pay taxes, Sally and Larry Mann are a tight couple. Both \u201cImmediate Family\u201d and \u201cAt Twelve,\u201d her portraits of local girls on the cusp of puberty, are dedicated to him. While she has pursued her photography career with singleminded purpose, he has been a blacksmith and a two-term City Councilman; recently, he got a law degree. His office in town is 10 minutes away, and he walks home nearly every day for lunch. Their house has an airy mood of understated comfort, its three levels overlooking a wisteria arbor and a well-tended vegetable garden in a yard that slopes down to a creek. Rope swings and hammocks hang from ash-leaved maples. The decor includes photographs by Diane Arbus and Emmet Gowin, both important figures for Mann; walls of books; marble torsos of nude women; finches in cages and flying free; the skeletons of lizards and cats. An expansion completed this year provides each child his or her own room; Sally and Larry reside in a connecting wing, which also houses her new darkroom and offices. To meet the demand for her work, she can now afford to hire an assistant. The slow, wet air of southern Virginia in July and August, when even the trees perspire, serves as a backdrop for Mann\u2019s idylls of leisure. \u201cEven though I take pictures of my children, they\u2019re still about here,\u201d she says. \u201cIt exerts a hold on me that I can\u2019t define.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The doorbell at the Mann home in Lexington, Va., is a small, black, wrought-iron breast. Visitors announce themselves by pressing a red nipple within the raised areola . Like the red-metal dragons that line the driveway or the 20-by-24-inch blowups of the children in the foyer or the photograph on the living room wall of Sally Mann\u2019s father, dead in his bathrobe, the doorbell seems designed to give a start to the uninitiated and to put some comic distance between the occupants and their neighbors. The same attitude of defiance is there in the cover portrait of \u201cImmediate Family.\u201d Bare-chested with arms crossed or akimbo, the three little Manns level their gaze at the world. Children and house both project the sensibilities of Sally Mann herself. A 41-year-old dark-haired beauty whose turned-up nose accentuates a natural hauteur, she is a cool mom. With her brood safely strapped in, she drives a black BMW 735i, very fast, and favors a subdued, asexual preppy look \u2014 turtle-necks and T-shirts, cut-off shorts, dirty Reeboks. Lexington is a genteel town, site of Stonewall Jackson\u2019s house, Washington and Lee University and the Virginia Military Institute. Born and raised here, married to the same man for 22 years, Mann is secure enough in her surroundings to take liberties with the mores of a place only 50 miles from the headquarters of the Rev. Jerry Falwell and his Moral Majority. \u201cI think the South depends on its eccentrics,\u201d she says one summer afternoon on the back porch as Jessie and Virginia weave in and out of the house. (Emmett is away at camp.) \u201cIt loves them, and it rewards them in lots of ways. This community allows itself to be scandalized by me and by my work, but they love it. What else would they do if it wasn\u2019t for me? I take being iconoclastic sort of seriously. It\u2019s my role here.\u201d Ex-\u201ddirt hippies\u201d who still grow much of their own food and until a decade and a half ago barely made enough money to pay taxes, Sally and Larry Mann are a tight couple. Both \u201cImmediate Family\u201d and \u201cAt Twelve,\u201d her portraits of local girls on the cusp of puberty, are dedicated to him. While she has pursued her photography career with singleminded purpose, he has been a blacksmith and a two-term City Councilman; recently, he got a law degree. His office in town is 10 minutes away, and he walks home nearly every day for lunch. Their house has an airy mood of understated comfort, its three levels overlooking a wisteria arbor and a well-tended vegetable garden in a yard that slopes down to a creek. Rope swings and hammocks hang from ash-leaved maples. The decor includes photographs by Diane Arbus and Emmet Gowin, both important figures for Mann; walls of books; marble torsos of nude women; finches in cages and flying free; the skeletons of lizards and cats. An expansion completed this year provides each child his or her own room; Sally and Larry reside in a connecting wing, which also houses her new darkroom and offices. To meet the demand for her work, she can now afford to hire an assistant. The slow, wet air of southern Virginia in July and August, when even the trees perspire, serves as a backdrop for Mann\u2019s idylls of leisure. \u201cEven though I take pictures of my children, they\u2019re still about here,\u201d she says. \u201cIt exerts a hold on me that I can\u2019t define.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Visitors announce themselves by pressing a red nipple within the raised areola .", "paragraph_id": "5d700606c8e4820a9b66aa57"} +{"question": "When did Myanmar decide to open themselves up to the outside world?", "paragraph": "In 1962, Myanmar \u2014 which was called Burma and is wedged high up in Southeast Asia between India and China \u2014 closed its doors to the world and threw away the keys for almost 40 years. Under surveillance-obsessed military rule, little from outside could get in, and little from inside could get out, including art. There was Myanmar art in the West \u2014 England and Germany had made out like the colonial bandits they were \u2014 but very little in the United States. Finally, in the early 2000s, Myanmar re-established cautious international contact and began to advertise, in the interest of tourism, its cultural riches. Loans of art became possible, among the first a big one to the Metropolitan Museum for \u201cLost Kingdoms: Hindu-Buddhist Sculpture of Early Southeast Asia\u201d last year. Even then, at the last minute, promised pieces were held back, though extraordinary things came through, the largest being a monumental stone stele, carved on both sides with mysterious, apparently non-Buddhist figures and dating from around the fourth century.", "answer": "in the early 2000s", "sentence": "Finally, in the early 2000s , Myanmar re-established cautious international contact and began to advertise, in the interest of tourism, its cultural riches.", "paragraph_sentence": "In 1962, Myanmar \u2014 which was called Burma and is wedged high up in Southeast Asia between India and China \u2014 closed its doors to the world and threw away the keys for almost 40 years. Under surveillance-obsessed military rule, little from outside could get in, and little from inside could get out, including art. There was Myanmar art in the West \u2014 England and Germany had made out like the colonial bandits they were \u2014 but very little in the United States. Finally, in the early 2000s , Myanmar re-established cautious international contact and began to advertise, in the interest of tourism, its cultural riches. Loans of art became possible, among the first a big one to the Metropolitan Museum for \u201cLost Kingdoms: Hindu-Buddhist Sculpture of Early Southeast Asia\u201d last year. Even then, at the last minute, promised pieces were held back, though extraordinary things came through, the largest being a monumental stone stele, carved on both sides with mysterious, apparently non-Buddhist figures and dating from around the fourth century.", "paragraph_answer": "In 1962, Myanmar \u2014 which was called Burma and is wedged high up in Southeast Asia between India and China \u2014 closed its doors to the world and threw away the keys for almost 40 years. Under surveillance-obsessed military rule, little from outside could get in, and little from inside could get out, including art. There was Myanmar art in the West \u2014 England and Germany had made out like the colonial bandits they were \u2014 but very little in the United States. Finally, in the early 2000s , Myanmar re-established cautious international contact and began to advertise, in the interest of tourism, its cultural riches. Loans of art became possible, among the first a big one to the Metropolitan Museum for \u201cLost Kingdoms: Hindu-Buddhist Sculpture of Early Southeast Asia\u201d last year. Even then, at the last minute, promised pieces were held back, though extraordinary things came through, the largest being a monumental stone stele, carved on both sides with mysterious, apparently non-Buddhist figures and dating from around the fourth century.", "sentence_answer": "Finally, in the early 2000s , Myanmar re-established cautious international contact and began to advertise, in the interest of tourism, its cultural riches.", "paragraph_id": "5d7027c8c8e4820a9b66d585"} +{"question": "What was her initial request to the McDonald's company?", "paragraph": "In the misguided popular lore, the display says, the woman was driving when the coffee spilled (she was not), she was not badly injured (she was, with third-degree burns that put her in the hospital for eight days and caused permanent scarring), she was out to fleece McDonald\u2019s (the company rejected her initial request for just $20,000 to cover medical expenses) and she received millions (she received less than $500,000). The museum is in a former bank in this struggling town, dotted with abandoned factories but on the path of weekend visitors to more prosperous areas. Mr. Nader knows that a museum in Washington would have more influence but said he had a hard enough time raising close to $3 million for this location. When he first described his vision for the museum, in 1998, he had hoped to raise $5 million within a year or two.", "answer": "$20,000 to cover medical expenses", "sentence": "(the company rejected her initial request for just $20,000 to cover medical expenses ) and she received millions (she received less than $500,000).", "paragraph_sentence": "In the misguided popular lore, the display says, the woman was driving when the coffee spilled (she was not), she was not badly injured (she was, with third-degree burns that put her in the hospital for eight days and caused permanent scarring), she was out to fleece McDonald\u2019s (the company rejected her initial request for just $20,000 to cover medical expenses ) and she received millions (she received less than $500,000). The museum is in a former bank in this struggling town, dotted with abandoned factories but on the path of weekend visitors to more prosperous areas. Mr. Nader knows that a museum in Washington would have more influence but said he had a hard enough time raising close to $3 million for this location. When he first described his vision for the museum, in 1998, he had hoped to raise $5 million within a year or two.", "paragraph_answer": "In the misguided popular lore, the display says, the woman was driving when the coffee spilled (she was not), she was not badly injured (she was, with third-degree burns that put her in the hospital for eight days and caused permanent scarring), she was out to fleece McDonald\u2019s (the company rejected her initial request for just $20,000 to cover medical expenses ) and she received millions (she received less than $500,000). The museum is in a former bank in this struggling town, dotted with abandoned factories but on the path of weekend visitors to more prosperous areas. Mr. Nader knows that a museum in Washington would have more influence but said he had a hard enough time raising close to $3 million for this location. When he first described his vision for the museum, in 1998, he had hoped to raise $5 million within a year or two.", "sentence_answer": "(the company rejected her initial request for just $20,000 to cover medical expenses ) and she received millions (she received less than $500,000).", "paragraph_id": "5d703ee7c8e4820a9b66e437"} +{"question": "ISIS has effective terrorist but indifferent what?", "paragraph": "This border-straddling ISIS sanctuary must be eliminated, just as the Afghan safe haven of Al Qaeda was after 9/11 (before the disastrous distraction of Iraq). Raqqa is much closer to Europe than Tora Bora. ISIS has effective terrorists but indifferent soldiers. They are beatable. Kurdish militias \u2014 not the U.S. military by any means \u2014 have made rapid inroads. They and other local forces can help. But Obama does not have the will. \u201cLet\u2019s assume we send 50,000 troops into Syria,\u201d he said in Turkey. \u201cWhat happens when there\u2019s a terrorist attack generated from Yemen?\u201d That\u2019s a straw-man game unworthy of the president. Its subtext: Because you can\u2019t solve all the problems of the world, solve none. ISIS in Syria and Iraq is the core of the terrorist threat to Europe and America today. So destroy it.", "answer": "soldiers", "sentence": "ISIS has effective terrorists but indifferent soldiers .", "paragraph_sentence": "This border-straddling ISIS sanctuary must be eliminated, just as the Afghan safe haven of Al Qaeda was after 9/11 (before the disastrous distraction of Iraq). Raqqa is much closer to Europe than Tora Bora. ISIS has effective terrorists but indifferent soldiers . They are beatable. Kurdish militias \u2014 not the U.S. military by any means \u2014 have made rapid inroads. They and other local forces can help. But Obama does not have the will. \u201cLet\u2019s assume we send 50,000 troops into Syria,\u201d he said in Turkey. \u201cWhat happens when there\u2019s a terrorist attack generated from Yemen?\u201d That\u2019s a straw-man game unworthy of the president. Its subtext: Because you can\u2019t solve all the problems of the world, solve none. ISIS in Syria and Iraq is the core of the terrorist threat to Europe and America today. So destroy it.", "paragraph_answer": "This border-straddling ISIS sanctuary must be eliminated, just as the Afghan safe haven of Al Qaeda was after 9/11 (before the disastrous distraction of Iraq). Raqqa is much closer to Europe than Tora Bora. ISIS has effective terrorists but indifferent soldiers . They are beatable. Kurdish militias \u2014 not the U.S. military by any means \u2014 have made rapid inroads. They and other local forces can help. But Obama does not have the will. \u201cLet\u2019s assume we send 50,000 troops into Syria,\u201d he said in Turkey. \u201cWhat happens when there\u2019s a terrorist attack generated from Yemen?\u201d That\u2019s a straw-man game unworthy of the president. Its subtext: Because you can\u2019t solve all the problems of the world, solve none. ISIS in Syria and Iraq is the core of the terrorist threat to Europe and America today. So destroy it.", "sentence_answer": "ISIS has effective terrorists but indifferent soldiers .", "paragraph_id": "5d703d51c8e4820a9b66e37a"} +{"question": "How does Mr. Ratmansky coach his casts?", "paragraph": "The week brings five casts at the Metropolitan Opera House. Having already seen five casts in the production\u2019s opening season this March in California, I can attest that it\u2019s rewarding to see them all \u2014 partly because Mr. Ratmansky has coached his casts with different textual options. There are, for example, two versions of the Lilac Fairy\u2019s solo variation in the Prologue \u2014 both notated from the original St. Petersburg production. In the Act III wedding pas de deux, Sarah Lane and Herman Cornejo (on Thursday) eschew the celebrated and traditional fish dives. They instead perform supported pirouettes with an upright ending (one leg flourished to the side) \u2014 which is recorded in the notation as the original choreography.", "answer": "casts with different textual options", "sentence": "Having already seen five casts in the production\u2019s opening season this March in California, I can attest that it\u2019s rewarding to see them all \u2014 partly because Mr. Ratmansky has coached his casts with different textual options .", "paragraph_sentence": "The week brings five casts at the Metropolitan Opera House. Having already seen five casts in the production\u2019s opening season this March in California, I can attest that it\u2019s rewarding to see them all \u2014 partly because Mr. Ratmansky has coached his casts with different textual options . There are, for example, two versions of the Lilac Fairy\u2019s solo variation in the Prologue \u2014 both notated from the original St. Petersburg production. In the Act III wedding pas de deux, Sarah Lane and Herman Cornejo (on Thursday) eschew the celebrated and traditional fish dives. They instead perform supported pirouettes with an upright ending (one leg flourished to the side) \u2014 which is recorded in the notation as the original choreography.", "paragraph_answer": "The week brings five casts at the Metropolitan Opera House. Having already seen five casts in the production\u2019s opening season this March in California, I can attest that it\u2019s rewarding to see them all \u2014 partly because Mr. Ratmansky has coached his casts with different textual options . There are, for example, two versions of the Lilac Fairy\u2019s solo variation in the Prologue \u2014 both notated from the original St. Petersburg production. In the Act III wedding pas de deux, Sarah Lane and Herman Cornejo (on Thursday) eschew the celebrated and traditional fish dives. They instead perform supported pirouettes with an upright ending (one leg flourished to the side) \u2014 which is recorded in the notation as the original choreography.", "sentence_answer": "Having already seen five casts in the production\u2019s opening season this March in California, I can attest that it\u2019s rewarding to see them all \u2014 partly because Mr. Ratmansky has coached his casts with different textual options .", "paragraph_id": "5d700684c8e4820a9b66ab88"} +{"question": "What benefits all readers?", "paragraph": "Diverse storytelling benefits all readers, gay or straight, Mr. Griepp of ICv2 said. \u201cA good story is enjoyable to everybody,\u201d he said, pointing to the steady sales for Alison Bechdel\u2019s graphic memoir \u201cFun Home\u201d as an example. The book, about a lesbian cartoonist and her closeted gay father, has been a best seller since its release in 2007, he said. Adapted for the stage, \u201cFun Home\u201d won five Tony Awards in June, including one for best musical. Jon Goldwater felt the need to modernize Archie Comics when he came aboard as publisher. \u201cIt was crystal clear that Archie was not diverse,\u201d he said, so he introduced Kevin Keller, a gay character, in 2010, eventually giving Kevin his own series. \u201cIt was a cultural decision and business decision,\u201d Mr. Goldwater said. \u201cThey go hand in hand.\u201d", "answer": "Diverse storytelling", "sentence": "Diverse storytelling benefits all readers, gay or straight, Mr. Griepp of ICv2 said.", "paragraph_sentence": " Diverse storytelling benefits all readers, gay or straight, Mr. Griepp of ICv2 said. \u201cA good story is enjoyable to everybody,\u201d he said, pointing to the steady sales for Alison Bechdel\u2019s graphic memoir \u201cFun Home\u201d as an example. The book, about a lesbian cartoonist and her closeted gay father, has been a best seller since its release in 2007, he said. Adapted for the stage, \u201cFun Home\u201d won five Tony Awards in June, including one for best musical. Jon Goldwater felt the need to modernize Archie Comics when he came aboard as publisher. \u201cIt was crystal clear that Archie was not diverse,\u201d he said, so he introduced Kevin Keller, a gay character, in 2010, eventually giving Kevin his own series. \u201cIt was a cultural decision and business decision,\u201d Mr. Goldwater said. \u201cThey go hand in hand.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": " Diverse storytelling benefits all readers, gay or straight, Mr. Griepp of ICv2 said. \u201cA good story is enjoyable to everybody,\u201d he said, pointing to the steady sales for Alison Bechdel\u2019s graphic memoir \u201cFun Home\u201d as an example. The book, about a lesbian cartoonist and her closeted gay father, has been a best seller since its release in 2007, he said. Adapted for the stage, \u201cFun Home\u201d won five Tony Awards in June, including one for best musical. Jon Goldwater felt the need to modernize Archie Comics when he came aboard as publisher. \u201cIt was crystal clear that Archie was not diverse,\u201d he said, so he introduced Kevin Keller, a gay character, in 2010, eventually giving Kevin his own series. \u201cIt was a cultural decision and business decision,\u201d Mr. Goldwater said. \u201cThey go hand in hand.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Diverse storytelling benefits all readers, gay or straight, Mr. Griepp of ICv2 said.", "paragraph_id": "5d703079c8e4820a9b66dcb7"} +{"question": "What did the government say about the soliders that were marching?", "paragraph": "BEIRUT, Lebanon \u2014 Scores of Syrian government soldiers and civilians besieged by insurgents for nearly a month in a hospital in northern Syria fled on Friday in a dramatic exit that both the army and its opponents promptly claimed as a victory. Videos posted by each side showed lines of uniformed soldiers trotting away across a field as what sounded like rifle and artillery fire echoed in the background; the government claimed that they reached safety, while insurgents claimed that many were killed or captured.", "answer": "that they reached safety", "sentence": "Videos posted by each side showed lines of uniformed soldiers trotting away across a field as what sounded like rifle and artillery fire echoed in the background; the government claimed that they reached safety , while insurgents claimed that many were killed or captured.", "paragraph_sentence": "BEIRUT, Lebanon \u2014 Scores of Syrian government soldiers and civilians besieged by insurgents for nearly a month in a hospital in northern Syria fled on Friday in a dramatic exit that both the army and its opponents promptly claimed as a victory. Videos posted by each side showed lines of uniformed soldiers trotting away across a field as what sounded like rifle and artillery fire echoed in the background; the government claimed that they reached safety , while insurgents claimed that many were killed or captured. ", "paragraph_answer": "BEIRUT, Lebanon \u2014 Scores of Syrian government soldiers and civilians besieged by insurgents for nearly a month in a hospital in northern Syria fled on Friday in a dramatic exit that both the army and its opponents promptly claimed as a victory. Videos posted by each side showed lines of uniformed soldiers trotting away across a field as what sounded like rifle and artillery fire echoed in the background; the government claimed that they reached safety , while insurgents claimed that many were killed or captured.", "sentence_answer": "Videos posted by each side showed lines of uniformed soldiers trotting away across a field as what sounded like rifle and artillery fire echoed in the background; the government claimed that they reached safety , while insurgents claimed that many were killed or captured.", "paragraph_id": "5d70226ec8e4820a9b66ce7c"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d7008fcc8e4820a9b66b139"} +{"question": "What happened before the insurgents took over the hospital?", "paragraph": "The scene unfolded almost a month after President Bashar al-Assad, in a rare public speech, had vowed to send reinforcements to rescue the holdouts, declaring, \u201cThe army will arrive soon to these heroes.\u201d Afterward, insurgents, including members of the Nusra Front, which is affiliated with Al Qaeda, captured the gutted hospital, completing their takeover of the town of Jisr al-Shoughour, a crucial location on the road from the mostly insurgent-held province of Idlib toward the government\u2019s strongholds on the coast. The loss of the hospital came two days after Islamic State militants drove government forces out of the desert town of Palmyra in central Syria in a lightning attack that has shocked the country. In addition, on Friday, the Islamic State group, also known as ISIS or ISIL, seized a military outpost near Palmyra, after its takeover on Thursday of a border crossing between Syria and Iraq farther east.", "answer": "Islamic State militants drove government forces out of the desert town of Palmyra", "sentence": "The loss of the hospital came two days after Islamic State militants drove government forces out of the desert town of Palmyra in central Syria in a lightning attack that has shocked the country.", "paragraph_sentence": "The scene unfolded almost a month after President Bashar al-Assad, in a rare public speech, had vowed to send reinforcements to rescue the holdouts, declaring, \u201cThe army will arrive soon to these heroes.\u201d Afterward, insurgents, including members of the Nusra Front, which is affiliated with Al Qaeda, captured the gutted hospital, completing their takeover of the town of Jisr al-Shoughour, a crucial location on the road from the mostly insurgent-held province of Idlib toward the government\u2019s strongholds on the coast. The loss of the hospital came two days after Islamic State militants drove government forces out of the desert town of Palmyra in central Syria in a lightning attack that has shocked the country. In addition, on Friday, the Islamic State group, also known as ISIS or ISIL, seized a military outpost near Palmyra, after its takeover on Thursday of a border crossing between Syria and Iraq farther east.", "paragraph_answer": "The scene unfolded almost a month after President Bashar al-Assad, in a rare public speech, had vowed to send reinforcements to rescue the holdouts, declaring, \u201cThe army will arrive soon to these heroes.\u201d Afterward, insurgents, including members of the Nusra Front, which is affiliated with Al Qaeda, captured the gutted hospital, completing their takeover of the town of Jisr al-Shoughour, a crucial location on the road from the mostly insurgent-held province of Idlib toward the government\u2019s strongholds on the coast. The loss of the hospital came two days after Islamic State militants drove government forces out of the desert town of Palmyra in central Syria in a lightning attack that has shocked the country. In addition, on Friday, the Islamic State group, also known as ISIS or ISIL, seized a military outpost near Palmyra, after its takeover on Thursday of a border crossing between Syria and Iraq farther east.", "sentence_answer": "The loss of the hospital came two days after Islamic State militants drove government forces out of the desert town of Palmyra in central Syria in a lightning attack that has shocked the country.", "paragraph_id": "5d702514c8e4820a9b66d19d"} +{"question": "did julius erving play on 2 different basketball teams?", "paragraph": "If you tried to define New York City basketball strictly by birthplace, you would include players like Michael Jordan, who was born in Brooklyn but grew up elsewhere. And you would exclude Julius Erving, who was born in Nassau County, next to but not part of the city, but who helped to enhance the New York style of play with his wizardry at the famous Rucker Park playground in Harlem before going on to star for the New York Nets and the Philadelphia 76ers. So clearly there is more to the definition than an original address. And even if you can agree that a player should basically be considered a New York City athlete if he went to high school in one of the five boroughs, is there anything else that traditionally sets apart a New York City basketball player?", "answer": "New York Nets and the Philadelphia 76ers", "sentence": "And you would exclude Julius Erving, who was born in Nassau County, next to but not part of the city, but who helped to enhance the New York style of play with his wizardry at the famous Rucker Park playground in Harlem before going on to star for the New York Nets and the Philadelphia 76ers .", "paragraph_sentence": "If you tried to define New York City basketball strictly by birthplace, you would include players like Michael Jordan, who was born in Brooklyn but grew up elsewhere. And you would exclude Julius Erving, who was born in Nassau County, next to but not part of the city, but who helped to enhance the New York style of play with his wizardry at the famous Rucker Park playground in Harlem before going on to star for the New York Nets and the Philadelphia 76ers . So clearly there is more to the definition than an original address. And even if you can agree that a player should basically be considered a New York City athlete if he went to high school in one of the five boroughs, is there anything else that traditionally sets apart a New York City basketball player?", "paragraph_answer": "If you tried to define New York City basketball strictly by birthplace, you would include players like Michael Jordan, who was born in Brooklyn but grew up elsewhere. And you would exclude Julius Erving, who was born in Nassau County, next to but not part of the city, but who helped to enhance the New York style of play with his wizardry at the famous Rucker Park playground in Harlem before going on to star for the New York Nets and the Philadelphia 76ers . So clearly there is more to the definition than an original address. And even if you can agree that a player should basically be considered a New York City athlete if he went to high school in one of the five boroughs, is there anything else that traditionally sets apart a New York City basketball player?", "sentence_answer": "And you would exclude Julius Erving, who was born in Nassau County, next to but not part of the city, but who helped to enhance the New York style of play with his wizardry at the famous Rucker Park playground in Harlem before going on to star for the New York Nets and the Philadelphia 76ers .", "paragraph_id": "5d7021b0c8e4820a9b66cdb0"} +{"question": "What is the name of the former head of the Russian atomic energy ministry?", "paragraph": "Switzerland has extradited some people wanted for financial fraud by countries like Russia, despite criticism from human rights groups concerned that they would not receive a fair trial in their homeland. At the request of the United States, Switzerland arrested Yevgeny Adamov, the former head of the Russian atomic energy ministry, in 2005. But after a long tussle between Washington and Moscow, which then also sought his extradition on embezzlement charges, Switzerland sent Mr. Adamov back to Russia to stand trial, rather than to the United States.", "answer": "Yevgeny Adamov", "sentence": "At the request of the United States, Switzerland arrested Yevgeny Adamov , the former head of the Russian atomic energy ministry, in 2005.", "paragraph_sentence": "Switzerland has extradited some people wanted for financial fraud by countries like Russia, despite criticism from human rights groups concerned that they would not receive a fair trial in their homeland. At the request of the United States, Switzerland arrested Yevgeny Adamov , the former head of the Russian atomic energy ministry, in 2005. But after a long tussle between Washington and Moscow, which then also sought his extradition on embezzlement charges, Switzerland sent Mr. Adamov back to Russia to stand trial, rather than to the United States.", "paragraph_answer": "Switzerland has extradited some people wanted for financial fraud by countries like Russia, despite criticism from human rights groups concerned that they would not receive a fair trial in their homeland. At the request of the United States, Switzerland arrested Yevgeny Adamov , the former head of the Russian atomic energy ministry, in 2005. But after a long tussle between Washington and Moscow, which then also sought his extradition on embezzlement charges, Switzerland sent Mr. Adamov back to Russia to stand trial, rather than to the United States.", "sentence_answer": "At the request of the United States, Switzerland arrested Yevgeny Adamov , the former head of the Russian atomic energy ministry, in 2005.", "paragraph_id": "5d7043a6c8e4820a9b66e6f2"} +{"question": "Where will Aya Jones be modelling this year?", "paragraph": "4. Aya Jones The model Aya Jones was first discovered on Paris\u2019s rue de Rivoli \u2014 and booked promptly as an exclusive in Prada\u2019s spring/summer 2015 show. This year, T brought her somewhere very different: to rural America, for an exploration of American sportswear.", "answer": "rural America", "sentence": "This year, T brought her somewhere very different: to rural America , for an exploration of American sportswear.", "paragraph_sentence": "4. Aya Jones The model Aya Jones was first discovered on Paris\u2019s rue de Rivoli \u2014 and booked promptly as an exclusive in Prada\u2019s spring/summer 2015 show. This year, T brought her somewhere very different: to rural America , for an exploration of American sportswear. ", "paragraph_answer": "4. Aya Jones The model Aya Jones was first discovered on Paris\u2019s rue de Rivoli \u2014 and booked promptly as an exclusive in Prada\u2019s spring/summer 2015 show. This year, T brought her somewhere very different: to rural America , for an exploration of American sportswear.", "sentence_answer": "This year, T brought her somewhere very different: to rural America , for an exploration of American sportswear.", "paragraph_id": "5d702a7fc8e4820a9b66d81b"} +{"question": "The patients who talk for hours are referred as?", "paragraph": "\u201cNightwalkers,\u201d Pierre Bell calls the men and women who find their peace after-hours. He\u2019s new to the night himself, working as a nurse\u2019s aide on the behavior unit at an assisted-living home in Akron, Ohio. \u201cWhat\u2019s behavior?\u201d I asked. \u201cCombative,\u201d he said. \u201cLockdown. Spit, kick, hit, bite.\u201d Sounds terrible, I said. It\u2019s not, he told me, especially at night, when the anger subsides, and when the alarm I can hear beeping in the background is an event rather than a constant song. The other aide will get that one. Bell, a 28-year-old father of a 9-month-old, was sitting with the nightwalkers. The strange ones, the restless ones, the story\u00adtellers. \u201cSome were in wars,\u201d he told me. \u201cSome were teachers.\u201d Sometimes they talk for hours. If they\u2019re up, he\u2019s up. It feels to him like a matter of courtesy. The behavior unit is his patients\u2019 home. He\u2019s only visiting. Trying out the night they live in.", "answer": "the story\u00adtellers", "sentence": "The strange ones, the restless ones, the story\u00adtellers .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cNightwalkers,\u201d Pierre Bell calls the men and women who find their peace after-hours. He\u2019s new to the night himself, working as a nurse\u2019s aide on the behavior unit at an assisted-living home in Akron, Ohio. \u201cWhat\u2019s behavior?\u201d I asked. \u201cCombative,\u201d he said. \u201cLockdown. Spit, kick, hit, bite.\u201d Sounds terrible, I said. It\u2019s not, he told me, especially at night, when the anger subsides, and when the alarm I can hear beeping in the background is an event rather than a constant song. The other aide will get that one. Bell, a 28-year-old father of a 9-month-old, was sitting with the nightwalkers. The strange ones, the restless ones, the story\u00adtellers . \u201cSome were in wars,\u201d he told me. \u201cSome were teachers.\u201d Sometimes they talk for hours. If they\u2019re up, he\u2019s up. It feels to him like a matter of courtesy. The behavior unit is his patients\u2019 home. He\u2019s only visiting. Trying out the night they live in.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cNightwalkers,\u201d Pierre Bell calls the men and women who find their peace after-hours. He\u2019s new to the night himself, working as a nurse\u2019s aide on the behavior unit at an assisted-living home in Akron, Ohio. \u201cWhat\u2019s behavior?\u201d I asked. \u201cCombative,\u201d he said. \u201cLockdown. Spit, kick, hit, bite.\u201d Sounds terrible, I said. It\u2019s not, he told me, especially at night, when the anger subsides, and when the alarm I can hear beeping in the background is an event rather than a constant song. The other aide will get that one. Bell, a 28-year-old father of a 9-month-old, was sitting with the nightwalkers. The strange ones, the restless ones, the story\u00adtellers . \u201cSome were in wars,\u201d he told me. \u201cSome were teachers.\u201d Sometimes they talk for hours. If they\u2019re up, he\u2019s up. It feels to him like a matter of courtesy. The behavior unit is his patients\u2019 home. He\u2019s only visiting. Trying out the night they live in.", "sentence_answer": "The strange ones, the restless ones, the story\u00adtellers .", "paragraph_id": "5d703555c8e4820a9b66df74"} +{"question": "Who studies the financial factors of preventive care?", "paragraph": "There\u2019s also the unavoidable fact that every time you prevent people from dying from one disease, they are likely to live longer and incur future medical expenses. The patient who benefits from the cholesterol screening may go on to develop cancer, arthritis, Alzheimer\u2019s or some other costly illness. There are some prevention measures that actually do seem to save money. Counseling on contraception is one because the costs of prenatal care, delivery and pediatric care associated with an unplanned pregnancy are so substantial. But a lot of the preventive health measures that we tend to value a lot \u2014 mammography, screening for diabetes \u2014 tend to cost more than they save. Researchers like Mr. Cohen, who study these trade-offs, say we need to think more broadly about the value of what our preventive spending buys, not the narrow question of whether it saves money.", "answer": "Mr. Cohen", "sentence": "Researchers like Mr. Cohen , who study these trade-offs, say we need to think more broadly about the value of what our preventive spending buys, not the narrow question of whether it saves money.", "paragraph_sentence": "There\u2019s also the unavoidable fact that every time you prevent people from dying from one disease, they are likely to live longer and incur future medical expenses. The patient who benefits from the cholesterol screening may go on to develop cancer, arthritis, Alzheimer\u2019s or some other costly illness. There are some prevention measures that actually do seem to save money. Counseling on contraception is one because the costs of prenatal care, delivery and pediatric care associated with an unplanned pregnancy are so substantial. But a lot of the preventive health measures that we tend to value a lot \u2014 mammography, screening for diabetes \u2014 tend to cost more than they save. Researchers like Mr. Cohen , who study these trade-offs, say we need to think more broadly about the value of what our preventive spending buys, not the narrow question of whether it saves money. ", "paragraph_answer": "There\u2019s also the unavoidable fact that every time you prevent people from dying from one disease, they are likely to live longer and incur future medical expenses. The patient who benefits from the cholesterol screening may go on to develop cancer, arthritis, Alzheimer\u2019s or some other costly illness. There are some prevention measures that actually do seem to save money. Counseling on contraception is one because the costs of prenatal care, delivery and pediatric care associated with an unplanned pregnancy are so substantial. But a lot of the preventive health measures that we tend to value a lot \u2014 mammography, screening for diabetes \u2014 tend to cost more than they save. Researchers like Mr. Cohen , who study these trade-offs, say we need to think more broadly about the value of what our preventive spending buys, not the narrow question of whether it saves money.", "sentence_answer": "Researchers like Mr. Cohen , who study these trade-offs, say we need to think more broadly about the value of what our preventive spending buys, not the narrow question of whether it saves money.", "paragraph_id": "5d7058d7c8e4820a9b66eddb"} +{"question": "Craig Elbert is the VP for marketing where?", "paragraph": "Members of the so-called millennial generation, accustomed to online shopping, may share Mr. Wright\u2019s opinion in greater number. Still, some e-commerce retailers like Bonobos see printed materials as having modern appeal across age groups and have embraced them. Craig Elbert, vice president for marketing at Bonobos, called them helpful for building relationships and for measuring effectiveness. \u201cYou know if you ultimately made a sale,\u201d he said. \u201cYou know where you ship a catalog and where you ship your orders.\u201d", "answer": "at Bonobos", "sentence": "Craig Elbert, vice president for marketing at Bonobos , called them helpful for building relationships and for measuring effectiveness.", "paragraph_sentence": "Members of the so-called millennial generation, accustomed to online shopping, may share Mr. Wright\u2019s opinion in greater number. Still, some e-commerce retailers like Bonobos see printed materials as having modern appeal across age groups and have embraced them. Craig Elbert, vice president for marketing at Bonobos , called them helpful for building relationships and for measuring effectiveness. \u201cYou know if you ultimately made a sale,\u201d he said. \u201cYou know where you ship a catalog and where you ship your orders.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Members of the so-called millennial generation, accustomed to online shopping, may share Mr. Wright\u2019s opinion in greater number. Still, some e-commerce retailers like Bonobos see printed materials as having modern appeal across age groups and have embraced them. Craig Elbert, vice president for marketing at Bonobos , called them helpful for building relationships and for measuring effectiveness. \u201cYou know if you ultimately made a sale,\u201d he said. \u201cYou know where you ship a catalog and where you ship your orders.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Craig Elbert, vice president for marketing at Bonobos , called them helpful for building relationships and for measuring effectiveness.", "paragraph_id": "5d702b5ec8e4820a9b66d8ec"} +{"question": "What material cost more than others when used to build a mantel?", "paragraph": "Ms. Enger recommended using a \u201cclean and simple\u201d design that would appeal to both modern and traditional tastes. \u201cMost people today don\u2019t want anything too fussy,\u201d she said. It\u2019s also important to be aware of how the original surround was built. Many surrounds are made from brick veneer that is just stuck onto the wall, Ms. Enger said, and they can be removed relatively easily and replaced. But if the brick is an integral part of the wall, a cover-up job may be required. If you\u2019re aiming for all-out luxury, you might consider installing a custom stone surround. Ms. Enger built a clean-lined limestone mantel for a spec house in Hoboken that she and her husband sold last May, she said, and it became one of the home\u2019s most talked-about selling features. \u201cIt was something that everyone \u2013 realtors, potential buyers and friends \u2013 loved,\u201d she said. Just be aware, she added, that \u201cit\u2019s definitely more pricey than wood or paint.\u201d", "answer": "limestone", "sentence": "Ms. Enger built a clean-lined limestone mantel for a spec house in Hoboken that she and her husband sold last May, she said, and it became one of the home\u2019s most talked-about selling features.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Enger recommended using a \u201cclean and simple\u201d design that would appeal to both modern and traditional tastes. \u201cMost people today don\u2019t want anything too fussy,\u201d she said. It\u2019s also important to be aware of how the original surround was built. Many surrounds are made from brick veneer that is just stuck onto the wall, Ms. Enger said, and they can be removed relatively easily and replaced. But if the brick is an integral part of the wall, a cover-up job may be required. If you\u2019re aiming for all-out luxury, you might consider installing a custom stone surround. Ms. Enger built a clean-lined limestone mantel for a spec house in Hoboken that she and her husband sold last May, she said, and it became one of the home\u2019s most talked-about selling features. \u201cIt was something that everyone \u2013 realtors, potential buyers and friends \u2013 loved,\u201d she said. Just be aware, she added, that \u201cit\u2019s definitely more pricey than wood or paint.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Enger recommended using a \u201cclean and simple\u201d design that would appeal to both modern and traditional tastes. \u201cMost people today don\u2019t want anything too fussy,\u201d she said. It\u2019s also important to be aware of how the original surround was built. Many surrounds are made from brick veneer that is just stuck onto the wall, Ms. Enger said, and they can be removed relatively easily and replaced. But if the brick is an integral part of the wall, a cover-up job may be required. If you\u2019re aiming for all-out luxury, you might consider installing a custom stone surround. Ms. Enger built a clean-lined limestone mantel for a spec house in Hoboken that she and her husband sold last May, she said, and it became one of the home\u2019s most talked-about selling features. \u201cIt was something that everyone \u2013 realtors, potential buyers and friends \u2013 loved,\u201d she said. Just be aware, she added, that \u201cit\u2019s definitely more pricey than wood or paint.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Enger built a clean-lined limestone mantel for a spec house in Hoboken that she and her husband sold last May, she said, and it became one of the home\u2019s most talked-about selling features.", "paragraph_id": "5d705113c8e4820a9b66eb6f"} +{"question": "What are the colors of the studies?", "paragraph": "Inside the elevator bank model, a short video of Hofmann at work is worth watching. On audio, Mr. Silver presents his thinking on the mosaics. First, His studies for the mosaics led him away from easel painting and spurred larger, more ambitious works. This is visible in nine paintings (oil on paper on board) executed in preparation for a 50-foot-tall mural for a campanile in Chimbote, a port city in Peru, as part of a renewal project by the architect Josep Llu\u00eds Sert and the urban planner Paul Lester Wiener. Measuring as much as 8 by 4 feet, the studies depict tilting, implicitly Constructivist crosses in red, yellow and blue, so cheerful they seem almost blasphemous, and more open figurative-like improvisations that bring to mind David Smith\u2019s welded sculptures.", "answer": "red, yellow and blue,", "sentence": "Measuring as much as 8 by 4 feet, the studies depict tilting, implicitly Constructivist crosses in red, yellow and blue, so cheerful they seem almost blasphemous, and more open figurative-like improvisations that bring to mind David Smith\u2019s welded sculptures.", "paragraph_sentence": "Inside the elevator bank model, a short video of Hofmann at work is worth watching. On audio, Mr. Silver presents his thinking on the mosaics. First, His studies for the mosaics led him away from easel painting and spurred larger, more ambitious works. This is visible in nine paintings (oil on paper on board) executed in preparation for a 50-foot-tall mural for a campanile in Chimbote, a port city in Peru, as part of a renewal project by the architect Josep Llu\u00eds Sert and the urban planner Paul Lester Wiener. Measuring as much as 8 by 4 feet, the studies depict tilting, implicitly Constructivist crosses in red, yellow and blue, so cheerful they seem almost blasphemous, and more open figurative-like improvisations that bring to mind David Smith\u2019s welded sculptures. ", "paragraph_answer": "Inside the elevator bank model, a short video of Hofmann at work is worth watching. On audio, Mr. Silver presents his thinking on the mosaics. First, His studies for the mosaics led him away from easel painting and spurred larger, more ambitious works. This is visible in nine paintings (oil on paper on board) executed in preparation for a 50-foot-tall mural for a campanile in Chimbote, a port city in Peru, as part of a renewal project by the architect Josep Llu\u00eds Sert and the urban planner Paul Lester Wiener. Measuring as much as 8 by 4 feet, the studies depict tilting, implicitly Constructivist crosses in red, yellow and blue, so cheerful they seem almost blasphemous, and more open figurative-like improvisations that bring to mind David Smith\u2019s welded sculptures.", "sentence_answer": "Measuring as much as 8 by 4 feet, the studies depict tilting, implicitly Constructivist crosses in red, yellow and blue, so cheerful they seem almost blasphemous, and more open figurative-like improvisations that bring to mind David Smith\u2019s welded sculptures.", "paragraph_id": "5d700bc2c8e4820a9b66b69f"} +{"question": "Which moniker has Rodriguez accepted from fans?", "paragraph": "\u201cI wasn\u2019t sure what to expect in spring training,\u201d Girardi said last week. \u201cBut Alex is a worker and he knows how to play the game. And he\u2019s been a really smart player for a long period of time, so if there\u2019s anyone who can figure it out quickly, it would be Alex.\u201d Rodriguez\u2019s performance has moved him into the good graces of many, but not all, Yankees fans. On the road, Rodriguez has been booed, though it often seems as if it is a matter of course. As Rodriguez noted recently, he has been a popular villain since 2001, when he signed a then-record $252 million free-agent contract with the Texas Rangers.", "answer": "villain", "sentence": "As Rodriguez noted recently, he has been a popular villain since 2001, when he signed a then-record $252 million free-agent contract with the Texas Rangers.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI wasn\u2019t sure what to expect in spring training,\u201d Girardi said last week. \u201cBut Alex is a worker and he knows how to play the game. And he\u2019s been a really smart player for a long period of time, so if there\u2019s anyone who can figure it out quickly, it would be Alex.\u201d Rodriguez\u2019s performance has moved him into the good graces of many, but not all, Yankees fans. On the road, Rodriguez has been booed, though it often seems as if it is a matter of course. As Rodriguez noted recently, he has been a popular villain since 2001, when he signed a then-record $252 million free-agent contract with the Texas Rangers. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI wasn\u2019t sure what to expect in spring training,\u201d Girardi said last week. \u201cBut Alex is a worker and he knows how to play the game. And he\u2019s been a really smart player for a long period of time, so if there\u2019s anyone who can figure it out quickly, it would be Alex.\u201d Rodriguez\u2019s performance has moved him into the good graces of many, but not all, Yankees fans. On the road, Rodriguez has been booed, though it often seems as if it is a matter of course. As Rodriguez noted recently, he has been a popular villain since 2001, when he signed a then-record $252 million free-agent contract with the Texas Rangers.", "sentence_answer": "As Rodriguez noted recently, he has been a popular villain since 2001, when he signed a then-record $252 million free-agent contract with the Texas Rangers.", "paragraph_id": "5d70306ec8e4820a9b66dcb1"} +{"question": "When did HP split into two companies?", "paragraph": "Hewlett-Packard will release its earnings for the fourth quarter of 2015 on Tuesday. It will be something of a valedictory moment: On Nov. 1 the entity became two companies. One, HP Inc., primarily sells personal computers and printers. HP Enterprise, or HPE, sells computer hardware and software for business.", "answer": "Nov. 1", "sentence": "It will be something of a valedictory moment: On Nov. 1 the entity became two companies.", "paragraph_sentence": "Hewlett-Packard will release its earnings for the fourth quarter of 2015 on Tuesday. It will be something of a valedictory moment: On Nov. 1 the entity became two companies. One, HP Inc., primarily sells personal computers and printers. HP Enterprise, or HPE, sells computer hardware and software for business.", "paragraph_answer": "Hewlett-Packard will release its earnings for the fourth quarter of 2015 on Tuesday. It will be something of a valedictory moment: On Nov. 1 the entity became two companies. One, HP Inc., primarily sells personal computers and printers. HP Enterprise, or HPE, sells computer hardware and software for business.", "sentence_answer": "It will be something of a valedictory moment: On Nov. 1 the entity became two companies.", "paragraph_id": "5d702725c8e4820a9b66d4f0"} +{"question": "Which team was Mattingly playing against when he hit the last grand slam in 1987?", "paragraph": "Don Mattingly is the author of one of baseball\u2019s most preposterous statistical anomalies. In 1987, he set the major league record (it has since been tied) for most grand slams in a season \u2014 six \u2014 and those were the only ones he ever hit. Two of them came during a streak in mid-July when he matched the record for most consecutive games with a home run \u2014 eight \u2014 actually hitting 10 in eight games. The last one, in Texas against the Rangers, just barely sailed over the wall in left-center field, not exactly the left-handed Mattingly\u2019s power alley. \u201cHoly cow, he did it!\u201d Phil Rizzuto screamed, announcing the feat on TV. \u201cHoly cow, Mattingly is unbelievable.\u201d", "answer": "Rangers", "sentence": "The last one, in Texas against the Rangers , just barely sailed over the wall in left-center field, not exactly the left-handed Mattingly\u2019s power alley.", "paragraph_sentence": "Don Mattingly is the author of one of baseball\u2019s most preposterous statistical anomalies. In 1987, he set the major league record (it has since been tied) for most grand slams in a season \u2014 six \u2014 and those were the only ones he ever hit. Two of them came during a streak in mid-July when he matched the record for most consecutive games with a home run \u2014 eight \u2014 actually hitting 10 in eight games. The last one, in Texas against the Rangers , just barely sailed over the wall in left-center field, not exactly the left-handed Mattingly\u2019s power alley. \u201cHoly cow, he did it!\u201d Phil Rizzuto screamed, announcing the feat on TV. \u201cHoly cow, Mattingly is unbelievable.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Don Mattingly is the author of one of baseball\u2019s most preposterous statistical anomalies. In 1987, he set the major league record (it has since been tied) for most grand slams in a season \u2014 six \u2014 and those were the only ones he ever hit. Two of them came during a streak in mid-July when he matched the record for most consecutive games with a home run \u2014 eight \u2014 actually hitting 10 in eight games. The last one, in Texas against the Rangers , just barely sailed over the wall in left-center field, not exactly the left-handed Mattingly\u2019s power alley. \u201cHoly cow, he did it!\u201d Phil Rizzuto screamed, announcing the feat on TV. \u201cHoly cow, Mattingly is unbelievable.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The last one, in Texas against the Rangers , just barely sailed over the wall in left-center field, not exactly the left-handed Mattingly\u2019s power alley.", "paragraph_id": "5d6f60d2c8e4820a9b66a652"} +{"question": "Which region did officials target for a temporary ban for ride hailing services?", "paragraph": "The case, which made headlines in December, incited local officials to temporarily ban the ride-hailing service in the Delhi region after details emerged that the driver, Shiv Kumar Yadav, had previously been detained on suspicion of raping another female passenger in 2011. While officials said that case was ultimately closed and Mr. Yadav was acquitted, the fallout around the episode raised questions about Uber\u2019s security screening process for drivers. An Uber spokeswoman declined to comment on the withdrawal of the case. Douglas Wigdor, a lawyer representing the plaintiff, who filed as Jane Doe, also declined to comment.", "answer": "Delhi region", "sentence": "The case, which made headlines in December, incited local officials to temporarily ban the ride-hailing service in the Delhi region after details emerged that the driver, Shiv Kumar Yadav, had previously been detained on suspicion of raping another female passenger in 2011.", "paragraph_sentence": " The case, which made headlines in December, incited local officials to temporarily ban the ride-hailing service in the Delhi region after details emerged that the driver, Shiv Kumar Yadav, had previously been detained on suspicion of raping another female passenger in 2011. While officials said that case was ultimately closed and Mr. Yadav was acquitted, the fallout around the episode raised questions about Uber\u2019s security screening process for drivers. An Uber spokeswoman declined to comment on the withdrawal of the case. Douglas Wigdor, a lawyer representing the plaintiff, who filed as Jane Doe, also declined to comment.", "paragraph_answer": "The case, which made headlines in December, incited local officials to temporarily ban the ride-hailing service in the Delhi region after details emerged that the driver, Shiv Kumar Yadav, had previously been detained on suspicion of raping another female passenger in 2011. While officials said that case was ultimately closed and Mr. Yadav was acquitted, the fallout around the episode raised questions about Uber\u2019s security screening process for drivers. An Uber spokeswoman declined to comment on the withdrawal of the case. Douglas Wigdor, a lawyer representing the plaintiff, who filed as Jane Doe, also declined to comment.", "sentence_answer": "The case, which made headlines in December, incited local officials to temporarily ban the ride-hailing service in the Delhi region after details emerged that the driver, Shiv Kumar Yadav, had previously been detained on suspicion of raping another female passenger in 2011.", "paragraph_id": "5d7040d1c8e4820a9b66e523"} +{"question": "Who does John Skipper think is bigger than the brand?", "paragraph": "ESPN will make its annual upfront presentation to advertisers Tuesday morning in a Broadway theater, four days after scripting the latest act in its relationship with Bill Simmons, if not its final one. Last Friday, John Skipper, ESPN\u2019s president, effectively fired Simmons, one of the company\u2019s best known employees and the founding editor of its Grantland website, by announcing that he would not renew his contract. The message was clear: Regardless of your influence or the number of people who listen to your podcasts, no one is bigger than the brand.", "answer": "no one", "sentence": "Regardless of your influence or the number of people who listen to your podcasts, no one is bigger than the brand.", "paragraph_sentence": "ESPN will make its annual upfront presentation to advertisers Tuesday morning in a Broadway theater, four days after scripting the latest act in its relationship with Bill Simmons, if not its final one. Last Friday, John Skipper, ESPN\u2019s president, effectively fired Simmons, one of the company\u2019s best known employees and the founding editor of its Grantland website, by announcing that he would not renew his contract. The message was clear: Regardless of your influence or the number of people who listen to your podcasts, no one is bigger than the brand. ", "paragraph_answer": "ESPN will make its annual upfront presentation to advertisers Tuesday morning in a Broadway theater, four days after scripting the latest act in its relationship with Bill Simmons, if not its final one. Last Friday, John Skipper, ESPN\u2019s president, effectively fired Simmons, one of the company\u2019s best known employees and the founding editor of its Grantland website, by announcing that he would not renew his contract. The message was clear: Regardless of your influence or the number of people who listen to your podcasts, no one is bigger than the brand.", "sentence_answer": "Regardless of your influence or the number of people who listen to your podcasts, no one is bigger than the brand.", "paragraph_id": "5d706bd9c8e4820a9b66f169"} +{"question": "Where did Sandy retire from?", "paragraph": "On a quiet Friday morning in November 2010, Sandy sat down with a mug of honey-\u00adginger tea to read two books that Daryl had brought her. By this point, a year and a half after her amnestic M.C.I. diagnosis, she had progressed to what Duffy said was Alzheimer\u2019s disease. She had retired from Cornell, but she was doing well. She could still travel alone to familiar destinations, including Austin, Tex., where Emily was living. Jeremy had temporarily moved back home to be with her. She could read novels, even difficult ones like Cormac McCarthy\u2019s \u201cThe Road.\u201d She played tennis, gardened and went for walks around Ithaca with a handful of friends, most of them former colleagues from Cornell. She saw a few psychotherapy patients. One would later say that even though Sandy was having some trouble remembering words, \u201cit didn\u2019t really matter. In a therapy relationship you\u2019re talking more about emotions \u2014 and in that regard, she didn\u2019t miss a beat.\u201d", "answer": "Cornell", "sentence": "She had retired from Cornell , but she was doing well.", "paragraph_sentence": "On a quiet Friday morning in November 2010, Sandy sat down with a mug of honey-\u00adginger tea to read two books that Daryl had brought her. By this point, a year and a half after her amnestic M.C.I. diagnosis, she had progressed to what Duffy said was Alzheimer\u2019s disease. She had retired from Cornell , but she was doing well. She could still travel alone to familiar destinations, including Austin, Tex., where Emily was living. Jeremy had temporarily moved back home to be with her. She could read novels, even difficult ones like Cormac McCarthy\u2019s \u201cThe Road.\u201d She played tennis, gardened and went for walks around Ithaca with a handful of friends, most of them former colleagues from Cornell. She saw a few psychotherapy patients. One would later say that even though Sandy was having some trouble remembering words, \u201cit didn\u2019t really matter. In a therapy relationship you\u2019re talking more about emotions \u2014 and in that regard, she didn\u2019t miss a beat.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "On a quiet Friday morning in November 2010, Sandy sat down with a mug of honey-\u00adginger tea to read two books that Daryl had brought her. By this point, a year and a half after her amnestic M.C.I. diagnosis, she had progressed to what Duffy said was Alzheimer\u2019s disease. She had retired from Cornell , but she was doing well. She could still travel alone to familiar destinations, including Austin, Tex., where Emily was living. Jeremy had temporarily moved back home to be with her. She could read novels, even difficult ones like Cormac McCarthy\u2019s \u201cThe Road.\u201d She played tennis, gardened and went for walks around Ithaca with a handful of friends, most of them former colleagues from Cornell. She saw a few psychotherapy patients. One would later say that even though Sandy was having some trouble remembering words, \u201cit didn\u2019t really matter. In a therapy relationship you\u2019re talking more about emotions \u2014 and in that regard, she didn\u2019t miss a beat.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "She had retired from Cornell , but she was doing well.", "paragraph_id": "5d704083c8e4820a9b66e50c"} +{"question": "Where is Big Brother watching from?", "paragraph": "\u201cI really loved the idea of a healthy weekend: high-end, but low-fat cuisine, fitness classes, treatments,\u201d Ms. Kushner said. The event coordinator planned nostalgic playground games (ring toss, jumping rope) in a lighthearted but competitive style. \u201cMy friends were so surprised by how much fun they had,\u201d she said. The notion that Big Brother is watching from the web, along with the eyes of corporate America, is a reality that is also bearing down on millennials and others who are holding down jobs and are expected to perform in them. As enticing and addictive as Facebook and Instagram have become, there\u2019s also a pushback from those wanting to remain faceless and nameless. For these folks, being caught in compromising photographs in a posting on someone\u2019s page that they didn\u2019t O.K. is no longer acceptable.", "answer": "web", "sentence": "The notion that Big Brother is watching from the web , along with the eyes of corporate America, is a reality that is also bearing down on millennials and others who are holding down jobs and are expected to perform in them.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI really loved the idea of a healthy weekend: high-end, but low-fat cuisine, fitness classes, treatments,\u201d Ms. Kushner said. The event coordinator planned nostalgic playground games (ring toss, jumping rope) in a lighthearted but competitive style. \u201cMy friends were so surprised by how much fun they had,\u201d she said. The notion that Big Brother is watching from the web , along with the eyes of corporate America, is a reality that is also bearing down on millennials and others who are holding down jobs and are expected to perform in them. As enticing and addictive as Facebook and Instagram have become, there\u2019s also a pushback from those wanting to remain faceless and nameless. For these folks, being caught in compromising photographs in a posting on someone\u2019s page that they didn\u2019t O.K. is no longer acceptable.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI really loved the idea of a healthy weekend: high-end, but low-fat cuisine, fitness classes, treatments,\u201d Ms. Kushner said. The event coordinator planned nostalgic playground games (ring toss, jumping rope) in a lighthearted but competitive style. \u201cMy friends were so surprised by how much fun they had,\u201d she said. The notion that Big Brother is watching from the web , along with the eyes of corporate America, is a reality that is also bearing down on millennials and others who are holding down jobs and are expected to perform in them. As enticing and addictive as Facebook and Instagram have become, there\u2019s also a pushback from those wanting to remain faceless and nameless. For these folks, being caught in compromising photographs in a posting on someone\u2019s page that they didn\u2019t O.K. is no longer acceptable.", "sentence_answer": "The notion that Big Brother is watching from the web , along with the eyes of corporate America, is a reality that is also bearing down on millennials and others who are holding down jobs and are expected to perform in them.", "paragraph_id": "5d70156ec8e4820a9b66c18b"} +{"question": "Where were a series of test shows held at?", "paragraph": "But thematically, Mr. Slater said, he could understand why Mr. Lloyd Webber might relate to the material. \u201cEveryone has gone through some period where they felt like they needed to break out of a category they had been put in and find their own voice,\u201d he said. \u201cThat\u2019s really what this show is about.\u201d The composition of the musical (in which Alex Brightman plays the Dewey Finn character) happened quickly, between June and December of 2014. Auditions for its school-aged characters were held at the start of this year, and over the summer, a series of test shows were held at the Gramercy Theater, a sticky-floored rock club in Midtown Manhattan. Plans for a Broadway transfer were already in place \u2014 an unusually aggressive trajectory for a musical that never had an out-of-town tryout.", "answer": "Gramercy Theater", "sentence": "Auditions for its school-aged characters were held at the start of this year, and over the summer, a series of test shows were held at the Gramercy Theater , a sticky-floored rock club in Midtown Manhattan.", "paragraph_sentence": "But thematically, Mr. Slater said, he could understand why Mr. Lloyd Webber might relate to the material. \u201cEveryone has gone through some period where they felt like they needed to break out of a category they had been put in and find their own voice,\u201d he said. \u201cThat\u2019s really what this show is about.\u201d The composition of the musical (in which Alex Brightman plays the Dewey Finn character) happened quickly, between June and December of 2014. Auditions for its school-aged characters were held at the start of this year, and over the summer, a series of test shows were held at the Gramercy Theater , a sticky-floored rock club in Midtown Manhattan. Plans for a Broadway transfer were already in place \u2014 an unusually aggressive trajectory for a musical that never had an out-of-town tryout.", "paragraph_answer": "But thematically, Mr. Slater said, he could understand why Mr. Lloyd Webber might relate to the material. \u201cEveryone has gone through some period where they felt like they needed to break out of a category they had been put in and find their own voice,\u201d he said. \u201cThat\u2019s really what this show is about.\u201d The composition of the musical (in which Alex Brightman plays the Dewey Finn character) happened quickly, between June and December of 2014. Auditions for its school-aged characters were held at the start of this year, and over the summer, a series of test shows were held at the Gramercy Theater , a sticky-floored rock club in Midtown Manhattan. Plans for a Broadway transfer were already in place \u2014 an unusually aggressive trajectory for a musical that never had an out-of-town tryout.", "sentence_answer": "Auditions for its school-aged characters were held at the start of this year, and over the summer, a series of test shows were held at the Gramercy Theater , a sticky-floored rock club in Midtown Manhattan.", "paragraph_id": "5d704915c8e4820a9b66e920"} +{"question": "What character sits on a chair?", "paragraph": "In Jesse Ball\u2019s elegant, spellbinding fifth novel, \u201cA Cure for Suicide,\u201d a man known only as the \u201cclaimant\u201d sits on a chair, which he has recently learned is called \u201cchair.\u201d He listens as a woman he knows as the \u201cexaminer\u201d tells him how a story works. The examiner has not yet given the claimant a name. The claimant must first learn how to listen to a story and tell a story in turn. \u201cIt isn\u2019t important that you understand what I say,\u201d the examiner tells him. \u201cIt is not very important that you are understood as long as you give the person the happiness of being told a story.\u201d", "answer": "the \u201cclaimant\u201d", "sentence": "In Jesse Ball\u2019s elegant, spellbinding fifth novel, \u201cA Cure for Suicide,\u201d a man known only as the \u201cclaimant\u201d sits on a chair, which he has recently learned is called \u201cchair.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " In Jesse Ball\u2019s elegant, spellbinding fifth novel, \u201cA Cure for Suicide,\u201d a man known only as the \u201cclaimant\u201d sits on a chair, which he has recently learned is called \u201cchair.\u201d He listens as a woman he knows as the \u201cexaminer\u201d tells him how a story works. The examiner has not yet given the claimant a name. The claimant must first learn how to listen to a story and tell a story in turn. \u201cIt isn\u2019t important that you understand what I say,\u201d the examiner tells him. \u201cIt is not very important that you are understood as long as you give the person the happiness of being told a story.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "In Jesse Ball\u2019s elegant, spellbinding fifth novel, \u201cA Cure for Suicide,\u201d a man known only as the \u201cclaimant\u201d sits on a chair, which he has recently learned is called \u201cchair.\u201d He listens as a woman he knows as the \u201cexaminer\u201d tells him how a story works. The examiner has not yet given the claimant a name. The claimant must first learn how to listen to a story and tell a story in turn. \u201cIt isn\u2019t important that you understand what I say,\u201d the examiner tells him. \u201cIt is not very important that you are understood as long as you give the person the happiness of being told a story.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In Jesse Ball\u2019s elegant, spellbinding fifth novel, \u201cA Cure for Suicide,\u201d a man known only as the \u201cclaimant\u201d sits on a chair, which he has recently learned is called \u201cchair.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d70068cc8e4820a9b66aba4"} +{"question": "What is the unfolding of the characters compared to by the reviewer?", "paragraph": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "answer": "slow-motion car accident", "sentence": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident , we long for a happy ending.", "paragraph_sentence": " Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident , we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "paragraph_answer": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident , we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "sentence_answer": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident , we long for a happy ending.", "paragraph_id": "5d701ff5c8e4820a9b66cbb3"} +{"question": "who said anne gary pannell was worn out dealing with the strife on campus ?", "paragraph": "\u201cI was filled with social reform zeal,\u201d she said. \u201cIt was a big thing for my parents, who had not gone to college, that I was going to college. It was really a shock to them, the change between how I was when I went in and when I came out. So we had some rough years.\u201d So did Sweet Briar\u2019s president at the time, Anne Gary Pannell, who Ms. English said was so worn out dealing with the strife on campus that she retired when the class of 1971 graduated.", "answer": "Ms. English", "sentence": "who Ms. English said was so worn out dealing with the strife on campus that she retired when the class of 1971 graduated.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI was filled with social reform zeal,\u201d she said. \u201cIt was a big thing for my parents, who had not gone to college, that I was going to college. It was really a shock to them, the change between how I was when I went in and when I came out. So we had some rough years.\u201d So did Sweet Briar\u2019s president at the time, Anne Gary Pannell, who Ms. English said was so worn out dealing with the strife on campus that she retired when the class of 1971 graduated. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI was filled with social reform zeal,\u201d she said. \u201cIt was a big thing for my parents, who had not gone to college, that I was going to college. It was really a shock to them, the change between how I was when I went in and when I came out. So we had some rough years.\u201d So did Sweet Briar\u2019s president at the time, Anne Gary Pannell, who Ms. English said was so worn out dealing with the strife on campus that she retired when the class of 1971 graduated.", "sentence_answer": "who Ms. English said was so worn out dealing with the strife on campus that she retired when the class of 1971 graduated.", "paragraph_id": "5d702025c8e4820a9b66cbd0"} +{"question": "How much are new stocks permitted to rise on their first day?", "paragraph": "The move signals that the government is beginning to step back from the extraordinary measures it took over the summer to stop a steep sell-off in the country\u2019s stock markets. In addition to suspending I.P.O.s, those measures included a harsh crackdown backed by the police against any investors betting against stocks, orders for state-owned brokerages to buy stocks on behalf of the state, and banning large shareholders of companies from selling their stakes. The timing of the move is opportunistic, as Chinese stocks have recently staged a rebound. From its low in late August, the main Shanghai share index has risen 23 percent. Getting the I.P.O. process right has proved challenging for Chinese regulators, who have suspended and resumed new listings several times in recent years when markets have become too volatile. New listings are a favored target of speculators because, under current regulations, the shares are permitted to rise as much as 44 percent on their first day of trading. Trading on subsequent days is capped at a daily gain or loss of 10 percent, as it is for all other stocks.", "answer": "as much as 44 percent", "sentence": "New listings are a favored target of speculators because, under current regulations, the shares are permitted to rise as much as 44 percent on their first day of trading.", "paragraph_sentence": "The move signals that the government is beginning to step back from the extraordinary measures it took over the summer to stop a steep sell-off in the country\u2019s stock markets. In addition to suspending I.P.O.s, those measures included a harsh crackdown backed by the police against any investors betting against stocks, orders for state-owned brokerages to buy stocks on behalf of the state, and banning large shareholders of companies from selling their stakes. The timing of the move is opportunistic, as Chinese stocks have recently staged a rebound. From its low in late August, the main Shanghai share index has risen 23 percent. Getting the I.P.O. process right has proved challenging for Chinese regulators, who have suspended and resumed new listings several times in recent years when markets have become too volatile. New listings are a favored target of speculators because, under current regulations, the shares are permitted to rise as much as 44 percent on their first day of trading. Trading on subsequent days is capped at a daily gain or loss of 10 percent, as it is for all other stocks.", "paragraph_answer": "The move signals that the government is beginning to step back from the extraordinary measures it took over the summer to stop a steep sell-off in the country\u2019s stock markets. In addition to suspending I.P.O.s, those measures included a harsh crackdown backed by the police against any investors betting against stocks, orders for state-owned brokerages to buy stocks on behalf of the state, and banning large shareholders of companies from selling their stakes. The timing of the move is opportunistic, as Chinese stocks have recently staged a rebound. From its low in late August, the main Shanghai share index has risen 23 percent. Getting the I.P.O. process right has proved challenging for Chinese regulators, who have suspended and resumed new listings several times in recent years when markets have become too volatile. New listings are a favored target of speculators because, under current regulations, the shares are permitted to rise as much as 44 percent on their first day of trading. Trading on subsequent days is capped at a daily gain or loss of 10 percent, as it is for all other stocks.", "sentence_answer": "New listings are a favored target of speculators because, under current regulations, the shares are permitted to rise as much as 44 percent on their first day of trading.", "paragraph_id": "5d702d1dc8e4820a9b66dab1"} +{"question": "To what agency did the White House want to move the drone operations to?", "paragraph": "It was two years ago that Mr. Obama gave a speech pledging to pull the targeted killing program from the shadows, and White House officials said they wanted to shift the bulk of drone operations from the C.I.A. to the Pentagon, with the stated intent of making the program somewhat more transparent. But the intelligence committees have resisted the plan, in part because Mr. D\u2019Andrea and other top agency officials have convinced lawmakers that the C.I.A. strikes are more precise than those conducted by the Pentagon\u2019s Joint Special Operations Command.", "answer": "Pentagon", "sentence": "It was two years ago that Mr. Obama gave a speech pledging to pull the targeted killing program from the shadows, and White House officials said they wanted to shift the bulk of drone operations from the C.I.A. to the Pentagon , with the stated intent of making the program somewhat more transparent.", "paragraph_sentence": " It was two years ago that Mr. Obama gave a speech pledging to pull the targeted killing program from the shadows, and White House officials said they wanted to shift the bulk of drone operations from the C.I.A. to the Pentagon , with the stated intent of making the program somewhat more transparent. But the intelligence committees have resisted the plan, in part because Mr. D\u2019Andrea and other top agency officials have convinced lawmakers that the C.I.A. strikes are more precise than those conducted by the Pentagon\u2019s Joint Special Operations Command.", "paragraph_answer": "It was two years ago that Mr. Obama gave a speech pledging to pull the targeted killing program from the shadows, and White House officials said they wanted to shift the bulk of drone operations from the C.I.A. to the Pentagon , with the stated intent of making the program somewhat more transparent. But the intelligence committees have resisted the plan, in part because Mr. D\u2019Andrea and other top agency officials have convinced lawmakers that the C.I.A. strikes are more precise than those conducted by the Pentagon\u2019s Joint Special Operations Command.", "sentence_answer": "It was two years ago that Mr. Obama gave a speech pledging to pull the targeted killing program from the shadows, and White House officials said they wanted to shift the bulk of drone operations from the C.I.A. to the Pentagon , with the stated intent of making the program somewhat more transparent.", "paragraph_id": "5d703494c8e4820a9b66df16"} +{"question": "Who makes the dressing?", "paragraph": "For the dressing, which Baumgart builds out of what he calls \u2018\u2018a deconstructed za\u2019atar,\u2019\u2019 the Middle Eastern spice blend, some confidence is required. What seems an enormous amount of dried spices \u2014 ground fennel, sumac and coriander \u2014 is combined with chopped parsley and cilantro. The result looks dry and grainy, as if something is wrong. But olive oil, lime juice and white-wine vinegar (best available, please!) begin to smooth things out, and the cheese, pistachios and vinegar-plumped currants finish the job. \u2018\u2018Let it sit for a while,\u2019\u2019 Baumgart advised. \u2018\u2018Let those flavors come together.\u2019\u2019", "answer": "Baumgart", "sentence": "For the dressing, which Baumgart builds out of what he calls \u2018\u2018a deconstructed za\u2019atar,\u2019\u2019 the Middle Eastern spice blend, some confidence is required.", "paragraph_sentence": " For the dressing, which Baumgart builds out of what he calls \u2018\u2018a deconstructed za\u2019atar,\u2019\u2019 the Middle Eastern spice blend, some confidence is required. What seems an enormous amount of dried spices \u2014 ground fennel, sumac and coriander \u2014 is combined with chopped parsley and cilantro. The result looks dry and grainy, as if something is wrong. But olive oil, lime juice and white-wine vinegar (best available, please!) begin to smooth things out, and the cheese, pistachios and vinegar-plumped currants finish the job. \u2018\u2018Let it sit for a while,\u2019\u2019 Baumgart advised. \u2018\u2018Let those flavors come together.\u2019\u2019", "paragraph_answer": "For the dressing, which Baumgart builds out of what he calls \u2018\u2018a deconstructed za\u2019atar,\u2019\u2019 the Middle Eastern spice blend, some confidence is required. What seems an enormous amount of dried spices \u2014 ground fennel, sumac and coriander \u2014 is combined with chopped parsley and cilantro. The result looks dry and grainy, as if something is wrong. But olive oil, lime juice and white-wine vinegar (best available, please!) begin to smooth things out, and the cheese, pistachios and vinegar-plumped currants finish the job. \u2018\u2018Let it sit for a while,\u2019\u2019 Baumgart advised. \u2018\u2018Let those flavors come together.\u2019\u2019", "sentence_answer": "For the dressing, which Baumgart builds out of what he calls \u2018\u2018a deconstructed za\u2019atar,\u2019\u2019 the Middle Eastern spice blend, some confidence is required.", "paragraph_id": "5d7005d7c8e4820a9b66a9c3"} +{"question": "Where was The Legend of Pale Male filmed?", "paragraph": "A red-tailed hawk named Pale Male became a celebrity after starring in a film, \u201cThe Legend of Pale Male,\u201d that opened at the Angelika Film Center in Greenwich Village in 2010. And one raccoon in Central Park is so well known that he goes by a single name \u2013 Rocky \u2013 a rarefied status typically afforded to superstars like Madonna or Cher. Unlike hawks and raccoons, however, alligators are not native to New York. Ms. Silver suggested that CockadoodleQ may have at one point been a pet, and in her statement she reminded New Yorkers that it is illegal to keep alligators and other exotic animals as house pets in the city.", "answer": "Angelika Film Center in Greenwich Village", "sentence": "A red-tailed hawk named Pale Male became a celebrity after starring in a film, \u201cThe Legend of Pale Male,\u201d that opened at the Angelika Film Center in Greenwich Village in 2010.", "paragraph_sentence": " A red-tailed hawk named Pale Male became a celebrity after starring in a film, \u201cThe Legend of Pale Male,\u201d that opened at the Angelika Film Center in Greenwich Village in 2010. And one raccoon in Central Park is so well known that he goes by a single name \u2013 Rocky \u2013 a rarefied status typically afforded to superstars like Madonna or Cher. Unlike hawks and raccoons, however, alligators are not native to New York. Ms. Silver suggested that CockadoodleQ may have at one point been a pet, and in her statement she reminded New Yorkers that it is illegal to keep alligators and other exotic animals as house pets in the city.", "paragraph_answer": "A red-tailed hawk named Pale Male became a celebrity after starring in a film, \u201cThe Legend of Pale Male,\u201d that opened at the Angelika Film Center in Greenwich Village in 2010. And one raccoon in Central Park is so well known that he goes by a single name \u2013 Rocky \u2013 a rarefied status typically afforded to superstars like Madonna or Cher. Unlike hawks and raccoons, however, alligators are not native to New York. Ms. Silver suggested that CockadoodleQ may have at one point been a pet, and in her statement she reminded New Yorkers that it is illegal to keep alligators and other exotic animals as house pets in the city.", "sentence_answer": "A red-tailed hawk named Pale Male became a celebrity after starring in a film, \u201cThe Legend of Pale Male,\u201d that opened at the Angelika Film Center in Greenwich Village in 2010.", "paragraph_id": "5d70213fc8e4820a9b66cd24"} +{"question": "What country has a certainty about the Dutch?", "paragraph": "The tit for tat has been so obvious that even pro-Kremlin commentators have dropped the pretense, saying the flower burning is intended as a warning to the Netherlands over risks to trade if the investigation proceeds unfavorably for Russia. \u201cThis is connected to the Malaysian Boeing,\u201d Sergei A. Markov, a former member of Parliament in the pro-government United Russia party, said in a telephone interview. \u201cRussia is certain that the Dutch government is falsifying this investigation,\u201d he said, but cannot say so directly.", "answer": "Russia", "sentence": "The tit for tat has been so obvious that even pro-Kremlin commentators have dropped the pretense, saying the flower burning is intended as a warning to the Netherlands over risks to trade if the investigation proceeds unfavorably for Russia .", "paragraph_sentence": " The tit for tat has been so obvious that even pro-Kremlin commentators have dropped the pretense, saying the flower burning is intended as a warning to the Netherlands over risks to trade if the investigation proceeds unfavorably for Russia . \u201cThis is connected to the Malaysian Boeing,\u201d Sergei A. Markov, a former member of Parliament in the pro-government United Russia party, said in a telephone interview. \u201cRussia is certain that the Dutch government is falsifying this investigation,\u201d he said, but cannot say so directly.", "paragraph_answer": "The tit for tat has been so obvious that even pro-Kremlin commentators have dropped the pretense, saying the flower burning is intended as a warning to the Netherlands over risks to trade if the investigation proceeds unfavorably for Russia . \u201cThis is connected to the Malaysian Boeing,\u201d Sergei A. Markov, a former member of Parliament in the pro-government United Russia party, said in a telephone interview. \u201cRussia is certain that the Dutch government is falsifying this investigation,\u201d he said, but cannot say so directly.", "sentence_answer": "The tit for tat has been so obvious that even pro-Kremlin commentators have dropped the pretense, saying the flower burning is intended as a warning to the Netherlands over risks to trade if the investigation proceeds unfavorably for Russia .", "paragraph_id": "5d700edcc8e4820a9b66baed"} +{"question": "What is the name of Red Bull's aerodynamics guru?", "paragraph": "The other teams fear that with a better engine, the Red Bull aerodynamics guru, Adrian Newey, who has been responsible for designing many of the championship-winning cars of the last two decades \u2014 at Red Bull and previously at Williams and McLaren \u2014 would trump them again. The ongoing saga began to unfold in July, when Red Bull, dissatisfied with its Renault engine\u2019s inferior power in the new downsized, hybrid, turbo formula, said it would drop its Renault engine a year before the end of their contract. The French manufacturer had powered Red Bull to all of its championships successes. But it had long felt that it had not received enough credit for those victories, and so when it was jilted by Red Bull, it was loath to help Red Bull find a replacement engine. At the same time, Renault had moved on to a new project that involved possibly buying the Lotus team and returning to the series as a full-fledged car and engine manufacturer. Red Bull, meanwhile, had announced that it was dropping the Renault engine after it had entered into what it considered was an agreement to use the best engine of the new era, made by Mercedes. But Mercedes later said that there was no agreement. Mercedes had indeed spoken to Red Bull directors, the German manufacturer claimed, but any possibility of a deal fell apart because the directors had overlooked some important negotiating points. One of those points involved the eventuality that with a Mercedes engine Red Bull might beat the Mercedes team and therefore Mercedes could benefit, rather than suffer, from the situation through marketing. \u201cWe wanted to know from Red Bull about shared ideas and marketing campaigns we could develop for a common future,\u201d said Toto Wolff, the Mercedes motorsport director. \u201cBut nothing came out of it. And so the issue was taken care of from our side.\u201d Finding itself with no Renault or Mercedes engine, the Red Bull team turned to Ferrari. But Red Bull wanted to have exactly the same engine that the Ferrari team uses. After starting poorly last season, the Italian manufacturer\u2019s engine has improved this year to the point of being the second-best in the series.", "answer": "Adrian Newey", "sentence": "The other teams fear that with a better engine, the Red Bull aerodynamics guru, Adrian Newey , who has been responsible for designing many of the championship-winning cars of the last two decades \u2014 at Red Bull and previously at Williams and McLaren \u2014 would trump them again.", "paragraph_sentence": " The other teams fear that with a better engine, the Red Bull aerodynamics guru, Adrian Newey , who has been responsible for designing many of the championship-winning cars of the last two decades \u2014 at Red Bull and previously at Williams and McLaren \u2014 would trump them again. The ongoing saga began to unfold in July, when Red Bull, dissatisfied with its Renault engine\u2019s inferior power in the new downsized, hybrid, turbo formula, said it would drop its Renault engine a year before the end of their contract. The French manufacturer had powered Red Bull to all of its championships successes. But it had long felt that it had not received enough credit for those victories, and so when it was jilted by Red Bull, it was loath to help Red Bull find a replacement engine. At the same time, Renault had moved on to a new project that involved possibly buying the Lotus team and returning to the series as a full-fledged car and engine manufacturer. Red Bull, meanwhile, had announced that it was dropping the Renault engine after it had entered into what it considered was an agreement to use the best engine of the new era, made by Mercedes. But Mercedes later said that there was no agreement. Mercedes had indeed spoken to Red Bull directors, the German manufacturer claimed, but any possibility of a deal fell apart because the directors had overlooked some important negotiating points. One of those points involved the eventuality that with a Mercedes engine Red Bull might beat the Mercedes team and therefore Mercedes could benefit, rather than suffer, from the situation through marketing. \u201cWe wanted to know from Red Bull about shared ideas and marketing campaigns we could develop for a common future,\u201d said Toto Wolff, the Mercedes motorsport director. \u201cBut nothing came out of it. And so the issue was taken care of from our side.\u201d Finding itself with no Renault or Mercedes engine, the Red Bull team turned to Ferrari. But Red Bull wanted to have exactly the same engine that the Ferrari team uses. After starting poorly last season, the Italian manufacturer\u2019s engine has improved this year to the point of being the second-best in the series.", "paragraph_answer": "The other teams fear that with a better engine, the Red Bull aerodynamics guru, Adrian Newey , who has been responsible for designing many of the championship-winning cars of the last two decades \u2014 at Red Bull and previously at Williams and McLaren \u2014 would trump them again. The ongoing saga began to unfold in July, when Red Bull, dissatisfied with its Renault engine\u2019s inferior power in the new downsized, hybrid, turbo formula, said it would drop its Renault engine a year before the end of their contract. The French manufacturer had powered Red Bull to all of its championships successes. But it had long felt that it had not received enough credit for those victories, and so when it was jilted by Red Bull, it was loath to help Red Bull find a replacement engine. At the same time, Renault had moved on to a new project that involved possibly buying the Lotus team and returning to the series as a full-fledged car and engine manufacturer. Red Bull, meanwhile, had announced that it was dropping the Renault engine after it had entered into what it considered was an agreement to use the best engine of the new era, made by Mercedes. But Mercedes later said that there was no agreement. Mercedes had indeed spoken to Red Bull directors, the German manufacturer claimed, but any possibility of a deal fell apart because the directors had overlooked some important negotiating points. One of those points involved the eventuality that with a Mercedes engine Red Bull might beat the Mercedes team and therefore Mercedes could benefit, rather than suffer, from the situation through marketing. \u201cWe wanted to know from Red Bull about shared ideas and marketing campaigns we could develop for a common future,\u201d said Toto Wolff, the Mercedes motorsport director. \u201cBut nothing came out of it. And so the issue was taken care of from our side.\u201d Finding itself with no Renault or Mercedes engine, the Red Bull team turned to Ferrari. But Red Bull wanted to have exactly the same engine that the Ferrari team uses. After starting poorly last season, the Italian manufacturer\u2019s engine has improved this year to the point of being the second-best in the series.", "sentence_answer": "The other teams fear that with a better engine, the Red Bull aerodynamics guru, Adrian Newey , who has been responsible for designing many of the championship-winning cars of the last two decades \u2014 at Red Bull and previously at Williams and McLaren \u2014 would trump them again.", "paragraph_id": "5d700782c8e4820a9b66add9"} +{"question": "When did collectors would acquire a painting to keep in their home and then leave it to a museum?", "paragraph": "\u201cIn the old days you had a small market. Now globalization is a huge factor,\u201d said James Roundell, a director at the London and New York dealer and adviser Dickinson, who, while working at Christie\u2019s in 1987, represented the winning Japanese telephone bidder for Van Gogh\u2019s \u201cSunflowers.\u201d That $39.9 million was the first of the modern \u201cart boom\u201c prices. \u201cThere\u2019s a lot of fashion involved, and people are buying for show,\u201d Mr. Roundell said. \u201cI\u2019m not sure that many of them are buying for the love of the object. For some, particularly wealthy Americans, it\u2019s all about playing the market. Back in the early 20th century, collectors would buy a painting, live with it in their own home and leave it to a museum. Now it\u2019s about acquisition, not collecting.\u201d", "answer": "Back in the early 20th century", "sentence": "Back in the early 20th century , collectors would buy a painting, live with it in their own home and leave it to a museum.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIn the old days you had a small market. Now globalization is a huge factor,\u201d said James Roundell, a director at the London and New York dealer and adviser Dickinson, who, while working at Christie\u2019s in 1987, represented the winning Japanese telephone bidder for Van Gogh\u2019s \u201cSunflowers.\u201d That $39.9 million was the first of the modern \u201cart boom\u201c prices. \u201cThere\u2019s a lot of fashion involved, and people are buying for show,\u201d Mr. Roundell said. \u201cI\u2019m not sure that many of them are buying for the love of the object. For some, particularly wealthy Americans, it\u2019s all about playing the market. Back in the early 20th century , collectors would buy a painting, live with it in their own home and leave it to a museum. Now it\u2019s about acquisition, not collecting.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIn the old days you had a small market. Now globalization is a huge factor,\u201d said James Roundell, a director at the London and New York dealer and adviser Dickinson, who, while working at Christie\u2019s in 1987, represented the winning Japanese telephone bidder for Van Gogh\u2019s \u201cSunflowers.\u201d That $39.9 million was the first of the modern \u201cart boom\u201c prices. \u201cThere\u2019s a lot of fashion involved, and people are buying for show,\u201d Mr. Roundell said. \u201cI\u2019m not sure that many of them are buying for the love of the object. For some, particularly wealthy Americans, it\u2019s all about playing the market. Back in the early 20th century , collectors would buy a painting, live with it in their own home and leave it to a museum. Now it\u2019s about acquisition, not collecting.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Back in the early 20th century , collectors would buy a painting, live with it in their own home and leave it to a museum.", "paragraph_id": "5d7027e6c8e4820a9b66d596"} +{"question": "What woman insisted on the name change?", "paragraph": "When Goldberger describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated. Gehry says he opposed the name change. \u201cI didn\u2019t want to do it. You have to understand, I was super lefty, I was involved with liberal causes,\u201d Goldberger quotes him saying. Gehry felt it was \u201ca cop-out.\u201d But Anita, the woman he had recently married, insisted. She was Jewish too, but her maiden name of \u201cSnyder\u201d had been less telling, and she had no use for \u201cGoldberg.\u201d Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected. Frank, declaring his wife \u201cone tough operator,\u201d tells Goldberger: \u201cIf you knew Anita, you knew that I had to do it. I had no way out. I was in a corner.\u201d He invented the spelling \u201cGehry\u201d to simulate Goldberg by starting with G, maintaining a high-profile letter in the middle, and ending with a tail.", "answer": "Anita", "sentence": "But Anita , the woman he had recently married, insisted.", "paragraph_sentence": "When Goldberger describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated. Gehry says he opposed the name change. \u201cI didn\u2019t want to do it. You have to understand, I was super lefty, I was involved with liberal causes,\u201d Goldberger quotes him saying. Gehry felt it was \u201ca cop-out.\u201d But Anita , the woman he had recently married, insisted. She was Jewish too, but her maiden name of \u201cSnyder\u201d had been less telling, and she had no use for \u201cGoldberg.\u201d Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected. Frank, declaring his wife \u201cone tough operator,\u201d tells Goldberger: \u201cIf you knew Anita, you knew that I had to do it. I had no way out. I was in a corner.\u201d He invented the spelling \u201cGehry\u201d to simulate Goldberg by starting with G, maintaining a high-profile letter in the middle, and ending with a tail.", "paragraph_answer": "When Goldberger describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated. Gehry says he opposed the name change. \u201cI didn\u2019t want to do it. You have to understand, I was super lefty, I was involved with liberal causes,\u201d Goldberger quotes him saying. Gehry felt it was \u201ca cop-out.\u201d But Anita , the woman he had recently married, insisted. She was Jewish too, but her maiden name of \u201cSnyder\u201d had been less telling, and she had no use for \u201cGoldberg.\u201d Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected. Frank, declaring his wife \u201cone tough operator,\u201d tells Goldberger: \u201cIf you knew Anita, you knew that I had to do it. I had no way out. I was in a corner.\u201d He invented the spelling \u201cGehry\u201d to simulate Goldberg by starting with G, maintaining a high-profile letter in the middle, and ending with a tail.", "sentence_answer": "But Anita , the woman he had recently married, insisted.", "paragraph_id": "5d70101dc8e4820a9b66bc39"} +{"question": "What do the experts favor instead of dams?", "paragraph": "Yet, as agricultural interests prepare a major push to get water projects built, doubts are growing about whether spending huge sums to pour high walls of concrete are the best way to solve California\u2019s water problems. Many independent experts, and almost all environmental groups, argue that dams would supply relatively little water for the money. They contend that Californians need to move aggressively to more modern methods of water management, reducing waste to a minimum and learning to live within the limits imposed by an arid environment.", "answer": "modern methods of water management", "sentence": "They contend that Californians need to move aggressively to more modern methods of water management , reducing waste to a minimum and learning to live within the limits imposed by an arid environment.", "paragraph_sentence": "Yet, as agricultural interests prepare a major push to get water projects built, doubts are growing about whether spending huge sums to pour high walls of concrete are the best way to solve California\u2019s water problems. Many independent experts, and almost all environmental groups, argue that dams would supply relatively little water for the money. They contend that Californians need to move aggressively to more modern methods of water management , reducing waste to a minimum and learning to live within the limits imposed by an arid environment. ", "paragraph_answer": "Yet, as agricultural interests prepare a major push to get water projects built, doubts are growing about whether spending huge sums to pour high walls of concrete are the best way to solve California\u2019s water problems. Many independent experts, and almost all environmental groups, argue that dams would supply relatively little water for the money. They contend that Californians need to move aggressively to more modern methods of water management , reducing waste to a minimum and learning to live within the limits imposed by an arid environment.", "sentence_answer": "They contend that Californians need to move aggressively to more modern methods of water management , reducing waste to a minimum and learning to live within the limits imposed by an arid environment.", "paragraph_id": "5d700a8fc8e4820a9b66b47b"} +{"question": "How many Ukrainian where trained during basic training courses?", "paragraph": "Capt. Andrii Syurkalo, a Ukrainian officer, said it was commendable that the trainers were willing to use the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal as an element in a class on the Geneva Conventions. American officers described the course work as equivalent to the latter months of basic training in the United States. The courses will train 705 Ukrainian soldiers at a cost of $19 million over six months. The Ukrainian National Guard is rotating from the front what units it can spare for the training. American instructors intend to recommend top performers to serve as trainers within other Ukrainian units, and in this way spread the instruction more broadly.", "answer": "705", "sentence": "The courses will train 705 Ukrainian soldiers at a cost of $19 million over six months.", "paragraph_sentence": "Capt. Andrii Syurkalo, a Ukrainian officer, said it was commendable that the trainers were willing to use the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal as an element in a class on the Geneva Conventions. American officers described the course work as equivalent to the latter months of basic training in the United States. The courses will train 705 Ukrainian soldiers at a cost of $19 million over six months. The Ukrainian National Guard is rotating from the front what units it can spare for the training. American instructors intend to recommend top performers to serve as trainers within other Ukrainian units, and in this way spread the instruction more broadly.", "paragraph_answer": "Capt. Andrii Syurkalo, a Ukrainian officer, said it was commendable that the trainers were willing to use the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal as an element in a class on the Geneva Conventions. American officers described the course work as equivalent to the latter months of basic training in the United States. The courses will train 705 Ukrainian soldiers at a cost of $19 million over six months. The Ukrainian National Guard is rotating from the front what units it can spare for the training. American instructors intend to recommend top performers to serve as trainers within other Ukrainian units, and in this way spread the instruction more broadly.", "sentence_answer": "The courses will train 705 Ukrainian soldiers at a cost of $19 million over six months.", "paragraph_id": "5d702701c8e4820a9b66d4bc"} +{"question": "How long did it take to raise the donations?", "paragraph": "\u201cHelp us raise back the $100,000 a donor asked us to return because we welcome transgender girls,\u201d read the headline on the page, which included a video about the Girl Scouts\u2019 commitment to inclusivity. In a little over five hours, Ms. Ferland says, the site had already received over $100,000 in donations. By the end of that first day, the number was up to $243,958 from 4,760 donors. By the time the fund-raising effort was concluded a month later, the organization had raised $365,573. It was a victory for the Girl Scouts and a lesson for the philanthropic community. \u201cThe lesson for the fund-raising community is that if you\u2019re interested in accessing the L.G.B.T. market, your values have to be those of inclusiveness,\u201d says Mickey MacIntyre of realChange Partners, a consultant for nonprofits, focusing on L.G.B.T. issues.", "answer": "five hours", "sentence": "In a little over five hours , Ms. Ferland says, the site had already received over $100,000 in donations.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cHelp us raise back the $100,000 a donor asked us to return because we welcome transgender girls,\u201d read the headline on the page, which included a video about the Girl Scouts\u2019 commitment to inclusivity. In a little over five hours , Ms. Ferland says, the site had already received over $100,000 in donations. By the end of that first day, the number was up to $243,958 from 4,760 donors. By the time the fund-raising effort was concluded a month later, the organization had raised $365,573. It was a victory for the Girl Scouts and a lesson for the philanthropic community. \u201cThe lesson for the fund-raising community is that if you\u2019re interested in accessing the L.G.B.T. market, your values have to be those of inclusiveness,\u201d says Mickey MacIntyre of realChange Partners, a consultant for nonprofits, focusing on L.G.B.T. issues.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cHelp us raise back the $100,000 a donor asked us to return because we welcome transgender girls,\u201d read the headline on the page, which included a video about the Girl Scouts\u2019 commitment to inclusivity. In a little over five hours , Ms. Ferland says, the site had already received over $100,000 in donations. By the end of that first day, the number was up to $243,958 from 4,760 donors. By the time the fund-raising effort was concluded a month later, the organization had raised $365,573. It was a victory for the Girl Scouts and a lesson for the philanthropic community. \u201cThe lesson for the fund-raising community is that if you\u2019re interested in accessing the L.G.B.T. market, your values have to be those of inclusiveness,\u201d says Mickey MacIntyre of realChange Partners, a consultant for nonprofits, focusing on L.G.B.T. issues.", "sentence_answer": "In a little over five hours , Ms. Ferland says, the site had already received over $100,000 in donations.", "paragraph_id": "5d700f59c8e4820a9b66bb57"} +{"question": "What is the name of the Peninsula?", "paragraph": "But the shark disappeared, the current turned at midmorning Tuesday, and for the final five hours of the swim, the athletes swam with the current, their every stroke infused with the momentum of the ocean. Warmuth took the final shift as the Deep Enders closed in on the Palos Verdes Peninsula. \u201cI was just gliding across the water,\u201d Warmuth said. \u201cIt was very fluid; the water was warm and glassy. It was an amazing feeling.\u201d With the Palos Verdes bluffs looming larger with every stroke, the sea became murky as four-foot waves swelled and thrashed the rocky shore. Behind Warmuth, her teammates dived into the water and swam to shore in a V formation, symbolizing victory. Warmuth checked the waves, timed it right and let the tide push her onto the rocks, crusted with razor-sharp barnacles. At 4:52 p.m. Tuesday \u2014 33 hours 37 minutes 26 seconds after the relay began \u2014 Warmuth took the required three steps clear of the tide line, not far from the Terranea Resort, in Rancho Palos Verdes. Soon her friends joined her on shore. Having navigated swirling seas, thick with jellyfish and as deep as 1,000 feet in some places, they hugged and celebrated, elated and exhausted.", "answer": "Palos Verdes Peninsula", "sentence": "Warmuth took the final shift as the Deep Enders closed in on the Palos Verdes Peninsula .", "paragraph_sentence": "But the shark disappeared, the current turned at midmorning Tuesday, and for the final five hours of the swim, the athletes swam with the current, their every stroke infused with the momentum of the ocean. Warmuth took the final shift as the Deep Enders closed in on the Palos Verdes Peninsula . \u201cI was just gliding across the water,\u201d Warmuth said. \u201cIt was very fluid; the water was warm and glassy. It was an amazing feeling.\u201d With the Palos Verdes bluffs looming larger with every stroke, the sea became murky as four-foot waves swelled and thrashed the rocky shore. Behind Warmuth, her teammates dived into the water and swam to shore in a V formation, symbolizing victory. Warmuth checked the waves, timed it right and let the tide push her onto the rocks, crusted with razor-sharp barnacles. At 4:52 p.m. Tuesday \u2014 33 hours 37 minutes 26 seconds after the relay began \u2014 Warmuth took the required three steps clear of the tide line, not far from the Terranea Resort, in Rancho Palos Verdes. Soon her friends joined her on shore. Having navigated swirling seas, thick with jellyfish and as deep as 1,000 feet in some places, they hugged and celebrated, elated and exhausted.", "paragraph_answer": "But the shark disappeared, the current turned at midmorning Tuesday, and for the final five hours of the swim, the athletes swam with the current, their every stroke infused with the momentum of the ocean. Warmuth took the final shift as the Deep Enders closed in on the Palos Verdes Peninsula . \u201cI was just gliding across the water,\u201d Warmuth said. \u201cIt was very fluid; the water was warm and glassy. It was an amazing feeling.\u201d With the Palos Verdes bluffs looming larger with every stroke, the sea became murky as four-foot waves swelled and thrashed the rocky shore. Behind Warmuth, her teammates dived into the water and swam to shore in a V formation, symbolizing victory. Warmuth checked the waves, timed it right and let the tide push her onto the rocks, crusted with razor-sharp barnacles. At 4:52 p.m. Tuesday \u2014 33 hours 37 minutes 26 seconds after the relay began \u2014 Warmuth took the required three steps clear of the tide line, not far from the Terranea Resort, in Rancho Palos Verdes. Soon her friends joined her on shore. Having navigated swirling seas, thick with jellyfish and as deep as 1,000 feet in some places, they hugged and celebrated, elated and exhausted.", "sentence_answer": "Warmuth took the final shift as the Deep Enders closed in on the Palos Verdes Peninsula .", "paragraph_id": "5d70103bc8e4820a9b66bc61"} +{"question": "What was the profession of Raymond W. Kelly?", "paragraph": "But Mr. Faulkner also acknowledged that his mayoral bid was very much a work in progress. The pastor said he had yet to speak with either of the city\u2019s last two Republican mayors, Michael R. Bloomberg and Rudolph W. Giuliani, about his campaign. Queried about his ideas for affordable housing, Mr. Faulkner said he would have more specific policy proposals within a year. Although Republicans intend to back a strong candidate against Mr. de Blasio, the party does not have a deep bench. Speculation so far has focused on Raymond W. Kelly, who was the police commissioner under Mayor Bloomberg, and Eva S. Moskowitz, the charter school executive who was previously elected to office as a Democrat, but has clashed bitterly with Mr. de Blasio over education policy. Mr. Faulkner is a social conservative who has opposed abortion rights and same-sex marriage. (Asked about his views on same-sex marriage on Monday, Mr. Faulkner said that the mayor of New York City had no role in the issue.) Still, clad in a pinstriped suit with a blue ribbon pinned to his chest \u2014 to show support for the police, he said \u2014 Mr. Faulkner said he had the force of personality and the right philosophy of government to lead New York.", "answer": "police commissioner", "sentence": "Speculation so far has focused on Raymond W. Kelly, who was the police commissioner under Mayor Bloomberg, and Eva S. Moskowitz, the charter school executive who was previously elected to office as a Democrat, but has clashed bitterly with Mr. de Blasio over education policy.", "paragraph_sentence": "But Mr. Faulkner also acknowledged that his mayoral bid was very much a work in progress. The pastor said he had yet to speak with either of the city\u2019s last two Republican mayors, Michael R. Bloomberg and Rudolph W. Giuliani, about his campaign. Queried about his ideas for affordable housing, Mr. Faulkner said he would have more specific policy proposals within a year. Although Republicans intend to back a strong candidate against Mr. de Blasio, the party does not have a deep bench. Speculation so far has focused on Raymond W. Kelly, who was the police commissioner under Mayor Bloomberg, and Eva S. Moskowitz, the charter school executive who was previously elected to office as a Democrat, but has clashed bitterly with Mr. de Blasio over education policy. Mr. Faulkner is a social conservative who has opposed abortion rights and same-sex marriage. (Asked about his views on same-sex marriage on Monday, Mr. Faulkner said that the mayor of New York City had no role in the issue.) Still, clad in a pinstriped suit with a blue ribbon pinned to his chest \u2014 to show support for the police, he said \u2014 Mr. Faulkner said he had the force of personality and the right philosophy of government to lead New York.", "paragraph_answer": "But Mr. Faulkner also acknowledged that his mayoral bid was very much a work in progress. The pastor said he had yet to speak with either of the city\u2019s last two Republican mayors, Michael R. Bloomberg and Rudolph W. Giuliani, about his campaign. Queried about his ideas for affordable housing, Mr. Faulkner said he would have more specific policy proposals within a year. Although Republicans intend to back a strong candidate against Mr. de Blasio, the party does not have a deep bench. Speculation so far has focused on Raymond W. Kelly, who was the police commissioner under Mayor Bloomberg, and Eva S. Moskowitz, the charter school executive who was previously elected to office as a Democrat, but has clashed bitterly with Mr. de Blasio over education policy. Mr. Faulkner is a social conservative who has opposed abortion rights and same-sex marriage. (Asked about his views on same-sex marriage on Monday, Mr. Faulkner said that the mayor of New York City had no role in the issue.) Still, clad in a pinstriped suit with a blue ribbon pinned to his chest \u2014 to show support for the police, he said \u2014 Mr. Faulkner said he had the force of personality and the right philosophy of government to lead New York.", "sentence_answer": "Speculation so far has focused on Raymond W. Kelly, who was the police commissioner under Mayor Bloomberg, and Eva S. Moskowitz, the charter school executive who was previously elected to office as a Democrat, but has clashed bitterly with Mr. de Blasio over education policy.", "paragraph_id": "5d7008f2c8e4820a9b66b123"} +{"question": "Who made the finals with a greater rate than James?", "paragraph": "Counting all of the rounds, James\u2019s rate is 37.8 so far in the playoffs. Going back to the 1970s, when the statistic becomes available, one player who made the finals had a greater rate: In 1993, when he won the third of his first triumvirate of titles, Michael Jordan rated at 38.0, according to basketball-reference.com. With Irving out for the rest of the playoffs, James\u2019s rate may well climb past Jordan\u2019s before the series concludes. And Jordan\u2019s rate for the 1993 finals alone, 38.9, lags behind James\u2019s 44.0.", "answer": "Michael Jordan", "sentence": "Going back to the 1970s, when the statistic becomes available, one player who made the finals had a greater rate: In 1993, when he won the third of his first triumvirate of titles, Michael Jordan rated at 38.0, according to basketball-reference.com.", "paragraph_sentence": "Counting all of the rounds, James\u2019s rate is 37.8 so far in the playoffs. Going back to the 1970s, when the statistic becomes available, one player who made the finals had a greater rate: In 1993, when he won the third of his first triumvirate of titles, Michael Jordan rated at 38.0, according to basketball-reference.com. With Irving out for the rest of the playoffs, James\u2019s rate may well climb past Jordan\u2019s before the series concludes. And Jordan\u2019s rate for the 1993 finals alone, 38.9, lags behind James\u2019s 44.0.", "paragraph_answer": "Counting all of the rounds, James\u2019s rate is 37.8 so far in the playoffs. Going back to the 1970s, when the statistic becomes available, one player who made the finals had a greater rate: In 1993, when he won the third of his first triumvirate of titles, Michael Jordan rated at 38.0, according to basketball-reference.com. With Irving out for the rest of the playoffs, James\u2019s rate may well climb past Jordan\u2019s before the series concludes. And Jordan\u2019s rate for the 1993 finals alone, 38.9, lags behind James\u2019s 44.0.", "sentence_answer": "Going back to the 1970s, when the statistic becomes available, one player who made the finals had a greater rate: In 1993, when he won the third of his first triumvirate of titles, Michael Jordan rated at 38.0, according to basketball-reference.com.", "paragraph_id": "5d70095ec8e4820a9b66b1e9"} +{"question": "Which nation is a problem in the nuclear resolution process?", "paragraph": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "answer": "Iran", "sentence": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran \u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran \u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "paragraph_answer": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran \u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "sentence_answer": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran \u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d703935c8e4820a9b66e180"} +{"question": "What network aired a show about the subject in the passage?", "paragraph": "\u201cBlack Rage\u201d thrust Dr. Grier into the spotlight. Immediately after the book was published, KRON, the local NBC television station, followed him and Dr. Cobbs on a walk on Fillmore Street as they explained the issues discussed in the book. ABC broadcast a special on the book called \u201cTo Be Black.\u201d The prominent black scholar Kenneth B. Clark, a professor of social psychology at City College, criticized \u201cBlack Rage\u201d in The New York Times Book Review as simplistic, unscholarly and overly impressed with the originality of its findings. But most critics found the book readable, persuasive and sobering. The authors followed up with \u201cThe Jesus Bag\u201d (1971), a critical analysis of the role of religion in black life. It was not nearly as successful as \u201cBlack Rage.\u201d After serving as chairman of the department of psychiatry at Meharry Medical College in Nashville in the early 1970s, Dr. Grier started a psychiatric practice in San Diego, from which he retired in the 1990s.", "answer": "ABC", "sentence": "ABC broadcast a special on the book called \u201cTo Be Black.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cBlack Rage\u201d thrust Dr. Grier into the spotlight. Immediately after the book was published, KRON, the local NBC television station, followed him and Dr. Cobbs on a walk on Fillmore Street as they explained the issues discussed in the book. ABC broadcast a special on the book called \u201cTo Be Black.\u201d The prominent black scholar Kenneth B. Clark, a professor of social psychology at City College, criticized \u201cBlack Rage\u201d in The New York Times Book Review as simplistic, unscholarly and overly impressed with the originality of its findings. But most critics found the book readable, persuasive and sobering. The authors followed up with \u201cThe Jesus Bag\u201d (1971), a critical analysis of the role of religion in black life. It was not nearly as successful as \u201cBlack Rage.\u201d After serving as chairman of the department of psychiatry at Meharry Medical College in Nashville in the early 1970s, Dr. Grier started a psychiatric practice in San Diego, from which he retired in the 1990s.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cBlack Rage\u201d thrust Dr. Grier into the spotlight. Immediately after the book was published, KRON, the local NBC television station, followed him and Dr. Cobbs on a walk on Fillmore Street as they explained the issues discussed in the book. ABC broadcast a special on the book called \u201cTo Be Black.\u201d The prominent black scholar Kenneth B. Clark, a professor of social psychology at City College, criticized \u201cBlack Rage\u201d in The New York Times Book Review as simplistic, unscholarly and overly impressed with the originality of its findings. But most critics found the book readable, persuasive and sobering. The authors followed up with \u201cThe Jesus Bag\u201d (1971), a critical analysis of the role of religion in black life. It was not nearly as successful as \u201cBlack Rage.\u201d After serving as chairman of the department of psychiatry at Meharry Medical College in Nashville in the early 1970s, Dr. Grier started a psychiatric practice in San Diego, from which he retired in the 1990s.", "sentence_answer": " ABC broadcast a special on the book called \u201cTo Be Black.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d702007c8e4820a9b66cbba"} +{"question": "What is the occupation of Ayrllys Mateus Silva?", "paragraph": "The jail is overcrowded, with nearly 200 inmates in a space for 40. Untreated sewage means visitors are greeted with a foul stench. But the mood among prisoners seems to waver between blas\u00e9 and leisurely. \u201cIt\u2019s not a jail here,\u201d said Idmark dos Santos da Silva, 36, serving time for bank robbery. \u201cIt\u2019s a day care.\u201d Ayrllys Mateus Silva, 24, a bus ticket seller and Mr. Silva Neto\u2019s daughter by the wife whom he killed, said both she and her grandmother had forgiven him, and that she visited his Sap\u00e9 prison.", "answer": "bus ticket seller", "sentence": "a bus ticket seller and Mr. Silva Neto\u2019s daughter by the wife whom he killed, said both she and her grandmother had forgiven him, and that she visited his Sap\u00e9 prison.", "paragraph_sentence": "The jail is overcrowded, with nearly 200 inmates in a space for 40. Untreated sewage means visitors are greeted with a foul stench. But the mood among prisoners seems to waver between blas\u00e9 and leisurely. \u201cIt\u2019s not a jail here,\u201d said Idmark dos Santos da Silva, 36, serving time for bank robbery. \u201cIt\u2019s a day care.\u201d Ayrllys Mateus Silva, 24, a bus ticket seller and Mr. Silva Neto\u2019s daughter by the wife whom he killed, said both she and her grandmother had forgiven him, and that she visited his Sap\u00e9 prison. ", "paragraph_answer": "The jail is overcrowded, with nearly 200 inmates in a space for 40. Untreated sewage means visitors are greeted with a foul stench. But the mood among prisoners seems to waver between blas\u00e9 and leisurely. \u201cIt\u2019s not a jail here,\u201d said Idmark dos Santos da Silva, 36, serving time for bank robbery. \u201cIt\u2019s a day care.\u201d Ayrllys Mateus Silva, 24, a bus ticket seller and Mr. Silva Neto\u2019s daughter by the wife whom he killed, said both she and her grandmother had forgiven him, and that she visited his Sap\u00e9 prison.", "sentence_answer": "a bus ticket seller and Mr. Silva Neto\u2019s daughter by the wife whom he killed, said both she and her grandmother had forgiven him, and that she visited his Sap\u00e9 prison.", "paragraph_id": "5d70296ec8e4820a9b66d70b"} +{"question": "How should the bandwidth of lagers be defined?", "paragraph": "The bandwidth of lagers is rather narrow, but they have their refreshing role to play. None did it better than our No. 1 brew, Session Premium Lager from Full Sail Brewing, clean, crisp, lively and fresh. Session, surprisingly, is not made entirely of malted barley. It uses a touch of malted wheat as well. Apparently, lager producers have found ways to be creative without exploding the genre. Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing. The Lawnmower, by the way, was the lowest in alcohol in the tasting at just 3.9 percent.", "answer": "narrow", "sentence": "The bandwidth of lagers is rather narrow , but they have their refreshing role to play.", "paragraph_sentence": " The bandwidth of lagers is rather narrow , but they have their refreshing role to play. None did it better than our No. 1 brew, Session Premium Lager from Full Sail Brewing, clean, crisp, lively and fresh. Session, surprisingly, is not made entirely of malted barley. It uses a touch of malted wheat as well. Apparently, lager producers have found ways to be creative without exploding the genre. Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing. The Lawnmower, by the way, was the lowest in alcohol in the tasting at just 3.9 percent.", "paragraph_answer": "The bandwidth of lagers is rather narrow , but they have their refreshing role to play. None did it better than our No. 1 brew, Session Premium Lager from Full Sail Brewing, clean, crisp, lively and fresh. Session, surprisingly, is not made entirely of malted barley. It uses a touch of malted wheat as well. Apparently, lager producers have found ways to be creative without exploding the genre. Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing. The Lawnmower, by the way, was the lowest in alcohol in the tasting at just 3.9 percent.", "sentence_answer": "The bandwidth of lagers is rather narrow , but they have their refreshing role to play.", "paragraph_id": "5d7016e1c8e4820a9b66c2e7"} +{"question": "What kind of student is Alex?", "paragraph": "Until his health began to fail, we traveled to see the Cubs in San Francisco and San Diego, and Arizona, where in 2007 we took my son, Alex, to the first round of the National League playoffs so he could be duly indoctrinated: two games against the Diamondbacks, two losses by the Cubs. In truth, as time passes, the results have mattered less than the time we had together. The Cubs have been, more than anything else, a shared experience. I will remember that this October, when they reach the World Series. I plan to take Alex with me. But first I will have to speak with his high school basketball coach. I do not imagine he will be happy about my son missing practice right before the start of the season, so I am prepared to explain that the Cubs do not play in a World Series every day. If necessary, there is a deal I am prepared to make.", "answer": "high school", "sentence": "But first I will have to speak with his high school basketball coach.", "paragraph_sentence": "Until his health began to fail, we traveled to see the Cubs in San Francisco and San Diego, and Arizona, where in 2007 we took my son, Alex, to the first round of the National League playoffs so he could be duly indoctrinated: two games against the Diamondbacks, two losses by the Cubs. In truth, as time passes, the results have mattered less than the time we had together. The Cubs have been, more than anything else, a shared experience. I will remember that this October, when they reach the World Series. I plan to take Alex with me. But first I will have to speak with his high school basketball coach. I do not imagine he will be happy about my son missing practice right before the start of the season, so I am prepared to explain that the Cubs do not play in a World Series every day. If necessary, there is a deal I am prepared to make.", "paragraph_answer": "Until his health began to fail, we traveled to see the Cubs in San Francisco and San Diego, and Arizona, where in 2007 we took my son, Alex, to the first round of the National League playoffs so he could be duly indoctrinated: two games against the Diamondbacks, two losses by the Cubs. In truth, as time passes, the results have mattered less than the time we had together. The Cubs have been, more than anything else, a shared experience. I will remember that this October, when they reach the World Series. I plan to take Alex with me. But first I will have to speak with his high school basketball coach. I do not imagine he will be happy about my son missing practice right before the start of the season, so I am prepared to explain that the Cubs do not play in a World Series every day. If necessary, there is a deal I am prepared to make.", "sentence_answer": "But first I will have to speak with his high school basketball coach.", "paragraph_id": "5d700692c8e4820a9b66abc9"} +{"question": "What is ms. pierpont able to convey within her paragraphs?", "paragraph": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "answer": "years", "sentence": "But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future.", "paragraph_sentence": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "paragraph_answer": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "sentence_answer": "But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future.", "paragraph_id": "5d70239cc8e4820a9b66cfb9"} +{"question": "What was the public reception like in response to Apple's new iPhone release?", "paragraph": "Each Saturday, Farhad Manjoo and Mike Isaac, technology reporters at The New York Times, review the week\u2019s news, offering analysis and maybe a joke or two about the most important developments in the tech industry. Farhad: Howdy, Mike! What\u2019s going on with you? Sorry, I don\u2019t have some kind of funny intro this week. I\u2019m just pretty tired. I need a nap. Mike: I had a root canal on Friday and my dog won\u2019t stop eating our drywall. Other than that, life is grand. Farhad: Sounds fantastic. OK, let\u2019s go through some tech news. Apple announced it sold 13 million new iPhones in its opening weekend \u2014 which, like everything with Apple, some people thought was really awesome and others thought was meh. Google unveiled some new Nexus phones, tablets and a Chromecast streaming device. Those were fine and also unexciting \u2014 smartphones changed everything and yet, man, are they boring. Mike: I have a seriously difficult time caring about phones now. Every announcement is just \u201clook at this cool new processor we put inside.\u201d Yawn.", "answer": "some people thought was really awesome and others thought was meh", "sentence": "Apple announced it sold 13 million new iPhones in its opening weekend \u2014 which, like everything with Apple, some people thought was really awesome and others thought was meh .", "paragraph_sentence": "Each Saturday, Farhad Manjoo and Mike Isaac, technology reporters at The New York Times, review the week\u2019s news, offering analysis and maybe a joke or two about the most important developments in the tech industry. Farhad: Howdy, Mike! What\u2019s going on with you? Sorry, I don\u2019t have some kind of funny intro this week. I\u2019m just pretty tired. I need a nap. Mike: I had a root canal on Friday and my dog won\u2019t stop eating our drywall. Other than that, life is grand. Farhad: Sounds fantastic. OK, let\u2019s go through some tech news. Apple announced it sold 13 million new iPhones in its opening weekend \u2014 which, like everything with Apple, some people thought was really awesome and others thought was meh . Google unveiled some new Nexus phones, tablets and a Chromecast streaming device. Those were fine and also unexciting \u2014 smartphones changed everything and yet, man, are they boring. Mike: I have a seriously difficult time caring about phones now. Every announcement is just \u201clook at this cool new processor we put inside.\u201d Yawn.", "paragraph_answer": "Each Saturday, Farhad Manjoo and Mike Isaac, technology reporters at The New York Times, review the week\u2019s news, offering analysis and maybe a joke or two about the most important developments in the tech industry. Farhad: Howdy, Mike! What\u2019s going on with you? Sorry, I don\u2019t have some kind of funny intro this week. I\u2019m just pretty tired. I need a nap. Mike: I had a root canal on Friday and my dog won\u2019t stop eating our drywall. Other than that, life is grand. Farhad: Sounds fantastic. OK, let\u2019s go through some tech news. Apple announced it sold 13 million new iPhones in its opening weekend \u2014 which, like everything with Apple, some people thought was really awesome and others thought was meh . Google unveiled some new Nexus phones, tablets and a Chromecast streaming device. Those were fine and also unexciting \u2014 smartphones changed everything and yet, man, are they boring. Mike: I have a seriously difficult time caring about phones now. Every announcement is just \u201clook at this cool new processor we put inside.\u201d Yawn.", "sentence_answer": "Apple announced it sold 13 million new iPhones in its opening weekend \u2014 which, like everything with Apple, some people thought was really awesome and others thought was meh .", "paragraph_id": "5d700796c8e4820a9b66ae34"} +{"question": "What did it signal?", "paragraph": "None of the leaders themselves signed the agreements \u2014 that was left to other representatives of the antagonists and the European truce observers \u2014 sending a discreet signal that they were not taking full responsibility for the outcome. Ms. Merkel did note that Mr. Putin had to pressure the rebel leaders to sign. The agreement also states that the Ukrainian military and its separatist opponents will complete the withdrawal of heavy weapons \u2014 with the largest missiles pulled back more than 40 miles \u2014 no later than two weeks after the start of the cease-fire.", "answer": "discreet signal that they were not taking full responsibility for the outcome", "sentence": "None of the leaders themselves signed the agreements \u2014 that was left to other representatives of the antagonists and the European truce observers \u2014 sending a discreet signal that they were not taking full responsibility for the outcome .", "paragraph_sentence": " None of the leaders themselves signed the agreements \u2014 that was left to other representatives of the antagonists and the European truce observers \u2014 sending a discreet signal that they were not taking full responsibility for the outcome . Ms. Merkel did note that Mr. Putin had to pressure the rebel leaders to sign. The agreement also states that the Ukrainian military and its separatist opponents will complete the withdrawal of heavy weapons \u2014 with the largest missiles pulled back more than 40 miles \u2014 no later than two weeks after the start of the cease-fire.", "paragraph_answer": "None of the leaders themselves signed the agreements \u2014 that was left to other representatives of the antagonists and the European truce observers \u2014 sending a discreet signal that they were not taking full responsibility for the outcome . Ms. Merkel did note that Mr. Putin had to pressure the rebel leaders to sign. The agreement also states that the Ukrainian military and its separatist opponents will complete the withdrawal of heavy weapons \u2014 with the largest missiles pulled back more than 40 miles \u2014 no later than two weeks after the start of the cease-fire.", "sentence_answer": "None of the leaders themselves signed the agreements \u2014 that was left to other representatives of the antagonists and the European truce observers \u2014 sending a discreet signal that they were not taking full responsibility for the outcome .", "paragraph_id": "5d702082c8e4820a9b66cc48"} +{"question": "What position does Scott Flanders hold with Playboy?", "paragraph": "I was thinking about my friend when I read the news that Playboy, the venerable purveyor of celebrity interviews, literary fiction and female nudity, had decided to stop publishing pictures of naked ladies. \u201cYou\u2019re now one click away from every sex act imaginable for free. And so it\u2019s just pass\u00e9 at this juncture,\u201d said Scott Flanders, Playboy\u2019s chief executive. With a once-mighty circulation of 5.6 million now hovering around 800,000, Playboy has been left with no choice but to put on its big-girl panties and try to compete with other glossy lad mags and their versions of the Good Life.", "answer": "chief executive", "sentence": "And so it\u2019s just pass\u00e9 at this juncture,\u201d said Scott Flanders, Playboy\u2019s chief executive .", "paragraph_sentence": "I was thinking about my friend when I read the news that Playboy, the venerable purveyor of celebrity interviews, literary fiction and female nudity, had decided to stop publishing pictures of naked ladies. \u201cYou\u2019re now one click away from every sex act imaginable for free. And so it\u2019s just pass\u00e9 at this juncture,\u201d said Scott Flanders, Playboy\u2019s chief executive . With a once-mighty circulation of 5.6 million now hovering around 800,000, Playboy has been left with no choice but to put on its big-girl panties and try to compete with other glossy lad mags and their versions of the Good Life.", "paragraph_answer": "I was thinking about my friend when I read the news that Playboy, the venerable purveyor of celebrity interviews, literary fiction and female nudity, had decided to stop publishing pictures of naked ladies. \u201cYou\u2019re now one click away from every sex act imaginable for free. And so it\u2019s just pass\u00e9 at this juncture,\u201d said Scott Flanders, Playboy\u2019s chief executive . With a once-mighty circulation of 5.6 million now hovering around 800,000, Playboy has been left with no choice but to put on its big-girl panties and try to compete with other glossy lad mags and their versions of the Good Life.", "sentence_answer": "And so it\u2019s just pass\u00e9 at this juncture,\u201d said Scott Flanders, Playboy\u2019s chief executive .", "paragraph_id": "5d701047c8e4820a9b66bc6b"} +{"question": "Who is Interpublic's longtime partner in Russia?", "paragraph": "The advertising giant Interpublic Group of Companies is gaining a stronger foothold in Russia. In a deal that has been brewing for years, Interpublic has acquired three Russian creative agencies from ADV, its longtime partner in the country. Interpublic, which is based in New York, has done business in Russia for two decades through ADV, an advertising group that encompasses more than 40 agencies in countries including Russia, Ukraine and Azerbaijan. But with the deal, Interpublic will now directly own advertising agencies in one of the top global markets. \u201cWe have wanted to own these agencies for years,\u201d said Michael I. Roth, the chairman and chief executive of Interpublic. \u201cWe have a number of global clients that operate in Russia that are very important, and it\u2019s important for us to have a relationship with our clients in the markets they compete in.\u201d", "answer": "ADV", "sentence": "In a deal that has been brewing for years, Interpublic has acquired three Russian creative agencies from ADV , its longtime partner in the country.", "paragraph_sentence": "The advertising giant Interpublic Group of Companies is gaining a stronger foothold in Russia. In a deal that has been brewing for years, Interpublic has acquired three Russian creative agencies from ADV , its longtime partner in the country. Interpublic, which is based in New York, has done business in Russia for two decades through ADV, an advertising group that encompasses more than 40 agencies in countries including Russia, Ukraine and Azerbaijan. But with the deal, Interpublic will now directly own advertising agencies in one of the top global markets. \u201cWe have wanted to own these agencies for years,\u201d said Michael I. Roth, the chairman and chief executive of Interpublic. \u201cWe have a number of global clients that operate in Russia that are very important, and it\u2019s important for us to have a relationship with our clients in the markets they compete in.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The advertising giant Interpublic Group of Companies is gaining a stronger foothold in Russia. In a deal that has been brewing for years, Interpublic has acquired three Russian creative agencies from ADV , its longtime partner in the country. Interpublic, which is based in New York, has done business in Russia for two decades through ADV, an advertising group that encompasses more than 40 agencies in countries including Russia, Ukraine and Azerbaijan. But with the deal, Interpublic will now directly own advertising agencies in one of the top global markets. \u201cWe have wanted to own these agencies for years,\u201d said Michael I. Roth, the chairman and chief executive of Interpublic. \u201cWe have a number of global clients that operate in Russia that are very important, and it\u2019s important for us to have a relationship with our clients in the markets they compete in.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In a deal that has been brewing for years, Interpublic has acquired three Russian creative agencies from ADV , its longtime partner in the country.", "paragraph_id": "5d702d24c8e4820a9b66dac4"} +{"question": "Where was the war that John Kerry try to find a political solution at?", "paragraph": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria. Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "answer": "Syria", "sentence": "In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria .", "paragraph_sentence": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria . Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria . Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria .", "paragraph_id": "5d7012e4c8e4820a9b66bf2a"} +{"question": "What is the name of the agreement between Ukraine and Russian-backed rebels?", "paragraph": "\u201cI see no reason to delay,\u201d said Linas Linkevicius, the foreign minister of Lithuania. He noted that a cease-fire, known as the Minsk agreement, between the Ukrainian government and Russian-backed separatist rebels had not yet been fully carried out. \u201cIf we don\u2019t see real progress in the implementation of the Minsk agreement, then we need to go further,\u201d said Didier Reynders, the Belgian foreign minister. \u201cWithout that, we need to prolong the sanctions.\u201d Federica Mogherini, the high representative of the European Union for foreign affairs and security policy, told reporters at a news conference on Monday that the union could reach a political decision as soon as Thursday at the summit meeting here. \u201cThe general assessment today was clearly going in the direction of the rollover of sanctions,\u201d she said.", "answer": "Minsk", "sentence": "He noted that a cease-fire, known as the Minsk agreement, between the Ukrainian government and Russian-backed separatist rebels had not yet been fully carried out.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI see no reason to delay,\u201d said Linas Linkevicius, the foreign minister of Lithuania. He noted that a cease-fire, known as the Minsk agreement, between the Ukrainian government and Russian-backed separatist rebels had not yet been fully carried out. \u201cIf we don\u2019t see real progress in the implementation of the Minsk agreement, then we need to go further,\u201d said Didier Reynders, the Belgian foreign minister. \u201cWithout that, we need to prolong the sanctions.\u201d Federica Mogherini, the high representative of the European Union for foreign affairs and security policy, told reporters at a news conference on Monday that the union could reach a political decision as soon as Thursday at the summit meeting here. \u201cThe general assessment today was clearly going in the direction of the rollover of sanctions,\u201d she said.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI see no reason to delay,\u201d said Linas Linkevicius, the foreign minister of Lithuania. He noted that a cease-fire, known as the Minsk agreement, between the Ukrainian government and Russian-backed separatist rebels had not yet been fully carried out. \u201cIf we don\u2019t see real progress in the implementation of the Minsk agreement, then we need to go further,\u201d said Didier Reynders, the Belgian foreign minister. \u201cWithout that, we need to prolong the sanctions.\u201d Federica Mogherini, the high representative of the European Union for foreign affairs and security policy, told reporters at a news conference on Monday that the union could reach a political decision as soon as Thursday at the summit meeting here. \u201cThe general assessment today was clearly going in the direction of the rollover of sanctions,\u201d she said.", "sentence_answer": "He noted that a cease-fire, known as the Minsk agreement, between the Ukrainian government and Russian-backed separatist rebels had not yet been fully carried out.", "paragraph_id": "5d70299dc8e4820a9b66d740"} +{"question": "At what level is the government hoping to expand defenses?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe Taliban have all of a sudden felt a rush after Kunduz \u2014 they are abandoning plans for districts and making runs on cities,\u201d said a senior Afghan official, who like others interviewed about security spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid political risk. The militia expansion plan is a reversal for President Ashraf Ghani, who had long talked about the importance of solidifying \u201cthe state monopoly over the use of force\u201d in a country still deeply scarred by its civil war. Militia forces wielded by American-backed warlords were responsible for some of the worst atrocities in that decade-long conflict. Afghan officials who described the new plan, however, bluntly called it a matter of survival: Given a choice between ceding territory to the Taliban and reinforcing areas with semiformal militias deemed abusive and predatory, the government is opting for the latter. Officials said the plan called for the immediate recruitment of an additional 15,000 armed militiamen under the Afghan Local Police program, and according to some accounts that may rise to as many as 30,000. The measure is supposed to focus on beefing up defenses at the district level, potentially freeing up the badly overstretched army and the national police to concentrate their forces for more strategic strikes. While the Americans had long told the Afghan government to respect the 30,000 cap for the force, at least two Afghan officials said that discussions were underway and that the American military had shown interest in finding a way to fund the program\u2019s expansion, which is believed to cost more than the force\u2019s current $120 million annual budget. Mr. Ghani has told his officials he will seek other sources if the American funding does not materialize.", "answer": "district level", "sentence": "The measure is supposed to focus on beefing up defenses at the district level , potentially freeing up the badly overstretched army and the national police to concentrate their forces for more strategic strikes.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe Taliban have all of a sudden felt a rush after Kunduz \u2014 they are abandoning plans for districts and making runs on cities,\u201d said a senior Afghan official, who like others interviewed about security spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid political risk. The militia expansion plan is a reversal for President Ashraf Ghani, who had long talked about the importance of solidifying \u201cthe state monopoly over the use of force\u201d in a country still deeply scarred by its civil war. Militia forces wielded by American-backed warlords were responsible for some of the worst atrocities in that decade-long conflict. Afghan officials who described the new plan, however, bluntly called it a matter of survival: Given a choice between ceding territory to the Taliban and reinforcing areas with semiformal militias deemed abusive and predatory, the government is opting for the latter. Officials said the plan called for the immediate recruitment of an additional 15,000 armed militiamen under the Afghan Local Police program, and according to some accounts that may rise to as many as 30,000. The measure is supposed to focus on beefing up defenses at the district level , potentially freeing up the badly overstretched army and the national police to concentrate their forces for more strategic strikes. While the Americans had long told the Afghan government to respect the 30,000 cap for the force, at least two Afghan officials said that discussions were underway and that the American military had shown interest in finding a way to fund the program\u2019s expansion, which is believed to cost more than the force\u2019s current $120 million annual budget. Mr. Ghani has told his officials he will seek other sources if the American funding does not materialize.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe Taliban have all of a sudden felt a rush after Kunduz \u2014 they are abandoning plans for districts and making runs on cities,\u201d said a senior Afghan official, who like others interviewed about security spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid political risk. The militia expansion plan is a reversal for President Ashraf Ghani, who had long talked about the importance of solidifying \u201cthe state monopoly over the use of force\u201d in a country still deeply scarred by its civil war. Militia forces wielded by American-backed warlords were responsible for some of the worst atrocities in that decade-long conflict. Afghan officials who described the new plan, however, bluntly called it a matter of survival: Given a choice between ceding territory to the Taliban and reinforcing areas with semiformal militias deemed abusive and predatory, the government is opting for the latter. Officials said the plan called for the immediate recruitment of an additional 15,000 armed militiamen under the Afghan Local Police program, and according to some accounts that may rise to as many as 30,000. The measure is supposed to focus on beefing up defenses at the district level , potentially freeing up the badly overstretched army and the national police to concentrate their forces for more strategic strikes. While the Americans had long told the Afghan government to respect the 30,000 cap for the force, at least two Afghan officials said that discussions were underway and that the American military had shown interest in finding a way to fund the program\u2019s expansion, which is believed to cost more than the force\u2019s current $120 million annual budget. Mr. Ghani has told his officials he will seek other sources if the American funding does not materialize.", "sentence_answer": "The measure is supposed to focus on beefing up defenses at the district level , potentially freeing up the badly overstretched army and the national police to concentrate their forces for more strategic strikes.", "paragraph_id": "5d7014dcc8e4820a9b66c0e2"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d7008c2c8e4820a9b66b0cd"} +{"question": "Why did Connecticut lose manufacturing jobs?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe are fighting for the future of middle-class families,\u201d said Representative Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut. \u201cThese trade deals make it much easier for corporations to send American jobs overseas.\u201d Over the past 20 years, Connecticut has lost more than 96,000 manufacturing jobs, she said, because of agreements that failed to protect American workers. Sanders told the assembled media that while he liked the president\u2019s speech, \u201che was wrong on one major issue, and that is the Trans-Pacific Partnership.\u201d He added, \u201cI do not believe that continuing a set of bad policies, policies that have failed, makes any sense at all.\u201d", "answer": "Trans-Pacific Partnership", "sentence": "Sanders told the assembled media that while he liked the president\u2019s speech, \u201che was wrong on one major issue, and that is the Trans-Pacific Partnership .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe are fighting for the future of middle-class families,\u201d said Representative Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut. \u201cThese trade deals make it much easier for corporations to send American jobs overseas.\u201d Over the past 20 years, Connecticut has lost more than 96,000 manufacturing jobs, she said, because of agreements that failed to protect American workers. Sanders told the assembled media that while he liked the president\u2019s speech, \u201che was wrong on one major issue, and that is the Trans-Pacific Partnership .\u201d He added, \u201cI do not believe that continuing a set of bad policies, policies that have failed, makes any sense at all.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe are fighting for the future of middle-class families,\u201d said Representative Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut. \u201cThese trade deals make it much easier for corporations to send American jobs overseas.\u201d Over the past 20 years, Connecticut has lost more than 96,000 manufacturing jobs, she said, because of agreements that failed to protect American workers. Sanders told the assembled media that while he liked the president\u2019s speech, \u201che was wrong on one major issue, and that is the Trans-Pacific Partnership .\u201d He added, \u201cI do not believe that continuing a set of bad policies, policies that have failed, makes any sense at all.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Sanders told the assembled media that while he liked the president\u2019s speech, \u201che was wrong on one major issue, and that is the Trans-Pacific Partnership .\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d7013a8c8e4820a9b66c03c"} +{"question": "Who was the first Asian to model for Valentino?", "paragraph": "The 26-year-old Chinese model Fei Fei Sun has, over the last five years, established herself as a well-known name in the industry. (Early in her career, she was chosen by Karl Lagerfeld to appear in his Chanel Shanghai show and, in 2012, became the first Asian face of Valentino.) This year, she appeared in T\u2019s portfolio examining what feels beautiful now. Read more: The Face 10. Liya Kebede The Ethiopian model Liya Kebede has been a successful model for years \u2014 but T fell in love with her all over again in 2015. She appeared in our big beauty portfolio featuring 11 different versions of beauty today. Read more: The Face", "answer": "Fei Fei Sun", "sentence": "The 26-year-old Chinese model Fei Fei Sun has, over the last five years, established herself as a well-known name in the industry.", "paragraph_sentence": " The 26-year-old Chinese model Fei Fei Sun has, over the last five years, established herself as a well-known name in the industry. (Early in her career, she was chosen by Karl Lagerfeld to appear in his Chanel Shanghai show and, in 2012, became the first Asian face of Valentino.) This year, she appeared in T\u2019s portfolio examining what feels beautiful now. Read more: The Face 10. Liya Kebede The Ethiopian model Liya Kebede has been a successful model for years \u2014 but T fell in love with her all over again in 2015. She appeared in our big beauty portfolio featuring 11 different versions of beauty today. Read more: The Face", "paragraph_answer": "The 26-year-old Chinese model Fei Fei Sun has, over the last five years, established herself as a well-known name in the industry. (Early in her career, she was chosen by Karl Lagerfeld to appear in his Chanel Shanghai show and, in 2012, became the first Asian face of Valentino.) This year, she appeared in T\u2019s portfolio examining what feels beautiful now. Read more: The Face 10. Liya Kebede The Ethiopian model Liya Kebede has been a successful model for years \u2014 but T fell in love with her all over again in 2015. She appeared in our big beauty portfolio featuring 11 different versions of beauty today. Read more: The Face", "sentence_answer": "The 26-year-old Chinese model Fei Fei Sun has, over the last five years, established herself as a well-known name in the industry.", "paragraph_id": "5d702b4cc8e4820a9b66d8cf"} +{"question": "Who did the Bengals play against last week?", "paragraph": "The Chiefs\u2019 secondary has had a hard time defending the pass, which makes a trip to Cincinnati to go against the Bengals\u2019 thriving offense a case of unfortunate timing. Last week, Bengals wide receiver A. J. Green humiliated Baltimore with 227 receiving yards and two touchdowns. Sean Smith will be back from a suspension and will do his best against Green, but with Phillip Gaines out with a knee injury, Cincinnati\u2019s offense may be off to the races. PICK: BENGALS Cowboys (2-1) at Saints (0-3) 8:30 p.m. Line: Even The Saints\u2019 offense performed reasonably well with Drew Brees sidelined last week, but frustration continued as the team remained winless and finished the week three games behind two teams in its division. Brees has expressed optimism that he will be back this week, but how his shoulder woes could affect his ability to stretch the field is unknown.", "answer": "Baltimore", "sentence": "Last week, Bengals wide receiver A. J. Green humiliated Baltimore with 227 receiving yards and two touchdowns.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Chiefs\u2019 secondary has had a hard time defending the pass, which makes a trip to Cincinnati to go against the Bengals\u2019 thriving offense a case of unfortunate timing. Last week, Bengals wide receiver A. J. Green humiliated Baltimore with 227 receiving yards and two touchdowns. Sean Smith will be back from a suspension and will do his best against Green, but with Phillip Gaines out with a knee injury, Cincinnati\u2019s offense may be off to the races. PICK: BENGALS Cowboys (2-1) at Saints (0-3) 8:30 p.m. Line: Even The Saints\u2019 offense performed reasonably well with Drew Brees sidelined last week, but frustration continued as the team remained winless and finished the week three games behind two teams in its division. Brees has expressed optimism that he will be back this week, but how his shoulder woes could affect his ability to stretch the field is unknown.", "paragraph_answer": "The Chiefs\u2019 secondary has had a hard time defending the pass, which makes a trip to Cincinnati to go against the Bengals\u2019 thriving offense a case of unfortunate timing. Last week, Bengals wide receiver A. J. Green humiliated Baltimore with 227 receiving yards and two touchdowns. Sean Smith will be back from a suspension and will do his best against Green, but with Phillip Gaines out with a knee injury, Cincinnati\u2019s offense may be off to the races. PICK: BENGALS Cowboys (2-1) at Saints (0-3) 8:30 p.m. Line: Even The Saints\u2019 offense performed reasonably well with Drew Brees sidelined last week, but frustration continued as the team remained winless and finished the week three games behind two teams in its division. Brees has expressed optimism that he will be back this week, but how his shoulder woes could affect his ability to stretch the field is unknown.", "sentence_answer": "Last week, Bengals wide receiver A. J. Green humiliated Baltimore with 227 receiving yards and two touchdowns.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026a9c8e4820a9b66d303"} +{"question": "What year was the statement given about the state falling apart?", "paragraph": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "answer": "2012", "sentence": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012 .", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012 . \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012 . \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012 .", "paragraph_id": "5d7012ecc8e4820a9b66bf5f"} +{"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?", "paragraph_id": "5d7008bfc8e4820a9b66b0b1"} +{"question": "What does Islam teach those to care about?", "paragraph": "KARACHI, Pakistan \u2014 I worry about Muslims. Islam teaches me to care about all human beings, and animals too, but life is short and I can\u2019t even find enough time to worry about all the Muslims. I don\u2019t worry too much about the Muslims who face racial slurs in Europe and America, the ones who are suspected of harboring murderous thoughts at their workplaces or those who are picked out of immigration queues and asked awkward questions about their luggage and their ancestors. I tell myself that at the end of their humiliating journeys they can expect privileges like running water, electricity and tainted promises of equality.", "answer": "Islam teaches me to care about all human beings, and animals", "sentence": "Islam teaches me to care about all human beings, and animals too, but life is short", "paragraph_sentence": "KARACHI, Pakistan \u2014 I worry about Muslims. Islam teaches me to care about all human beings, and animals too, but life is short and I can\u2019t even find enough time to worry about all the Muslims. I don\u2019t worry too much about the Muslims who face racial slurs in Europe and America, the ones who are suspected of harboring murderous thoughts at their workplaces or those who are picked out of immigration queues and asked awkward questions about their luggage and their ancestors. I tell myself that at the end of their humiliating journeys they can expect privileges like running water, electricity and tainted promises of equality.", "paragraph_answer": "KARACHI, Pakistan \u2014 I worry about Muslims. Islam teaches me to care about all human beings, and animals too, but life is short and I can\u2019t even find enough time to worry about all the Muslims. I don\u2019t worry too much about the Muslims who face racial slurs in Europe and America, the ones who are suspected of harboring murderous thoughts at their workplaces or those who are picked out of immigration queues and asked awkward questions about their luggage and their ancestors. I tell myself that at the end of their humiliating journeys they can expect privileges like running water, electricity and tainted promises of equality.", "sentence_answer": " Islam teaches me to care about all human beings, and animals too, but life is short", "paragraph_id": "5d7005c3c8e4820a9b66a98b"} +{"question": "How much space does the center have available?", "paragraph": "Mark Lubell, the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery. He said he believes the connection to the street \u2014 along with a cafe and screens beaming out images from the center\u2019s programming \u2014 will telegraph the institution\u2019s intention to become a hub for conversations about the increasingly complex way pictures circulate and function in the digital age. \u201cIt\u2019s going to be a big challenge to think about what an exhibition will even mean in that context,\u201d Mr. Lubell said. By New York museum standards, the turnaround time for the new space is whiplash fast, but Mr. Lubell said that he hoped the center would become known for such nimbleness. \u201cWe don\u2019t know everything yet, which is a little discomforting for some people,\u201d he said, \u201cbut we\u2019re figuring it out together.\u201d", "answer": "more than 5,000 square feet", "sentence": "Mark Lubell, the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mark Lubell, the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery. He said he believes the connection to the street \u2014 along with a cafe and screens beaming out images from the center\u2019s programming \u2014 will telegraph the institution\u2019s intention to become a hub for conversations about the increasingly complex way pictures circulate and function in the digital age. \u201cIt\u2019s going to be a big challenge to think about what an exhibition will even mean in that context,\u201d Mr. Lubell said. By New York museum standards, the turnaround time for the new space is whiplash fast, but Mr. Lubell said that he hoped the center would become known for such nimbleness. \u201cWe don\u2019t know everything yet, which is a little discomforting for some people,\u201d he said, \u201cbut we\u2019re figuring it out together.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Mark Lubell, the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery. He said he believes the connection to the street \u2014 along with a cafe and screens beaming out images from the center\u2019s programming \u2014 will telegraph the institution\u2019s intention to become a hub for conversations about the increasingly complex way pictures circulate and function in the digital age. \u201cIt\u2019s going to be a big challenge to think about what an exhibition will even mean in that context,\u201d Mr. Lubell said. By New York museum standards, the turnaround time for the new space is whiplash fast, but Mr. Lubell said that he hoped the center would become known for such nimbleness. \u201cWe don\u2019t know everything yet, which is a little discomforting for some people,\u201d he said, \u201cbut we\u2019re figuring it out together.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mark Lubell, the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery.", "paragraph_id": "5d7017a0c8e4820a9b66c39c"} +{"question": "Were is duties relinqished temporary or perminantely", "paragraph": "ALBANY \u2014 Sheldon Silver, the longtime speaker of the New York State Assembly, agreed on Sunday to relinquish his duties on a temporary basis as he fights federal corruption charges.", "answer": "temporary basis", "sentence": "ALBANY \u2014 Sheldon Silver, the longtime speaker of the New York State Assembly, agreed on Sunday to relinquish his duties on a temporary basis as he fights federal corruption charges.", "paragraph_sentence": " ALBANY \u2014 Sheldon Silver, the longtime speaker of the New York State Assembly, agreed on Sunday to relinquish his duties on a temporary basis as he fights federal corruption charges. ", "paragraph_answer": "ALBANY \u2014 Sheldon Silver, the longtime speaker of the New York State Assembly, agreed on Sunday to relinquish his duties on a temporary basis as he fights federal corruption charges.", "sentence_answer": "ALBANY \u2014 Sheldon Silver, the longtime speaker of the New York State Assembly, agreed on Sunday to relinquish his duties on a temporary basis as he fights federal corruption charges.", "paragraph_id": "5d707ecfc8e4820a9b66f3a5"} +{"question": "What kind of feature is iMessage?", "paragraph": "Apple\u2019s iMessage has an audio-chat feature that allows you to send voice messages to friends on the same platform as text messages. Many apps have similar features, including WhatsApp and WeChat. Then there is the actual phone, which I\u2019m told is the basis of these app-filled devices we all have. If you really want to hear someone\u2019s voice, you can simply call her.", "answer": "audio-chat", "sentence": "Apple\u2019s iMessage has an audio-chat feature that allows you to send voice messages to friends on the same platform as text messages.", "paragraph_sentence": " Apple\u2019s iMessage has an audio-chat feature that allows you to send voice messages to friends on the same platform as text messages. Many apps have similar features, including WhatsApp and WeChat. Then there is the actual phone, which I\u2019m told is the basis of these app-filled devices we all have. If you really want to hear someone\u2019s voice, you can simply call her.", "paragraph_answer": "Apple\u2019s iMessage has an audio-chat feature that allows you to send voice messages to friends on the same platform as text messages. Many apps have similar features, including WhatsApp and WeChat. Then there is the actual phone, which I\u2019m told is the basis of these app-filled devices we all have. If you really want to hear someone\u2019s voice, you can simply call her.", "sentence_answer": "Apple\u2019s iMessage has an audio-chat feature that allows you to send voice messages to friends on the same platform as text messages.", "paragraph_id": "5d70464ac8e4820a9b66e830"} +{"question": "Where can you stream the first half of Season 7 of Mad Men?", "paragraph": "10 P.M. (FX) JUSTIFIED Timothy Olyphant plays Raylan Givens, the fictional United States marshal created by Elmore Leonard in his novel \u201cPronto.\u201d In this episode Boyd Crowder (Walton Goggins) tries to take money from Avery Markham (Sam Elliott). 10 P.M. (CBS) PERSON OF INTEREST John Reese (Jim Caviezel) has to protect a reckless bounty hunter. Harold Finch (Michael Emerson) follows through on the plot he hatched in Hong Kong. 10:30 (HGTV) HOUSE HUNTERS INTERNATIONAL Prospective buyers set a budget and work with a real estate agent to find a home abroad. In this episode a couple with a $240,000 budget looks for places in the Turks and Caicos. Conflict sets in when it is revealed that they have different motives for the purchase. What\u2019s Streaming Now MAD MEN This AMC series\u2019s final episodes will be broadcast starting on April 5. The first half of Season 7 is available for streaming now on Netflix. (netflix.com)", "answer": "Netflix", "sentence": "The first half of Season 7 is available for streaming now on Netflix .", "paragraph_sentence": "10 P.M. (FX) JUSTIFIED Timothy Olyphant plays Raylan Givens, the fictional United States marshal created by Elmore Leonard in his novel \u201cPronto.\u201d In this episode Boyd Crowder (Walton Goggins) tries to take money from Avery Markham (Sam Elliott). 10 P.M. (CBS) PERSON OF INTEREST John Reese (Jim Caviezel) has to protect a reckless bounty hunter. Harold Finch (Michael Emerson) follows through on the plot he hatched in Hong Kong. 10:30 (HGTV) HOUSE HUNTERS INTERNATIONAL Prospective buyers set a budget and work with a real estate agent to find a home abroad. In this episode a couple with a $240,000 budget looks for places in the Turks and Caicos. Conflict sets in when it is revealed that they have different motives for the purchase. What\u2019s Streaming Now MAD MEN This AMC series\u2019s final episodes will be broadcast starting on April 5. The first half of Season 7 is available for streaming now on Netflix . (netflix.com)", "paragraph_answer": "10 P.M. (FX) JUSTIFIED Timothy Olyphant plays Raylan Givens, the fictional United States marshal created by Elmore Leonard in his novel \u201cPronto.\u201d In this episode Boyd Crowder (Walton Goggins) tries to take money from Avery Markham (Sam Elliott). 10 P.M. (CBS) PERSON OF INTEREST John Reese (Jim Caviezel) has to protect a reckless bounty hunter. Harold Finch (Michael Emerson) follows through on the plot he hatched in Hong Kong. 10:30 (HGTV) HOUSE HUNTERS INTERNATIONAL Prospective buyers set a budget and work with a real estate agent to find a home abroad. In this episode a couple with a $240,000 budget looks for places in the Turks and Caicos. Conflict sets in when it is revealed that they have different motives for the purchase. What\u2019s Streaming Now MAD MEN This AMC series\u2019s final episodes will be broadcast starting on April 5. The first half of Season 7 is available for streaming now on Netflix . (netflix.com)", "sentence_answer": "The first half of Season 7 is available for streaming now on Netflix .", "paragraph_id": "5d701fb3c8e4820a9b66cb5e"} +{"question": "Where is the advertising company Grupo ABC located?", "paragraph": "Ad holding companies have also been looking elsewhere for longer-term growth opportunities. Omnicom, for instance, announced in November that one of its divisions, DDB Worldwide, had acquired Grupo ABC, an advertising group in Brazil. With the deal, Interpublic gains a majority stake in the Russian affiliates of three of its most well-known global creative agencies \u2014 McCann, Mullen Lowe and FCB. ADV shareholders will remain minority owners of the agencies. Financial terms were not disclosed, but a person familiar with the deal said it was valued at between $10 million and $20 million; Interpublic sets aside $150 million a year for acquisitions.", "answer": "Brazil", "sentence": "Omnicom, for instance, announced in November that one of its divisions, DDB Worldwide, had acquired Grupo ABC, an advertising group in Brazil .", "paragraph_sentence": "Ad holding companies have also been looking elsewhere for longer-term growth opportunities. Omnicom, for instance, announced in November that one of its divisions, DDB Worldwide, had acquired Grupo ABC, an advertising group in Brazil . With the deal, Interpublic gains a majority stake in the Russian affiliates of three of its most well-known global creative agencies \u2014 McCann, Mullen Lowe and FCB. ADV shareholders will remain minority owners of the agencies. Financial terms were not disclosed, but a person familiar with the deal said it was valued at between $10 million and $20 million; Interpublic sets aside $150 million a year for acquisitions.", "paragraph_answer": "Ad holding companies have also been looking elsewhere for longer-term growth opportunities. Omnicom, for instance, announced in November that one of its divisions, DDB Worldwide, had acquired Grupo ABC, an advertising group in Brazil . With the deal, Interpublic gains a majority stake in the Russian affiliates of three of its most well-known global creative agencies \u2014 McCann, Mullen Lowe and FCB. ADV shareholders will remain minority owners of the agencies. Financial terms were not disclosed, but a person familiar with the deal said it was valued at between $10 million and $20 million; Interpublic sets aside $150 million a year for acquisitions.", "sentence_answer": "Omnicom, for instance, announced in November that one of its divisions, DDB Worldwide, had acquired Grupo ABC, an advertising group in Brazil .", "paragraph_id": "5d702ef5c8e4820a9b66dc1e"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700847c8e4820a9b66afca"} +{"question": "Where is the Clinton Correctional Facility located?", "paragraph": "Night after night for months, David Sweat slipped through a hole he had sawed at the back of his cell in the Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York. He would plumb the catacomb-like tunnels beneath the prison, where he was serving a life sentence for murder, searching for an escape route, confident that the guards would have no idea he was gone because they were asleep. Then he would return to his empty bunk. His explorations began this past winter and continued through the spring. They took him underground almost every night for hours until he finally stumbled on what would become, through trial and error and countless hours of grueling work, his subterranean route out. Mr. Sweat felt free during his nightly journeys into the maze, as though he had already escaped the ugliness of his day-to-day prison life.", "answer": "in northern New York", "sentence": "Night after night for months, David Sweat slipped through a hole he had sawed at the back of his cell in the Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York .", "paragraph_sentence": " Night after night for months, David Sweat slipped through a hole he had sawed at the back of his cell in the Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York . He would plumb the catacomb-like tunnels beneath the prison, where he was serving a life sentence for murder, searching for an escape route, confident that the guards would have no idea he was gone because they were asleep. Then he would return to his empty bunk. His explorations began this past winter and continued through the spring. They took him underground almost every night for hours until he finally stumbled on what would become, through trial and error and countless hours of grueling work, his subterranean route out. Mr. Sweat felt free during his nightly journeys into the maze, as though he had already escaped the ugliness of his day-to-day prison life.", "paragraph_answer": "Night after night for months, David Sweat slipped through a hole he had sawed at the back of his cell in the Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York . He would plumb the catacomb-like tunnels beneath the prison, where he was serving a life sentence for murder, searching for an escape route, confident that the guards would have no idea he was gone because they were asleep. Then he would return to his empty bunk. His explorations began this past winter and continued through the spring. They took him underground almost every night for hours until he finally stumbled on what would become, through trial and error and countless hours of grueling work, his subterranean route out. Mr. Sweat felt free during his nightly journeys into the maze, as though he had already escaped the ugliness of his day-to-day prison life.", "sentence_answer": "Night after night for months, David Sweat slipped through a hole he had sawed at the back of his cell in the Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York .", "paragraph_id": "5d7055f1c8e4820a9b66ecef"} +{"question": "What is the temperature of California during the drought?", "paragraph": "And now, as the end of the official rainy season approaches \u2014 this state gets 90 percent of its water from December through April, most of it in December and January \u2014 California is facing a punishing fourth year of drought. Temperatures in Southern California soared to record-high levels over the weekend, approaching 100 degrees in some places. Reservoirs are low. Landscapes are parched and blighted with fields of dead or dormant orange trees. And the Sierra Nevada snowpack, which is counted on to provide 30 percent of the state\u2019s water supply as it melts through early summer, is at its second-lowest level on record.", "answer": "100 degrees", "sentence": "Temperatures in Southern California soared to record-high levels over the weekend, approaching 100 degrees in some places.", "paragraph_sentence": "And now, as the end of the official rainy season approaches \u2014 this state gets 90 percent of its water from December through April, most of it in December and January \u2014 California is facing a punishing fourth year of drought. Temperatures in Southern California soared to record-high levels over the weekend, approaching 100 degrees in some places. Reservoirs are low. Landscapes are parched and blighted with fields of dead or dormant orange trees. And the Sierra Nevada snowpack, which is counted on to provide 30 percent of the state\u2019s water supply as it melts through early summer, is at its second-lowest level on record.", "paragraph_answer": "And now, as the end of the official rainy season approaches \u2014 this state gets 90 percent of its water from December through April, most of it in December and January \u2014 California is facing a punishing fourth year of drought. Temperatures in Southern California soared to record-high levels over the weekend, approaching 100 degrees in some places. Reservoirs are low. Landscapes are parched and blighted with fields of dead or dormant orange trees. And the Sierra Nevada snowpack, which is counted on to provide 30 percent of the state\u2019s water supply as it melts through early summer, is at its second-lowest level on record.", "sentence_answer": "Temperatures in Southern California soared to record-high levels over the weekend, approaching 100 degrees in some places.", "paragraph_id": "5d700a8bc8e4820a9b66b454"} +{"question": "What was Amtrak accused of by Gov. Chris Christie?", "paragraph": "\u201cAmtrak\u2019s leadership must reflect and determine how they can better manage their current funding to avoid these types of delays in the future,\u201d he said in a statement. Amtrak also depends on money from states, and its relationship with Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey soured last week. On Friday, Mr. Christie accused Amtrak of \u201cabject neglect\u201d of its infrastructure. He said he had asked New Jersey\u2019s attorney general to determine how the state could make sure that the nearly $100 million it pays Amtrak each year was being used properly. Amtrak officials countered that New Jersey Transit\u2019s payments mostly go toward operating costs, like train dispatching and inspections, and for electricity to run the trains, and that in the 2014 fiscal year, for example, only about $13.6 million was left for system upgrades.", "answer": "abject neglect", "sentence": "On Friday, Mr. Christie accused Amtrak of \u201c abject neglect \u201d of its infrastructure", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cAmtrak\u2019s leadership must reflect and determine how they can better manage their current funding to avoid these types of delays in the future,\u201d he said in a statement. Amtrak also depends on money from states, and its relationship with Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey soured last week. On Friday, Mr. Christie accused Amtrak of \u201c abject neglect \u201d of its infrastructure . He said he had asked New Jersey\u2019s attorney general to determine how the state could make sure that the nearly $100 million it pays Amtrak each year was being used properly. Amtrak officials countered that New Jersey Transit\u2019s payments mostly go toward operating costs, like train dispatching and inspections, and for electricity to run the trains, and that in the 2014 fiscal year, for example, only about $13.6 million was left for system upgrades.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cAmtrak\u2019s leadership must reflect and determine how they can better manage their current funding to avoid these types of delays in the future,\u201d he said in a statement. Amtrak also depends on money from states, and its relationship with Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey soured last week. On Friday, Mr. Christie accused Amtrak of \u201c abject neglect \u201d of its infrastructure. He said he had asked New Jersey\u2019s attorney general to determine how the state could make sure that the nearly $100 million it pays Amtrak each year was being used properly. Amtrak officials countered that New Jersey Transit\u2019s payments mostly go toward operating costs, like train dispatching and inspections, and for electricity to run the trains, and that in the 2014 fiscal year, for example, only about $13.6 million was left for system upgrades.", "sentence_answer": "On Friday, Mr. Christie accused Amtrak of \u201c abject neglect \u201d of its infrastructure", "paragraph_id": "5d702125c8e4820a9b66ccea"} +{"question": "What is the stance of the National Right to Work Committee regarding the policy?", "paragraph": "But it remains unclear what effect months of lobbying have had. \u201cI know we\u2019ve flipped some,\u201d said Greg Mourad, a vice president at the National Right to Work Committee, which supports the legislation. \u201cWhether we\u2019ve flipped enough or not, I guess we\u2019ll just have to wait and find out.\u201d Missouri, whose union footprint has decreased in recent decades as manufacturing jobs have moved abroad, is increasingly rare as a Midwestern state without a right-to-work law. Of the states it borders, all but Illinois and Kentucky have some version of the policy on the books. Mr. Mourad said that puts Missouri at a disadvantage when competing with its neighbors to attract a new factory or business.", "answer": "supports the legislation", "sentence": "\u201cI know we\u2019ve flipped some,\u201d said Greg Mourad, a vice president at the National Right to Work Committee, which supports the legislation .", "paragraph_sentence": "But it remains unclear what effect months of lobbying have had. \u201cI know we\u2019ve flipped some,\u201d said Greg Mourad, a vice president at the National Right to Work Committee, which supports the legislation . \u201cWhether we\u2019ve flipped enough or not, I guess we\u2019ll just have to wait and find out.\u201d Missouri, whose union footprint has decreased in recent decades as manufacturing jobs have moved abroad, is increasingly rare as a Midwestern state without a right-to-work law. Of the states it borders, all but Illinois and Kentucky have some version of the policy on the books. Mr. Mourad said that puts Missouri at a disadvantage when competing with its neighbors to attract a new factory or business.", "paragraph_answer": "But it remains unclear what effect months of lobbying have had. \u201cI know we\u2019ve flipped some,\u201d said Greg Mourad, a vice president at the National Right to Work Committee, which supports the legislation . \u201cWhether we\u2019ve flipped enough or not, I guess we\u2019ll just have to wait and find out.\u201d Missouri, whose union footprint has decreased in recent decades as manufacturing jobs have moved abroad, is increasingly rare as a Midwestern state without a right-to-work law. Of the states it borders, all but Illinois and Kentucky have some version of the policy on the books. Mr. Mourad said that puts Missouri at a disadvantage when competing with its neighbors to attract a new factory or business.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI know we\u2019ve flipped some,\u201d said Greg Mourad, a vice president at the National Right to Work Committee, which supports the legislation .", "paragraph_id": "5d701a12c8e4820a9b66c5f7"} +{"question": "Who expected them to know much of the basics?", "paragraph": "In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians\u2019 soldierly skills lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction. \u201cI came into it expecting them not to know much of the basics,\u201d said Sgt. Michael Faranda, who is teaching maneuvers. He was correct. Things \u201cevery soldier should know,\u201d he said, they did not. Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises. Still, Sergeant Faranda said, the Ukrainians\u2019 willingness to go into combat was all the more notable for their lack of preparation for it.", "answer": "Sgt. Michael Faranda", "sentence": "\u201cI came into it expecting them not to know much of the basics,\u201d said Sgt. Michael Faranda , who is teaching maneuvers.", "paragraph_sentence": "In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians\u2019 soldierly skills lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction. \u201cI came into it expecting them not to know much of the basics,\u201d said Sgt. Michael Faranda , who is teaching maneuvers. He was correct. Things \u201cevery soldier should know,\u201d he said, they did not. Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises. Still, Sergeant Faranda said, the Ukrainians\u2019 willingness to go into combat was all the more notable for their lack of preparation for it.", "paragraph_answer": "In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians\u2019 soldierly skills lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction. \u201cI came into it expecting them not to know much of the basics,\u201d said Sgt. Michael Faranda , who is teaching maneuvers. He was correct. Things \u201cevery soldier should know,\u201d he said, they did not. Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises. Still, Sergeant Faranda said, the Ukrainians\u2019 willingness to go into combat was all the more notable for their lack of preparation for it.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI came into it expecting them not to know much of the basics,\u201d said Sgt. Michael Faranda , who is teaching maneuvers.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026e6c8e4820a9b66d3e5"} +{"question": "Who was the author of the Imitation Game?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe Grand Budapest Hotel\u201d and \u201cThe Imitation Game\u201d were named best original and adapted screenplay, respectively, at the Writers Guild of America Awards, given out Saturday in Los Angeles and New York. The script for \u201cThe Grand Budapest Hotel,\u201d a comedic caper about a charismatic concierge and a young bellboy at a popular 1930s European ski resort, was written by Wes Anderson. \u201cThe Imitation Game\u201d was written by Graham Moore and based on Andrew Hodges\u2019s book about the British code-breaker Alan Turing. Other winners included Brian Knappenberger\u2019s \u201cThe Internet\u2019s Own Boy: The Story of Aaron Swartz,\u201d about a computer programming prodigy and information activist, for best documentary screenplay; Nic Pizzolatto\u2019s \u201cTrue Detective,\u201d the HBO mini-series that revisits a 1995 murder case in rural Louisiana 17 years later, for best drama series and best new series; and \u201cLouie,\u201d a fictionalized series starring the comedian Louis CK, for best comedy series (written by Louis CK and Pamela Adlon) and best episodic comedy.", "answer": "Graham Moore", "sentence": "\u201cThe Imitation Game\u201d was written by Graham Moore and based on Andrew Hodges\u2019s book about the British code-breaker Alan Turing.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe Grand Budapest Hotel\u201d and \u201cThe Imitation Game\u201d were named best original and adapted screenplay, respectively, at the Writers Guild of America Awards, given out Saturday in Los Angeles and New York. The script for \u201cThe Grand Budapest Hotel,\u201d a comedic caper about a charismatic concierge and a young bellboy at a popular 1930s European ski resort, was written by Wes Anderson. \u201cThe Imitation Game\u201d was written by Graham Moore and based on Andrew Hodges\u2019s book about the British code-breaker Alan Turing. Other winners included Brian Knappenberger\u2019s \u201cThe Internet\u2019s Own Boy: The Story of Aaron Swartz,\u201d about a computer programming prodigy and information activist, for best documentary screenplay; Nic Pizzolatto\u2019s \u201cTrue Detective,\u201d the HBO mini-series that revisits a 1995 murder case in rural Louisiana 17 years later, for best drama series and best new series; and \u201cLouie,\u201d a fictionalized series starring the comedian Louis CK, for best comedy series (written by Louis CK and Pamela Adlon) and best episodic comedy.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe Grand Budapest Hotel\u201d and \u201cThe Imitation Game\u201d were named best original and adapted screenplay, respectively, at the Writers Guild of America Awards, given out Saturday in Los Angeles and New York. The script for \u201cThe Grand Budapest Hotel,\u201d a comedic caper about a charismatic concierge and a young bellboy at a popular 1930s European ski resort, was written by Wes Anderson. \u201cThe Imitation Game\u201d was written by Graham Moore and based on Andrew Hodges\u2019s book about the British code-breaker Alan Turing. Other winners included Brian Knappenberger\u2019s \u201cThe Internet\u2019s Own Boy: The Story of Aaron Swartz,\u201d about a computer programming prodigy and information activist, for best documentary screenplay; Nic Pizzolatto\u2019s \u201cTrue Detective,\u201d the HBO mini-series that revisits a 1995 murder case in rural Louisiana 17 years later, for best drama series and best new series; and \u201cLouie,\u201d a fictionalized series starring the comedian Louis CK, for best comedy series (written by Louis CK and Pamela Adlon) and best episodic comedy.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe Imitation Game\u201d was written by Graham Moore and based on Andrew Hodges\u2019s book about the British code-breaker Alan Turing.", "paragraph_id": "5d703666c8e4820a9b66e018"} +{"question": "In which country did the most recent G-20 meeting take place?", "paragraph": "The applause, of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade. Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early.", "answer": "Australia", "sentence": "Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early.", "paragraph_sentence": "The applause, of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade. Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early. ", "paragraph_answer": "The applause, of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade. Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early.", "sentence_answer": "Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early.", "paragraph_id": "5d701bcec8e4820a9b66c74e"} +{"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 .", "paragraph_id": "5d700827c8e4820a9b66af6f"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700817c8e4820a9b66af47"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700891c8e4820a9b66b03d"} +{"question": "What is the law that protect female soccer players?", "paragraph": "Heinrichs was the first female coach of the women\u2019s national team and the first female player elected to the National Soccer Hall of Fame. She is convinced that American determination, fitness, hustle and competitiveness must be broadened with accelerated development of technical skill if the United States is to keep pace with teams like Germany, France and Japan, the defending World Cup champion. \u201cWe think players on an elite track that aspire to be women\u2019s national team players one day should self-select and play up earlier,\u201d Heinrichs said. \u201cIf more players and more club coaches saw the value in having their players in the most challenging environment that she could have on a daily basis, they would see how much faster she would grow.\u201d Title IX, the federal law that prohibits discrimination based on gender, has been applied so effectively to sports over the past four decades that female soccer players in the United States have widespread access to their own leagues from a young age. While it is necessary for girls to have an environment in which they can feel comfortable and progress at their own rate, Heinrichs said, she sees an unintended consequence of Title IX: Fewer top-level girls seem to be honing their skills against boys today than when she and Hamm and Wambach developed into elite players. \u201cIt\u2019s important because in Europe, they\u2019re all playing up, and their 12- to 16-year-olds are playing against boys,\u201d Heinrichs said. \u201cWe don\u2019t have that anymore, for the most part.\u201d", "answer": "Title IX, the federal law", "sentence": "\u201cIf more players and more club coaches saw the value in having their players in the most challenging environment that she could have on a daily basis, they would see how much faster she would grow.\u201d Title IX, the federal law that prohibits discrimination based on gender, has been applied so effectively to sports over the past four decades that female soccer players in the United States have widespread access to their own leagues from a young age.", "paragraph_sentence": "Heinrichs was the first female coach of the women\u2019s national team and the first female player elected to the National Soccer Hall of Fame. She is convinced that American determination, fitness, hustle and competitiveness must be broadened with accelerated development of technical skill if the United States is to keep pace with teams like Germany, France and Japan, the defending World Cup champion. \u201cWe think players on an elite track that aspire to be women\u2019s national team players one day should self-select and play up earlier,\u201d Heinrichs said. \u201cIf more players and more club coaches saw the value in having their players in the most challenging environment that she could have on a daily basis, they would see how much faster she would grow.\u201d Title IX, the federal law that prohibits discrimination based on gender, has been applied so effectively to sports over the past four decades that female soccer players in the United States have widespread access to their own leagues from a young age. While it is necessary for girls to have an environment in which they can feel comfortable and progress at their own rate, Heinrichs said, she sees an unintended consequence of Title IX: Fewer top-level girls seem to be honing their skills against boys today than when she and Hamm and Wambach developed into elite players. \u201cIt\u2019s important because in Europe, they\u2019re all playing up, and their 12- to 16-year-olds are playing against boys,\u201d Heinrichs said. \u201cWe don\u2019t have that anymore, for the most part.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Heinrichs was the first female coach of the women\u2019s national team and the first female player elected to the National Soccer Hall of Fame. She is convinced that American determination, fitness, hustle and competitiveness must be broadened with accelerated development of technical skill if the United States is to keep pace with teams like Germany, France and Japan, the defending World Cup champion. \u201cWe think players on an elite track that aspire to be women\u2019s national team players one day should self-select and play up earlier,\u201d Heinrichs said. \u201cIf more players and more club coaches saw the value in having their players in the most challenging environment that she could have on a daily basis, they would see how much faster she would grow.\u201d Title IX, the federal law that prohibits discrimination based on gender, has been applied so effectively to sports over the past four decades that female soccer players in the United States have widespread access to their own leagues from a young age. While it is necessary for girls to have an environment in which they can feel comfortable and progress at their own rate, Heinrichs said, she sees an unintended consequence of Title IX: Fewer top-level girls seem to be honing their skills against boys today than when she and Hamm and Wambach developed into elite players. \u201cIt\u2019s important because in Europe, they\u2019re all playing up, and their 12- to 16-year-olds are playing against boys,\u201d Heinrichs said. \u201cWe don\u2019t have that anymore, for the most part.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIf more players and more club coaches saw the value in having their players in the most challenging environment that she could have on a daily basis, they would see how much faster she would grow.\u201d Title IX, the federal law that prohibits discrimination based on gender, has been applied so effectively to sports over the past four decades that female soccer players in the United States have widespread access to their own leagues from a young age.", "paragraph_id": "5d700fe1c8e4820a9b66bbe6"} +{"question": "What is on the fifth floor of the American Embassy and some have called the big ears?", "paragraph": "What startled France, a country where the customer is always wrong, was the revolt of the taxi rider. For the last half year, many have turned away from cabs, loving the convenience of Uber and the way the drivers would open doors and not have the meter prematurely racking up the tab. The French were stunned to learn that the fifth floor of the American Embassy, a few doors from the \u00c9lys\u00e9e Palace, was a trompe l\u2019oeil design hiding what they call the \u201cbig ears\u201d of eavesdropping equipment pointed at Fran\u00e7ois Hollande (and his actress girlfriend, Julie Gayet, who is stealthily hanging out at the \u00c9lys\u00e9e). \u201cIt\u2019s a little bit like an invited guest whom you\u2019ve surprised looking into the bedroom through a keyhole,\u201d huffed Laurent Joffrin in a signed editorial in Lib\u00e9ration, concluding the only way to deal with this \u201cstain\u201d by a \u201ccondescending ally\u201d against the rules of good conduct was to give asylum to \u201cthe courageous whistle-blower,\u201d Edward Snowden. French officials, pleased with the successful collaboration of the French and the U.S. against jihadists in Africa, Libya, Mali and Syria, were more inclined to treat the wiretapping as an old story. (Though Lib\u00e9ration denounced that as hypocritical, \u201ca case of Tartufferie.\u201d) I visited the Foreign Ministry at the Quai d\u2019Orsay \u2014 bristling with emergency meetings on terrorism \u2014 to check on the status of French-American relations.", "answer": "eavesdropping equipment", "sentence": "The French were stunned to learn that the fifth floor of the American Embassy, a few doors from the \u00c9lys\u00e9e Palace, was a trompe l\u2019oeil design hiding what they call the \u201cbig ears\u201d of eavesdropping equipment pointed at Fran\u00e7ois Hollande (and his actress girlfriend, Julie Gayet, who is stealthily hanging out at the \u00c9lys\u00e9e).", "paragraph_sentence": "What startled France, a country where the customer is always wrong, was the revolt of the taxi rider. For the last half year, many have turned away from cabs, loving the convenience of Uber and the way the drivers would open doors and not have the meter prematurely racking up the tab. The French were stunned to learn that the fifth floor of the American Embassy, a few doors from the \u00c9lys\u00e9e Palace, was a trompe l\u2019oeil design hiding what they call the \u201cbig ears\u201d of eavesdropping equipment pointed at Fran\u00e7ois Hollande (and his actress girlfriend, Julie Gayet, who is stealthily hanging out at the \u00c9lys\u00e9e). \u201cIt\u2019s a little bit like an invited guest whom you\u2019ve surprised looking into the bedroom through a keyhole,\u201d huffed Laurent Joffrin in a signed editorial in Lib\u00e9ration, concluding the only way to deal with this \u201cstain\u201d by a \u201ccondescending ally\u201d against the rules of good conduct was to give asylum to \u201cthe courageous whistle-blower,\u201d Edward Snowden. French officials, pleased with the successful collaboration of the French and the U.S. against jihadists in Africa, Libya, Mali and Syria, were more inclined to treat the wiretapping as an old story. (Though Lib\u00e9ration denounced that as hypocritical, \u201ca case of Tartufferie.\u201d) I visited the Foreign Ministry at the Quai d\u2019Orsay \u2014 bristling with emergency meetings on terrorism \u2014 to check on the status of French-American relations.", "paragraph_answer": "What startled France, a country where the customer is always wrong, was the revolt of the taxi rider. For the last half year, many have turned away from cabs, loving the convenience of Uber and the way the drivers would open doors and not have the meter prematurely racking up the tab. The French were stunned to learn that the fifth floor of the American Embassy, a few doors from the \u00c9lys\u00e9e Palace, was a trompe l\u2019oeil design hiding what they call the \u201cbig ears\u201d of eavesdropping equipment pointed at Fran\u00e7ois Hollande (and his actress girlfriend, Julie Gayet, who is stealthily hanging out at the \u00c9lys\u00e9e). \u201cIt\u2019s a little bit like an invited guest whom you\u2019ve surprised looking into the bedroom through a keyhole,\u201d huffed Laurent Joffrin in a signed editorial in Lib\u00e9ration, concluding the only way to deal with this \u201cstain\u201d by a \u201ccondescending ally\u201d against the rules of good conduct was to give asylum to \u201cthe courageous whistle-blower,\u201d Edward Snowden. French officials, pleased with the successful collaboration of the French and the U.S. against jihadists in Africa, Libya, Mali and Syria, were more inclined to treat the wiretapping as an old story. (Though Lib\u00e9ration denounced that as hypocritical, \u201ca case of Tartufferie.\u201d) I visited the Foreign Ministry at the Quai d\u2019Orsay \u2014 bristling with emergency meetings on terrorism \u2014 to check on the status of French-American relations.", "sentence_answer": "The French were stunned to learn that the fifth floor of the American Embassy, a few doors from the \u00c9lys\u00e9e Palace, was a trompe l\u2019oeil design hiding what they call the \u201cbig ears\u201d of eavesdropping equipment pointed at Fran\u00e7ois Hollande (and his actress girlfriend, Julie Gayet, who is stealthily hanging out at the \u00c9lys\u00e9e).", "paragraph_id": "5d703523c8e4820a9b66df57"} +{"question": "How were the hosting rights lost?", "paragraph": "We might never fully know how the voting went down four years ago and how hosting rights were won and lost. Media reports, particularly in England, forced FIFA to expel \u2014 temporarily \u2014 two members before the vote. But allegation after continuing allegation prompted FIFA\u2019s ethics committee to commission an independent investigation led by the former federal prosecutor Michael J. Garcia. His 350-page report remains secret, locked in a labyrinth of FIFA procedures to decide which, if any, of the findings will be released to the public.", "answer": "We might never fully know", "sentence": "We might never fully know how the voting went down four years ago and how hosting rights were won and lost.", "paragraph_sentence": " We might never fully know how the voting went down four years ago and how hosting rights were won and lost. Media reports, particularly in England, forced FIFA to expel \u2014 temporarily \u2014 two members before the vote. But allegation after continuing allegation prompted FIFA\u2019s ethics committee to commission an independent investigation led by the former federal prosecutor Michael J. Garcia. His 350-page report remains secret, locked in a labyrinth of FIFA procedures to decide which, if any, of the findings will be released to the public.", "paragraph_answer": " We might never fully know how the voting went down four years ago and how hosting rights were won and lost. Media reports, particularly in England, forced FIFA to expel \u2014 temporarily \u2014 two members before the vote. But allegation after continuing allegation prompted FIFA\u2019s ethics committee to commission an independent investigation led by the former federal prosecutor Michael J. Garcia. His 350-page report remains secret, locked in a labyrinth of FIFA procedures to decide which, if any, of the findings will be released to the public.", "sentence_answer": " We might never fully know how the voting went down four years ago and how hosting rights were won and lost.", "paragraph_id": "5d7011d6c8e4820a9b66be4e"} +{"question": "What was the truck carrying?", "paragraph": "RABAT, Morocco \u2014 A fiery head-on collision between a semitrailer truck and a bus carrying a delegation of young athletes in southern Morocco on Friday killed 33 people and injured seven, according to the state news agency and local news media reports. The crash took place just before sunrise at 7 a.m. in the Chbika district, near Tan-Tan, a southern desert city, the news agency reported. A video posted by the French-language newspaper L\u2019Economiste shows the flaming wreckage of the tour bus, which caught fire after a collision with what the newspaper identified as a tanker truck carrying hydrocarbons. The video shows people wandering around the burning hulk in a desert landscape.", "answer": "hydrocarbons", "sentence": "A video posted by the French-language newspaper L\u2019Economiste shows the flaming wreckage of the tour bus, which caught fire after a collision with what the newspaper identified as a tanker truck carrying hydrocarbons .", "paragraph_sentence": "RABAT, Morocco \u2014 A fiery head-on collision between a semitrailer truck and a bus carrying a delegation of young athletes in southern Morocco on Friday killed 33 people and injured seven, according to the state news agency and local news media reports. The crash took place just before sunrise at 7 a.m. in the Chbika district, near Tan-Tan, a southern desert city, the news agency reported. A video posted by the French-language newspaper L\u2019Economiste shows the flaming wreckage of the tour bus, which caught fire after a collision with what the newspaper identified as a tanker truck carrying hydrocarbons . The video shows people wandering around the burning hulk in a desert landscape.", "paragraph_answer": "RABAT, Morocco \u2014 A fiery head-on collision between a semitrailer truck and a bus carrying a delegation of young athletes in southern Morocco on Friday killed 33 people and injured seven, according to the state news agency and local news media reports. The crash took place just before sunrise at 7 a.m. in the Chbika district, near Tan-Tan, a southern desert city, the news agency reported. A video posted by the French-language newspaper L\u2019Economiste shows the flaming wreckage of the tour bus, which caught fire after a collision with what the newspaper identified as a tanker truck carrying hydrocarbons . The video shows people wandering around the burning hulk in a desert landscape.", "sentence_answer": "A video posted by the French-language newspaper L\u2019Economiste shows the flaming wreckage of the tour bus, which caught fire after a collision with what the newspaper identified as a tanker truck carrying hydrocarbons .", "paragraph_id": "5d700bccc8e4820a9b66b6c7"} +{"question": "What anniversary was on Sunday?", "paragraph": "CAIRO \u2014 At least 18 people were killed in political violence on Sunday, the fourth anniversary of the Arab Spring uprising, a reminder of the ruthless crackdown the military-backed government has used to silence any echoes of that revolt. Security officials said three of those killed were militants trying to plant bombs that accidentally exploded in two Nile Delta towns, and three others were police conscripts. At least 12 others were civilians killed by security forces. As many as 10 civilians were killed in clashes in the Matariya district, a frequent flash point on the northern edge of Cairo, and dozens of civilians were reportedly injured in clashes at scattered protests around the country. After nearly 18 months of recurring police shootings at street protests since the military takeover in 2013, it was the deaths of two others killed over the weekend that most captured Egypt\u2019s attention. Sondos Reda Abu Bakr, a 17-year-old high school student, was killed Friday by police officers firing birdshot at a demonstration in Alexandria in support of ousted President Mohamed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood. And Shaimaa al-Sabbagh, 31, a left-leaning poet and activist, was killed in Cairo. She was a member of a socialist political party that had supported President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi and the military takeover he led in 2013.", "answer": "fourth anniversary of the Arab Spring uprising", "sentence": "CAIRO \u2014 At least 18 people were killed in political violence on Sunday, the fourth anniversary of the Arab Spring uprising , a reminder of the ruthless crackdown the military-backed government has used to silence any echoes of that revolt.", "paragraph_sentence": " CAIRO \u2014 At least 18 people were killed in political violence on Sunday, the fourth anniversary of the Arab Spring uprising , a reminder of the ruthless crackdown the military-backed government has used to silence any echoes of that revolt. Security officials said three of those killed were militants trying to plant bombs that accidentally exploded in two Nile Delta towns, and three others were police conscripts. At least 12 others were civilians killed by security forces. As many as 10 civilians were killed in clashes in the Matariya district, a frequent flash point on the northern edge of Cairo, and dozens of civilians were reportedly injured in clashes at scattered protests around the country. After nearly 18 months of recurring police shootings at street protests since the military takeover in 2013, it was the deaths of two others killed over the weekend that most captured Egypt\u2019s attention. Sondos Reda Abu Bakr, a 17-year-old high school student, was killed Friday by police officers firing birdshot at a demonstration in Alexandria in support of ousted President Mohamed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood. And Shaimaa al-Sabbagh, 31, a left-leaning poet and activist, was killed in Cairo. She was a member of a socialist political party that had supported President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi and the military takeover he led in 2013.", "paragraph_answer": "CAIRO \u2014 At least 18 people were killed in political violence on Sunday, the fourth anniversary of the Arab Spring uprising , a reminder of the ruthless crackdown the military-backed government has used to silence any echoes of that revolt. Security officials said three of those killed were militants trying to plant bombs that accidentally exploded in two Nile Delta towns, and three others were police conscripts. At least 12 others were civilians killed by security forces. As many as 10 civilians were killed in clashes in the Matariya district, a frequent flash point on the northern edge of Cairo, and dozens of civilians were reportedly injured in clashes at scattered protests around the country. After nearly 18 months of recurring police shootings at street protests since the military takeover in 2013, it was the deaths of two others killed over the weekend that most captured Egypt\u2019s attention. Sondos Reda Abu Bakr, a 17-year-old high school student, was killed Friday by police officers firing birdshot at a demonstration in Alexandria in support of ousted President Mohamed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood. And Shaimaa al-Sabbagh, 31, a left-leaning poet and activist, was killed in Cairo. She was a member of a socialist political party that had supported President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi and the military takeover he led in 2013.", "sentence_answer": "CAIRO \u2014 At least 18 people were killed in political violence on Sunday, the fourth anniversary of the Arab Spring uprising , a reminder of the ruthless crackdown the military-backed government has used to silence any echoes of that revolt.", "paragraph_id": "5d703470c8e4820a9b66df01"} +{"question": "Who limited the number of people allowed at the burial?", "paragraph": "Reuters reported that a relative said the family was refusing to receive the body because Israeli authorities had limited the number of people allowed at the burial. The measure is often imposed by Israel at the funerals of Palestinian militants in Jerusalem and when security officials fear that a funeral will turn rowdy or violent.", "answer": "Israeli authorities", "sentence": "Reuters reported that a relative said the family was refusing to receive the body because Israeli authorities had limited the number of people allowed at the burial.", "paragraph_sentence": " Reuters reported that a relative said the family was refusing to receive the body because Israeli authorities had limited the number of people allowed at the burial. The measure is often imposed by Israel at the funerals of Palestinian militants in Jerusalem and when security officials fear that a funeral will turn rowdy or violent.", "paragraph_answer": "Reuters reported that a relative said the family was refusing to receive the body because Israeli authorities had limited the number of people allowed at the burial. The measure is often imposed by Israel at the funerals of Palestinian militants in Jerusalem and when security officials fear that a funeral will turn rowdy or violent.", "sentence_answer": "Reuters reported that a relative said the family was refusing to receive the body because Israeli authorities had limited the number of people allowed at the burial.", "paragraph_id": "5d7004e6c8e4820a9b66a819"} +{"question": "Where will Iran not let foreigners inspect?", "paragraph": "\u201cThey say new things in the negotiations,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei told the military graduates. \u201cRegarding inspections, we have said that we will not let foreigners inspect any military center.\u201d Like last summer, when he vowed that Iran would ultimately build an industrial-scale uranium enrichment capability \u2014 with 190,000 centrifuges, or 10 times the number now installed \u2014 the ayatollah\u2019s comments are bound to cause deep complications for Iran\u2019s negotiators, led by Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif.", "answer": "any military center", "sentence": "\u201cRegarding inspections, we have said that we will not let foreigners inspect any military center .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThey say new things in the negotiations,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei told the military graduates. \u201cRegarding inspections, we have said that we will not let foreigners inspect any military center .\u201d Like last summer, when he vowed that Iran would ultimately build an industrial-scale uranium enrichment capability \u2014 with 190,000 centrifuges, or 10 times the number now installed \u2014 the ayatollah\u2019s comments are bound to cause deep complications for Iran\u2019s negotiators, led by Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThey say new things in the negotiations,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei told the military graduates. \u201cRegarding inspections, we have said that we will not let foreigners inspect any military center .\u201d Like last summer, when he vowed that Iran would ultimately build an industrial-scale uranium enrichment capability \u2014 with 190,000 centrifuges, or 10 times the number now installed \u2014 the ayatollah\u2019s comments are bound to cause deep complications for Iran\u2019s negotiators, led by Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cRegarding inspections, we have said that we will not let foreigners inspect any military center .\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d70183cc8e4820a9b66c438"} +{"question": "The building at 1156 Avenue of the Americas was owned since when?", "paragraph": "Q. Your next makeover is at 1156 Avenue of the Americas. A. That\u2019s a building that we\u2019ve owned since 1999. I was looking at the building and I said, well, if this building was for sale now and one of the major brokers had it on the market it would come with a high-gloss book and it would show all of the possibilities a buyer could do with the building. So I thought there\u2019s no reason we shouldn\u2019t do it. We own it. We could do what a broker would say could be done. It\u2019s about an 84,000-square-foot building, so it\u2019s rather on the small side, and on that we\u2019re spending $4 million. Q. What\u2019s your occupancy rate portfoliowide? A. We\u2019re over 96 percent. We have a high renewal rate as well \u2014 in excess of 70 percent.", "answer": "1999", "sentence": " A. That\u2019s a building that we\u2019ve owned since 1999 .", "paragraph_sentence": "Q. Your next makeover is at 1156 Avenue of the Americas. A. That\u2019s a building that we\u2019ve owned since 1999 . I was looking at the building and I said, well, if this building was for sale now and one of the major brokers had it on the market it would come with a high-gloss book and it would show all of the possibilities a buyer could do with the building. So I thought there\u2019s no reason we shouldn\u2019t do it. We own it. We could do what a broker would say could be done. It\u2019s about an 84,000-square-foot building, so it\u2019s rather on the small side, and on that we\u2019re spending $4 million. Q. What\u2019s your occupancy rate portfoliowide? A. We\u2019re over 96 percent. We have a high renewal rate as well \u2014 in excess of 70 percent.", "paragraph_answer": "Q. Your next makeover is at 1156 Avenue of the Americas. A. That\u2019s a building that we\u2019ve owned since 1999 . I was looking at the building and I said, well, if this building was for sale now and one of the major brokers had it on the market it would come with a high-gloss book and it would show all of the possibilities a buyer could do with the building. So I thought there\u2019s no reason we shouldn\u2019t do it. We own it. We could do what a broker would say could be done. It\u2019s about an 84,000-square-foot building, so it\u2019s rather on the small side, and on that we\u2019re spending $4 million. Q. What\u2019s your occupancy rate portfoliowide? A. We\u2019re over 96 percent. We have a high renewal rate as well \u2014 in excess of 70 percent.", "sentence_answer": " A. That\u2019s a building that we\u2019ve owned since 1999 .", "paragraph_id": "5d703c68c8e4820a9b66e31b"} +{"question": "What does the French left wing party accuse the right wing party of being?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front. Ms. Le Pen and her party have thrived on an anti-immigration message that has verged on anti-Muslim, as well as a call for re-establishing European borders. These notions had already found traction as France faced an influx of Muslim immigrants from war-afflicted areas of the world. But she gained even more momentum after the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, in which 130 people were killed. However, several analysts said it was important not to overplay the recent attacks in explaining her success. Rather, they see a long-term trend in which the National Front has gained ground in election after election. It has done so even more rapidly since Ms. Le Pen took leadership of the party from her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in 2011.", "answer": "xenophobic", "sentence": "\u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front. Ms. Le Pen and her party have thrived on an anti-immigration message that has verged on anti-Muslim, as well as a call for re-establishing European borders. These notions had already found traction as France faced an influx of Muslim immigrants from war-afflicted areas of the world. But she gained even more momentum after the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, in which 130 people were killed. However, several analysts said it was important not to overplay the recent attacks in explaining her success. Rather, they see a long-term trend in which the National Front has gained ground in election after election. It has done so even more rapidly since Ms. Le Pen took leadership of the party from her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in 2011.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front. Ms. Le Pen and her party have thrived on an anti-immigration message that has verged on anti-Muslim, as well as a call for re-establishing European borders. These notions had already found traction as France faced an influx of Muslim immigrants from war-afflicted areas of the world. But she gained even more momentum after the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, in which 130 people were killed. However, several analysts said it was important not to overplay the recent attacks in explaining her success. Rather, they see a long-term trend in which the National Front has gained ground in election after election. It has done so even more rapidly since Ms. Le Pen took leadership of the party from her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in 2011.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front.", "paragraph_id": "5d701089c8e4820a9b66bcf5"} +{"question": "Iran's past activities became what for negotiations?", "paragraph": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "answer": "acute obstacle", "sentence": "But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "paragraph_sentence": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations. ", "paragraph_answer": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "sentence_answer": "But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "paragraph_id": "5d70133ec8e4820a9b66bfe8"} +{"question": "Who did Mr. Faulkner fault for failing to reassure police officers?", "paragraph": "Mr. Faulkner, who served on a task force on police relations under Mayor Giuliani, faulted Mr. de Blasio for failing to reassure police officers that he \u201chas their back,\u201d and for alienating the business community. Mr. Faulkner pledged that he would get along better with Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, who is a Democrat, than Mr. de Blasio has. The two Democratic leaders have clashed, with increasingly open hostility. \u201cThis governor has been pretty independent of his party,\u201d Mr. Faulkner said. \u201cI have no doubt that I will have a much better relationship, a working relationship, with this governor.\u201d And if Mr. Faulkner were to advance to a debate with Mr. de Blasio, he would at least be able to challenge the mayor eye-to-eye: At 6-foot-4, Mr. Faulkner is, at most, only one or two inches shorter than Mr. de Blasio.", "answer": "Mr. de Blasio", "sentence": "Mr. Faulkner, who served on a task force on police relations under Mayor Giuliani, faulted Mr. de Blasio for failing to reassure police officers that he \u201chas their back,\u201d and for alienating the business community.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Faulkner, who served on a task force on police relations under Mayor Giuliani, faulted Mr. de Blasio for failing to reassure police officers that he \u201chas their back,\u201d and for alienating the business community. Mr. Faulkner pledged that he would get along better with Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, who is a Democrat, than Mr. de Blasio has. The two Democratic leaders have clashed, with increasingly open hostility. \u201cThis governor has been pretty independent of his party,\u201d Mr. Faulkner said. \u201cI have no doubt that I will have a much better relationship, a working relationship, with this governor.\u201d And if Mr. Faulkner were to advance to a debate with Mr. de Blasio, he would at least be able to challenge the mayor eye-to-eye: At 6-foot-4, Mr. Faulkner is, at most, only one or two inches shorter than Mr. de Blasio.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Faulkner, who served on a task force on police relations under Mayor Giuliani, faulted Mr. de Blasio for failing to reassure police officers that he \u201chas their back,\u201d and for alienating the business community. Mr. Faulkner pledged that he would get along better with Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, who is a Democrat, than Mr. de Blasio has. The two Democratic leaders have clashed, with increasingly open hostility. \u201cThis governor has been pretty independent of his party,\u201d Mr. Faulkner said. \u201cI have no doubt that I will have a much better relationship, a working relationship, with this governor.\u201d And if Mr. Faulkner were to advance to a debate with Mr. de Blasio, he would at least be able to challenge the mayor eye-to-eye: At 6-foot-4, Mr. Faulkner is, at most, only one or two inches shorter than Mr. de Blasio.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Faulkner, who served on a task force on police relations under Mayor Giuliani, faulted Mr. de Blasio for failing to reassure police officers that he \u201chas their back,\u201d and for alienating the business community.", "paragraph_id": "5d700a69c8e4820a9b66b421"} +{"question": "Who is visiting in the afternoon?", "paragraph": "Harry Reid, the Senate Democratic leader, and Nancy Pelosi, the House Democratic leader, visit in the afternoon. MARKETS \u2022 U.S. prosecutors unveiled today a $900 million settlement with General Motors over its failure to disclose a defect in ignition switches tied to at least 124 deaths. G.M. admitted that it did not disclose the flaw to federal regulators and falsely represented to consumers that the vehicles posed no safety concern. The defect led to the recall of 2.6 million small cars last year.", "answer": "Harry Reid, the Senate Democratic leader, and Nancy Pelosi, the House Democratic leader", "sentence": "Harry Reid, the Senate Democratic leader, and Nancy Pelosi, the House Democratic leader , visit in the afternoon.", "paragraph_sentence": " Harry Reid, the Senate Democratic leader, and Nancy Pelosi, the House Democratic leader , visit in the afternoon. MARKETS \u2022 U.S. prosecutors unveiled today a $900 million settlement with General Motors over its failure to disclose a defect in ignition switches tied to at least 124 deaths. G.M. admitted that it did not disclose the flaw to federal regulators and falsely represented to consumers that the vehicles posed no safety concern. The defect led to the recall of 2.6 million small cars last year.", "paragraph_answer": " Harry Reid, the Senate Democratic leader, and Nancy Pelosi, the House Democratic leader , visit in the afternoon. MARKETS \u2022 U.S. prosecutors unveiled today a $900 million settlement with General Motors over its failure to disclose a defect in ignition switches tied to at least 124 deaths. G.M. admitted that it did not disclose the flaw to federal regulators and falsely represented to consumers that the vehicles posed no safety concern. The defect led to the recall of 2.6 million small cars last year.", "sentence_answer": " Harry Reid, the Senate Democratic leader, and Nancy Pelosi, the House Democratic leader , visit in the afternoon.", "paragraph_id": "5d701efcc8e4820a9b66caa5"} +{"question": "How can I reach the Roxbury Minor Memorial Library?", "paragraph": "ROXBURY Minor Memorial Library \u201cStillscapes,\u201d paintings by Ann Getsinger. Through July 18. Mondays, noon to 7 p.m.; Wednesdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Thursdays, noon to 5 p.m.; Fridays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Minor Memorial Library, 23 South Street. minormemoriallibrary.org; 860-350-2181. STAMFORD Fernando Luis Alvarez Gallery \u201cJohn J. Bedoya: Small, Accessible Works.\u201d Through July 11. Tuesdays through Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.; and by appointment on Mondays. Fernando Luis Alvarez Gallery, 96 Bedford Street. 888-861-6791; flalvarezgallery.com. STAMFORD Loft Artists Association \u201cDeconstructing the Times,\u201d creations from The New York Times and other recent works, Karen Neems. Through July 26. Saturdays and Sundays, 1 to 4:30 p.m. Loft Artists Association, 575 Pacific Street. 203-247-2027; loftartists.com.", "answer": "860-350-2181", "sentence": "minormemoriallibrary.org; 860-350-2181 .", "paragraph_sentence": "ROXBURY Minor Memorial Library \u201cStillscapes,\u201d paintings by Ann Getsinger. Through July 18. Mondays, noon to 7 p.m.; Wednesdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Thursdays, noon to 5 p.m.; Fridays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Minor Memorial Library, 23 South Street. minormemoriallibrary.org; 860-350-2181 . STAMFORD Fernando Luis Alvarez Gallery \u201cJohn J. Bedoya: Small, Accessible Works.\u201d Through July 11. Tuesdays through Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.; and by appointment on Mondays. Fernando Luis Alvarez Gallery, 96 Bedford Street. 888-861-6791; flalvarezgallery.com. STAMFORD Loft Artists Association \u201cDeconstructing the Times,\u201d creations from The New York Times and other recent works, Karen Neems. Through July 26. Saturdays and Sundays, 1 to 4:30 p.m. Loft Artists Association, 575 Pacific Street. 203-247-2027; loftartists.com.", "paragraph_answer": "ROXBURY Minor Memorial Library \u201cStillscapes,\u201d paintings by Ann Getsinger. Through July 18. Mondays, noon to 7 p.m.; Wednesdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Thursdays, noon to 5 p.m.; Fridays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Minor Memorial Library, 23 South Street. minormemoriallibrary.org; 860-350-2181 . STAMFORD Fernando Luis Alvarez Gallery \u201cJohn J. Bedoya: Small, Accessible Works.\u201d Through July 11. Tuesdays through Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.; and by appointment on Mondays. Fernando Luis Alvarez Gallery, 96 Bedford Street. 888-861-6791; flalvarezgallery.com. STAMFORD Loft Artists Association \u201cDeconstructing the Times,\u201d creations from The New York Times and other recent works, Karen Neems. Through July 26. Saturdays and Sundays, 1 to 4:30 p.m. Loft Artists Association, 575 Pacific Street. 203-247-2027; loftartists.com.", "sentence_answer": "minormemoriallibrary.org; 860-350-2181 .", "paragraph_id": "5d7044abc8e4820a9b66e799"} +{"question": "Who's work is featured at the Stamford Gallery until June 21?", "paragraph": "STAMFORD P.M.W. Gallery \u201cNoir 2,\u201d etchings, lithographs, drawings and paintings by Ann Chernow. Through June 21. By appointment only. P.M.W. Gallery, 530 Roxbury Road. 203-322-5427; pmwgallery.com. STAMFORD Stamford Art Association \u201cUp, Down, All Around \u2014 Small Works,\u201d group show. \u201cFamiliar/Unfamiliar,\u201d Arthur Vitello III. Through July 9. Thursdays and Fridays, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays, noon to 3 p.m. Stamford Art Association, 39 Franklin Street. 203-325-1139; stamfordartassociation.org.", "answer": "Ann Chernow", "sentence": "STAMFORD P.M.W. Gallery \u201cNoir 2,\u201d etchings, lithographs, drawings and paintings by Ann Chernow .", "paragraph_sentence": " STAMFORD P.M.W. Gallery \u201cNoir 2,\u201d etchings, lithographs, drawings and paintings by Ann Chernow . Through June 21. By appointment only. P.M.W. Gallery, 530 Roxbury Road. 203-322-5427; pmwgallery.com. STAMFORD Stamford Art Association \u201cUp, Down, All Around \u2014 Small Works,\u201d group show. \u201cFamiliar/Unfamiliar,\u201d Arthur Vitello III. Through July 9. Thursdays and Fridays, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays, noon to 3 p.m. Stamford Art Association, 39 Franklin Street. 203-325-1139; stamfordartassociation.org.", "paragraph_answer": "STAMFORD P.M.W. Gallery \u201cNoir 2,\u201d etchings, lithographs, drawings and paintings by Ann Chernow . Through June 21. By appointment only. P.M.W. Gallery, 530 Roxbury Road. 203-322-5427; pmwgallery.com. STAMFORD Stamford Art Association \u201cUp, Down, All Around \u2014 Small Works,\u201d group show. \u201cFamiliar/Unfamiliar,\u201d Arthur Vitello III. Through July 9. Thursdays and Fridays, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays, noon to 3 p.m. Stamford Art Association, 39 Franklin Street. 203-325-1139; stamfordartassociation.org.", "sentence_answer": "STAMFORD P.M.W. Gallery \u201cNoir 2,\u201d etchings, lithographs, drawings and paintings by Ann Chernow .", "paragraph_id": "5d7045b3c8e4820a9b66e805"} +{"question": "What did Mrs. Clinton urge broad policies regarding?", "paragraph": "In the wake of Thursday\u2019s attack, Mrs. Clinton made sure to acknowledge that \u201cgun ownership is part of the fabric of many American communities,\u201d before urging broad policies to address gun violence. \u201cWe must come together for common sense gun violence prevention reforms that keep weapons out of the hands of criminals and the violently unstable, while respecting responsible gun owners,\u201d she said in a statement that was unlikely to offer encouragement to proponents of stricter gun laws.", "answer": "address gun violence", "sentence": "In the wake of Thursday\u2019s attack, Mrs. Clinton made sure to acknowledge that \u201cgun ownership is part of the fabric of many American communities,\u201d before urging broad policies to address gun violence .", "paragraph_sentence": " In the wake of Thursday\u2019s attack, Mrs. Clinton made sure to acknowledge that \u201cgun ownership is part of the fabric of many American communities,\u201d before urging broad policies to address gun violence . \u201cWe must come together for common sense gun violence prevention reforms that keep weapons out of the hands of criminals and the violently unstable, while respecting responsible gun owners,\u201d she said in a statement that was unlikely to offer encouragement to proponents of stricter gun laws.", "paragraph_answer": "In the wake of Thursday\u2019s attack, Mrs. Clinton made sure to acknowledge that \u201cgun ownership is part of the fabric of many American communities,\u201d before urging broad policies to address gun violence . \u201cWe must come together for common sense gun violence prevention reforms that keep weapons out of the hands of criminals and the violently unstable, while respecting responsible gun owners,\u201d she said in a statement that was unlikely to offer encouragement to proponents of stricter gun laws.", "sentence_answer": "In the wake of Thursday\u2019s attack, Mrs. Clinton made sure to acknowledge that \u201cgun ownership is part of the fabric of many American communities,\u201d before urging broad policies to address gun violence .", "paragraph_id": "5d702a32c8e4820a9b66d7be"} +{"question": "What may the Flussbad have to require?", "paragraph": "As for fears about noisy Berliners partying late into summer nights there, the Flussbad may require what Times Square\u2019s pedestrian plazas do: more policing and sanitation. But that\u2019s the trade-off for making a more popular and accessible public space. It would be great if Berliners reclaimed a site that is now for tourists and dead at night. It would be good for the city, too, to recuperate a long-abject waterway at its center, and keep faith with its post-Wall soul. How do you say \u201ccannonball!\u201d in German?", "answer": "more policing and sanitation", "sentence": "As for fears about noisy Berliners partying late into summer nights there, the Flussbad may require what Times Square\u2019s pedestrian plazas do: more policing and sanitation .", "paragraph_sentence": " As for fears about noisy Berliners partying late into summer nights there, the Flussbad may require what Times Square\u2019s pedestrian plazas do: more policing and sanitation . But that\u2019s the trade-off for making a more popular and accessible public space. It would be great if Berliners reclaimed a site that is now for tourists and dead at night. It would be good for the city, too, to recuperate a long-abject waterway at its center, and keep faith with its post-Wall soul. How do you say \u201ccannonball!\u201d in German?", "paragraph_answer": "As for fears about noisy Berliners partying late into summer nights there, the Flussbad may require what Times Square\u2019s pedestrian plazas do: more policing and sanitation . But that\u2019s the trade-off for making a more popular and accessible public space. It would be great if Berliners reclaimed a site that is now for tourists and dead at night. It would be good for the city, too, to recuperate a long-abject waterway at its center, and keep faith with its post-Wall soul. How do you say \u201ccannonball!\u201d in German?", "sentence_answer": "As for fears about noisy Berliners partying late into summer nights there, the Flussbad may require what Times Square\u2019s pedestrian plazas do: more policing and sanitation .", "paragraph_id": "5d704156c8e4820a9b66e58f"} +{"question": "What is the name of the boy that ran out of peach labels?", "paragraph": "I am especially partial to these kinds of \u201cwork\u201d books, these generally antiquated, patient things, that instead of telling a story directly, indirectly relate the inevitably moving story of a person getting up every day, sufficiently hopeful that something will be yielded via an extravagant, chaotic gathering of data. I confess I use these \u201cwork\u201d books the way other people use alcohol or exercise or SSRIs or sleeping pills \u2014 I turn to them for an altered state. Opening \u201cWild Talents\u201d to a random page, I find Fort narrating how as a kid he had run out of everything but peach labels for the tinned food at his parents\u2019 store, and so labeled all the tins \u2014 from tins of plums to tins of string beans \u2014 as peaches. Then, obliquely, he connects this to a string of unsolved murders across time and space.", "answer": "Fort", "sentence": "Opening \u201cWild Talents\u201d to a random page, I find Fort narrating how as a kid he had run out of everything but peach labels for the tinned food at his parents\u2019 store, and so labeled all the tins \u2014 from tins of plums to tins of string beans \u2014 as peaches.", "paragraph_sentence": "I am especially partial to these kinds of \u201cwork\u201d books, these generally antiquated, patient things, that instead of telling a story directly, indirectly relate the inevitably moving story of a person getting up every day, sufficiently hopeful that something will be yielded via an extravagant, chaotic gathering of data. I confess I use these \u201cwork\u201d books the way other people use alcohol or exercise or SSRIs or sleeping pills \u2014 I turn to them for an altered state. Opening \u201cWild Talents\u201d to a random page, I find Fort narrating how as a kid he had run out of everything but peach labels for the tinned food at his parents\u2019 store, and so labeled all the tins \u2014 from tins of plums to tins of string beans \u2014 as peaches. Then, obliquely, he connects this to a string of unsolved murders across time and space.", "paragraph_answer": "I am especially partial to these kinds of \u201cwork\u201d books, these generally antiquated, patient things, that instead of telling a story directly, indirectly relate the inevitably moving story of a person getting up every day, sufficiently hopeful that something will be yielded via an extravagant, chaotic gathering of data. I confess I use these \u201cwork\u201d books the way other people use alcohol or exercise or SSRIs or sleeping pills \u2014 I turn to them for an altered state. Opening \u201cWild Talents\u201d to a random page, I find Fort narrating how as a kid he had run out of everything but peach labels for the tinned food at his parents\u2019 store, and so labeled all the tins \u2014 from tins of plums to tins of string beans \u2014 as peaches. Then, obliquely, he connects this to a string of unsolved murders across time and space.", "sentence_answer": "Opening \u201cWild Talents\u201d to a random page, I find Fort narrating how as a kid he had run out of everything but peach labels for the tinned food at his parents\u2019 store, and so labeled all the tins \u2014 from tins of plums to tins of string beans \u2014 as peaches.", "paragraph_id": "5d70120fc8e4820a9b66be72"} +{"question": "Who is supposed to supervise the Afghan Local Police?", "paragraph": "The widespread nature of the problem has prompted Mr. Ghani to order an immediate \u201cpersonnel asset inventory,\u201d official said. Mr. Atmar said the increase in recruitment of the A.L.P. was to \u201cfront-load\u201d for other national forces, with the goal of eventually using the new recruits to fill the vacancies that exist in the army and the police. The Afghan Local Police were established by American commanders as a low-cost auxiliary force trained by the United States Special Forces. But even when units have been under direct American supervision, some have committed abuses. Several assessments, the most comprehensive of them by the International Crisis Group, have concluded that the A.L.P. \u201chas not improved security in many places and even exacerbated the conflict in many districts.\u201d", "answer": "American supervision", "sentence": "But even when units have been under direct American supervision , some have committed abuses.", "paragraph_sentence": "The widespread nature of the problem has prompted Mr. Ghani to order an immediate \u201cpersonnel asset inventory,\u201d official said. Mr. Atmar said the increase in recruitment of the A.L.P. was to \u201cfront-load\u201d for other national forces, with the goal of eventually using the new recruits to fill the vacancies that exist in the army and the police. The Afghan Local Police were established by American commanders as a low-cost auxiliary force trained by the United States Special Forces. But even when units have been under direct American supervision , some have committed abuses. Several assessments, the most comprehensive of them by the International Crisis Group, have concluded that the A.L.P. \u201chas not improved security in many places and even exacerbated the conflict in many districts.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The widespread nature of the problem has prompted Mr. Ghani to order an immediate \u201cpersonnel asset inventory,\u201d official said. Mr. Atmar said the increase in recruitment of the A.L.P. was to \u201cfront-load\u201d for other national forces, with the goal of eventually using the new recruits to fill the vacancies that exist in the army and the police. The Afghan Local Police were established by American commanders as a low-cost auxiliary force trained by the United States Special Forces. But even when units have been under direct American supervision , some have committed abuses. Several assessments, the most comprehensive of them by the International Crisis Group, have concluded that the A.L.P. \u201chas not improved security in many places and even exacerbated the conflict in many districts.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "But even when units have been under direct American supervision , some have committed abuses.", "paragraph_id": "5d7017a6c8e4820a9b66c3b9"} +{"question": "Who were the famous twins from Full House?", "paragraph": "8 P.M. (Lifetime) THE UNAUTHORIZED FULL HOUSE STORY (2015) No Reebok pump, tapered jean or heartthrob shag is overlooked in this latest installment in the \u201cUnauthorized\u201d franchise. The re-enacted journey, which begins in 1985, touches on why Bob Saget, who starred in the original ABC sitcom as the corny-but-loving father Danny Tanner, traded blue stand-up for family comedy; the intricacies of Dave Coulier\u2019s love life; John Stamos and Rebecca Romijn\u2019s clumsy first meeting; and how that phenomenon known as the Olsen twins came to be.", "answer": "the Olsen twins", "sentence": "The re-enacted journey, which begins in 1985, touches on why Bob Saget, who starred in the original ABC sitcom as the corny-but-loving father Danny Tanner, traded blue stand-up for family comedy; the intricacies of Dave Coulier\u2019s love life; John Stamos and Rebecca Romijn\u2019s clumsy first meeting; and how that phenomenon known as the Olsen twins came to be.", "paragraph_sentence": "8 P.M. (Lifetime) THE UNAUTHORIZED FULL HOUSE STORY (2015) No Reebok pump, tapered jean or heartthrob shag is overlooked in this latest installment in the \u201cUnauthorized\u201d franchise. The re-enacted journey, which begins in 1985, touches on why Bob Saget, who starred in the original ABC sitcom as the corny-but-loving father Danny Tanner, traded blue stand-up for family comedy; the intricacies of Dave Coulier\u2019s love life; John Stamos and Rebecca Romijn\u2019s clumsy first meeting; and how that phenomenon known as the Olsen twins came to be. ", "paragraph_answer": "8 P.M. (Lifetime) THE UNAUTHORIZED FULL HOUSE STORY (2015) No Reebok pump, tapered jean or heartthrob shag is overlooked in this latest installment in the \u201cUnauthorized\u201d franchise. The re-enacted journey, which begins in 1985, touches on why Bob Saget, who starred in the original ABC sitcom as the corny-but-loving father Danny Tanner, traded blue stand-up for family comedy; the intricacies of Dave Coulier\u2019s love life; John Stamos and Rebecca Romijn\u2019s clumsy first meeting; and how that phenomenon known as the Olsen twins came to be.", "sentence_answer": "The re-enacted journey, which begins in 1985, touches on why Bob Saget, who starred in the original ABC sitcom as the corny-but-loving father Danny Tanner, traded blue stand-up for family comedy; the intricacies of Dave Coulier\u2019s love life; John Stamos and Rebecca Romijn\u2019s clumsy first meeting; and how that phenomenon known as the Olsen twins came to be.", "paragraph_id": "5d700adbc8e4820a9b66b508"} +{"question": "Ms. Clyne said she would feel what emotion if someone caught her dancing?", "paragraph": "On her computer are drafts for a work for chamber ensemble and taped spoken word, featuring the voice of John Cage. On the desk are a pair of headphones, which Ms. Clyne will wear to listen to draft versions of her piece while walking, gesturing, dancing through the room. \u201cIt\u2019s a way to connect to the physicality of the music,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019ll put this on and not look at the score and just move to see if it feels right.\u201d She\u2019s not a dancer any more than she is a painter, and said she would be \u201cmortified\u201d if anyone saw her doing it. But it\u2019s a process she trusts \u2014 at least for now, for this piece. At any rate, she said, \u201cI\u2019m having to invent things each time.\u201d", "answer": "mortified", "sentence": "She\u2019s not a dancer any more than she is a painter, and said she would be \u201c mortified \u201d if anyone saw her doing it.", "paragraph_sentence": "On her computer are drafts for a work for chamber ensemble and taped spoken word, featuring the voice of John Cage. On the desk are a pair of headphones, which Ms. Clyne will wear to listen to draft versions of her piece while walking, gesturing, dancing through the room. \u201cIt\u2019s a way to connect to the physicality of the music,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019ll put this on and not look at the score and just move to see if it feels right.\u201d She\u2019s not a dancer any more than she is a painter, and said she would be \u201c mortified \u201d if anyone saw her doing it. But it\u2019s a process she trusts \u2014 at least for now, for this piece. At any rate, she said, \u201cI\u2019m having to invent things each time.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "On her computer are drafts for a work for chamber ensemble and taped spoken word, featuring the voice of John Cage. On the desk are a pair of headphones, which Ms. Clyne will wear to listen to draft versions of her piece while walking, gesturing, dancing through the room. \u201cIt\u2019s a way to connect to the physicality of the music,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019ll put this on and not look at the score and just move to see if it feels right.\u201d She\u2019s not a dancer any more than she is a painter, and said she would be \u201c mortified \u201d if anyone saw her doing it. But it\u2019s a process she trusts \u2014 at least for now, for this piece. At any rate, she said, \u201cI\u2019m having to invent things each time.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "She\u2019s not a dancer any more than she is a painter, and said she would be \u201c mortified \u201d if anyone saw her doing it.", "paragraph_id": "5d704dcfc8e4820a9b66ea68"} +{"question": "What were his typical basketball stats?", "paragraph": "He also played for the New Jersey Nets (now the Brooklyn Nets), the Utah Jazz and the Detroit Pistons. For his career, he averaged 12 points and 6.1 rebounds per game. More notably, he led the league three times in personal fouls, testimony to his ferocious inside play (and possibly because the refs were never crazy about him), and because he dunked so often and shot well from midrange, his career shooting percentage, .572, is the seventh highest in league history. Darryl Dawkins was born in Orlando on Jan. 11, 1957. He was raised mostly by his mother, the former Harriet James, though Mr. Tyler, his friend, said he remained close to his father, Frank Dawkins. He led Maynard Evans High School in Orlando to the Florida state championship in 1975.", "answer": "12 points and 6.1 rebounds per game", "sentence": "For his career, he averaged 12 points and 6.1 rebounds per game .", "paragraph_sentence": "He also played for the New Jersey Nets (now the Brooklyn Nets), the Utah Jazz and the Detroit Pistons. For his career, he averaged 12 points and 6.1 rebounds per game . More notably, he led the league three times in personal fouls, testimony to his ferocious inside play (and possibly because the refs were never crazy about him), and because he dunked so often and shot well from midrange, his career shooting percentage, .572, is the seventh highest in league history. Darryl Dawkins was born in Orlando on Jan. 11, 1957. He was raised mostly by his mother, the former Harriet James, though Mr. Tyler, his friend, said he remained close to his father, Frank Dawkins. He led Maynard Evans High School in Orlando to the Florida state championship in 1975.", "paragraph_answer": "He also played for the New Jersey Nets (now the Brooklyn Nets), the Utah Jazz and the Detroit Pistons. For his career, he averaged 12 points and 6.1 rebounds per game . More notably, he led the league three times in personal fouls, testimony to his ferocious inside play (and possibly because the refs were never crazy about him), and because he dunked so often and shot well from midrange, his career shooting percentage, .572, is the seventh highest in league history. Darryl Dawkins was born in Orlando on Jan. 11, 1957. He was raised mostly by his mother, the former Harriet James, though Mr. Tyler, his friend, said he remained close to his father, Frank Dawkins. He led Maynard Evans High School in Orlando to the Florida state championship in 1975.", "sentence_answer": "For his career, he averaged 12 points and 6.1 rebounds per game .", "paragraph_id": "5d704d01c8e4820a9b66ea2d"} +{"question": "In what department does the bride's father work at the hospital?", "paragraph": "Dr. Louise Wong and Paul Whitfield Hughes III were married Saturday at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington. The officiant was Elizabeth Hughes, the groom\u2019s sister, who was authorized by the District of Columbia. The bride, 30, is a pediatrician at Park Pediatrics in Takoma Park, Md. She graduated magna cum laude from Georgetown and received her medical degree at Weill Cornell Medical College. She is the daughter of Wong Kin Chow and Wong Xiao Ha of Brooklyn. Her father works as a patient care associate in the oncology outpatient department of Bellevue Hospital Center in Manhattan. Her mother retired as a senior administrator in trading, processing and settlements for Depfa Bank in Manhattan.", "answer": "oncology outpatient department", "sentence": "Her father works as a patient care associate in the oncology outpatient department of Bellevue Hospital Center in Manhattan.", "paragraph_sentence": "Dr. Louise Wong and Paul Whitfield Hughes III were married Saturday at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington. The officiant was Elizabeth Hughes, the groom\u2019s sister, who was authorized by the District of Columbia. The bride, 30, is a pediatrician at Park Pediatrics in Takoma Park, Md. She graduated magna cum laude from Georgetown and received her medical degree at Weill Cornell Medical College. She is the daughter of Wong Kin Chow and Wong Xiao Ha of Brooklyn. Her father works as a patient care associate in the oncology outpatient department of Bellevue Hospital Center in Manhattan. Her mother retired as a senior administrator in trading, processing and settlements for Depfa Bank in Manhattan.", "paragraph_answer": "Dr. Louise Wong and Paul Whitfield Hughes III were married Saturday at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington. The officiant was Elizabeth Hughes, the groom\u2019s sister, who was authorized by the District of Columbia. The bride, 30, is a pediatrician at Park Pediatrics in Takoma Park, Md. She graduated magna cum laude from Georgetown and received her medical degree at Weill Cornell Medical College. She is the daughter of Wong Kin Chow and Wong Xiao Ha of Brooklyn. Her father works as a patient care associate in the oncology outpatient department of Bellevue Hospital Center in Manhattan. Her mother retired as a senior administrator in trading, processing and settlements for Depfa Bank in Manhattan.", "sentence_answer": "Her father works as a patient care associate in the oncology outpatient department of Bellevue Hospital Center in Manhattan.", "paragraph_id": "5d701635c8e4820a9b66c241"} +{"question": "What team is Juan Uribe on?", "paragraph": "\u201cOne of the things we tried to do here was make it fun to be here,\u201d Collins said. \u201cTherefore, we\u2019ve tried to create an atmosphere in the clubhouse that\u2019s fun.\u201d The culture shift was evident early in the afternoon. Several Mets, led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s. The mood was the epitome of relaxed. While the Mets were keeping things light, local television and radio broadcasts in Philadelphia were full of speculation about retaliation after tensions flared during the Mets\u2019 win on Tuesday, when Hansel Robles threw a pitch before a Phillies batter was ready. But the events from the night before were far from the thoughts of the Mets\u2019 players. \u201cWe talked with Hansel today; you can\u2019t react like he did,\u201d Collins said, referring to Robles\u2019s staring toward the Phillies\u2019 dugout after an inning-ending strikeout. \u201cThe other guys, they haven\u2019t even brought it up today.\u201d With clear minds, the Mets emerged to score three runs in the first inning off the Phillies\u2019 Jerad Eickhoff, a rookie.", "answer": "Mets", "sentence": "Several Mets , led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cOne of the things we tried to do here was make it fun to be here,\u201d Collins said. \u201cTherefore, we\u2019ve tried to create an atmosphere in the clubhouse that\u2019s fun.\u201d The culture shift was evident early in the afternoon. Several Mets , led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s. The mood was the epitome of relaxed. While the Mets were keeping things light, local television and radio broadcasts in Philadelphia were full of speculation about retaliation after tensions flared during the Mets\u2019 win on Tuesday, when Hansel Robles threw a pitch before a Phillies batter was ready. But the events from the night before were far from the thoughts of the Mets\u2019 players. \u201cWe talked with Hansel today; you can\u2019t react like he did,\u201d Collins said, referring to Robles\u2019s staring toward the Phillies\u2019 dugout after an inning-ending strikeout. \u201cThe other guys, they haven\u2019t even brought it up today.\u201d With clear minds, the Mets emerged to score three runs in the first inning off the Phillies\u2019 Jerad Eickhoff, a rookie.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cOne of the things we tried to do here was make it fun to be here,\u201d Collins said. \u201cTherefore, we\u2019ve tried to create an atmosphere in the clubhouse that\u2019s fun.\u201d The culture shift was evident early in the afternoon. Several Mets , led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s. The mood was the epitome of relaxed. While the Mets were keeping things light, local television and radio broadcasts in Philadelphia were full of speculation about retaliation after tensions flared during the Mets\u2019 win on Tuesday, when Hansel Robles threw a pitch before a Phillies batter was ready. But the events from the night before were far from the thoughts of the Mets\u2019 players. \u201cWe talked with Hansel today; you can\u2019t react like he did,\u201d Collins said, referring to Robles\u2019s staring toward the Phillies\u2019 dugout after an inning-ending strikeout. \u201cThe other guys, they haven\u2019t even brought it up today.\u201d With clear minds, the Mets emerged to score three runs in the first inning off the Phillies\u2019 Jerad Eickhoff, a rookie.", "sentence_answer": "Several Mets , led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s.", "paragraph_id": "5d701068c8e4820a9b66bcab"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700981c8e4820a9b66b22c"} +{"question": "What is the stature of modern Davis statues?", "paragraph": "Barnum surely would have admired the puffing necessary to transform an archtraitor into an American hero. The commanding poses struck by Davis in statues across the country are anxious correctives to depictions that troubled his followers long after the war\u2019s end. Recent debates over relics of the Confederacy \u2014 in South Carolina, the United States Capitol, and elsewhere \u2014 only underscore how successful 150 years of revisionism can be. If Jefferson Davis manages to survive current efforts to remove him from several of his pedestals, his old antagonist would likely know why. \u201cThe American people,\u201d Barnum famously said, \u201clike to be fooled.\u201d", "answer": "commanding poses", "sentence": "The commanding poses struck by Davis in statues across the country are anxious correctives to depictions that troubled his followers long after the war\u2019s end.", "paragraph_sentence": "Barnum surely would have admired the puffing necessary to transform an archtraitor into an American hero. The commanding poses struck by Davis in statues across the country are anxious correctives to depictions that troubled his followers long after the war\u2019s end. Recent debates over relics of the Confederacy \u2014 in South Carolina, the United States Capitol, and elsewhere \u2014 only underscore how successful 150 years of revisionism can be. If Jefferson Davis manages to survive current efforts to remove him from several of his pedestals, his old antagonist would likely know why. \u201cThe American people,\u201d Barnum famously said, \u201clike to be fooled.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Barnum surely would have admired the puffing necessary to transform an archtraitor into an American hero. The commanding poses struck by Davis in statues across the country are anxious correctives to depictions that troubled his followers long after the war\u2019s end. Recent debates over relics of the Confederacy \u2014 in South Carolina, the United States Capitol, and elsewhere \u2014 only underscore how successful 150 years of revisionism can be. If Jefferson Davis manages to survive current efforts to remove him from several of his pedestals, his old antagonist would likely know why. \u201cThe American people,\u201d Barnum famously said, \u201clike to be fooled.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The commanding poses struck by Davis in statues across the country are anxious correctives to depictions that troubled his followers long after the war\u2019s end.", "paragraph_id": "5d7007c3c8e4820a9b66ae82"} +{"question": "What was considered to be the bread-and-butter business of Bear Stearns?", "paragraph": "That model has underpinned the basic private equity deal ever since. While at Bear Stearns, Mr. Kohlberg became the mentor of two promising Wall Street types, the cousins Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, who quickly took to this form of deal-making. But others at the firm began to grumble about the three spending too much time away from bread-and-butter business of the firm, investment banking. After an attempt to form a leveraged-buyout group within Bear Stearns was rejected, the three men struck out on their own. With the help of eight investors, including Mr. Kravis\u2019s father and Mr. Kohlberg\u2019s $5 million nest egg, they set up Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company in Midtown Manhattan. Though the early years of the firm were sometimes lean, K.K.R.\u2019s business model proved alluring, prompting a growing stream of competitors eager to reap huge profits from deals made with borrowed money.", "answer": "investment banking", "sentence": "But others at the firm began to grumble about the three spending too much time away from bread-and-butter business of the firm, investment banking .", "paragraph_sentence": "That model has underpinned the basic private equity deal ever since. While at Bear Stearns, Mr. Kohlberg became the mentor of two promising Wall Street types, the cousins Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, who quickly took to this form of deal-making. But others at the firm began to grumble about the three spending too much time away from bread-and-butter business of the firm, investment banking . After an attempt to form a leveraged-buyout group within Bear Stearns was rejected, the three men struck out on their own. With the help of eight investors, including Mr. Kravis\u2019s father and Mr. Kohlberg\u2019s $5 million nest egg, they set up Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company in Midtown Manhattan. Though the early years of the firm were sometimes lean, K.K.R.\u2019s business model proved alluring, prompting a growing stream of competitors eager to reap huge profits from deals made with borrowed money.", "paragraph_answer": "That model has underpinned the basic private equity deal ever since. While at Bear Stearns, Mr. Kohlberg became the mentor of two promising Wall Street types, the cousins Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, who quickly took to this form of deal-making. But others at the firm began to grumble about the three spending too much time away from bread-and-butter business of the firm, investment banking . After an attempt to form a leveraged-buyout group within Bear Stearns was rejected, the three men struck out on their own. With the help of eight investors, including Mr. Kravis\u2019s father and Mr. Kohlberg\u2019s $5 million nest egg, they set up Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company in Midtown Manhattan. Though the early years of the firm were sometimes lean, K.K.R.\u2019s business model proved alluring, prompting a growing stream of competitors eager to reap huge profits from deals made with borrowed money.", "sentence_answer": "But others at the firm began to grumble about the three spending too much time away from bread-and-butter business of the firm, investment banking .", "paragraph_id": "5d704b1bc8e4820a9b66e983"} +{"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 .", "paragraph_id": "5d700ac7c8e4820a9b66b4f7"} +{"question": "Who plays the title character in \"Steve Jobs\"?", "paragraph": "\u2605 \u2018Steve Jobs\u2019 (R, 2:02) This three-panel portrait of the Apple co-founder, written by Aaron Sorkin and directed by Danny Boyle, portrays Jobs (Michael Fassbender) as a complicated, ambitious man caught in a tangle of messy personal and business relationships. Isolating Jobs at three crucial moments in his career, the film plays like a fast, busy backstage comedy and ends up being a richly intelligent exploration of our ambivalence about technology, genius and consumer capitalism. (Scott) \u2018Suffragette\u2019 (PG-13, 1:47) Carey Mulligan plays Maud Watts, a laundry worker in London in 1912 who becomes a militant supporter of women\u2019s voting rights. In telling her story, Sarah Gavron (the director) and Abi Morgan (who wrote the screenplay) hit a few soft and sentimental notes, but they also explore the vital and still relevant connection between feminism and class consciousness in modern democratic politics. (Scott) \u2018Tamasha\u2019 (No rating, 2:35, in Hindi) Imtiaz Ali\u2019s Bollywood melodrama begins as an agreeable romance between a vacationing young man (Ranbir Kapoor) and woman (a charismatic but largely squandered Deepika Padukone); morphs into a professional identity crisis for the man; and concludes as a lavish self-serving ode by the director to his own calling. (Webster)", "answer": "Michael Fassbender", "sentence": "This three-panel portrait of the Apple co-founder, written by Aaron Sorkin and directed by Danny Boyle, portrays Jobs ( Michael Fassbender ) as a complicated, ambitious man caught in a tangle of messy personal and business relationships.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2605 \u2018Steve Jobs\u2019 (R, 2:02) This three-panel portrait of the Apple co-founder, written by Aaron Sorkin and directed by Danny Boyle, portrays Jobs ( Michael Fassbender ) as a complicated, ambitious man caught in a tangle of messy personal and business relationships. Isolating Jobs at three crucial moments in his career, the film plays like a fast, busy backstage comedy and ends up being a richly intelligent exploration of our ambivalence about technology, genius and consumer capitalism. (Scott) \u2018Suffragette\u2019 (PG-13, 1:47) Carey Mulligan plays Maud Watts, a laundry worker in London in 1912 who becomes a militant supporter of women\u2019s voting rights. In telling her story, Sarah Gavron (the director) and Abi Morgan (who wrote the screenplay) hit a few soft and sentimental notes, but they also explore the vital and still relevant connection between feminism and class consciousness in modern democratic politics. (Scott) \u2018Tamasha\u2019 (No rating, 2:35, in Hindi) Imtiaz Ali\u2019s Bollywood melodrama begins as an agreeable romance between a vacationing young man (Ranbir Kapoor) and woman (a charismatic but largely squandered Deepika Padukone); morphs into a professional identity crisis for the man; and concludes as a lavish self-serving ode by the director to his own calling. (Webster)", "paragraph_answer": "\u2605 \u2018Steve Jobs\u2019 (R, 2:02) This three-panel portrait of the Apple co-founder, written by Aaron Sorkin and directed by Danny Boyle, portrays Jobs ( Michael Fassbender ) as a complicated, ambitious man caught in a tangle of messy personal and business relationships. Isolating Jobs at three crucial moments in his career, the film plays like a fast, busy backstage comedy and ends up being a richly intelligent exploration of our ambivalence about technology, genius and consumer capitalism. (Scott) \u2018Suffragette\u2019 (PG-13, 1:47) Carey Mulligan plays Maud Watts, a laundry worker in London in 1912 who becomes a militant supporter of women\u2019s voting rights. In telling her story, Sarah Gavron (the director) and Abi Morgan (who wrote the screenplay) hit a few soft and sentimental notes, but they also explore the vital and still relevant connection between feminism and class consciousness in modern democratic politics. (Scott) \u2018Tamasha\u2019 (No rating, 2:35, in Hindi) Imtiaz Ali\u2019s Bollywood melodrama begins as an agreeable romance between a vacationing young man (Ranbir Kapoor) and woman (a charismatic but largely squandered Deepika Padukone); morphs into a professional identity crisis for the man; and concludes as a lavish self-serving ode by the director to his own calling. (Webster)", "sentence_answer": "This three-panel portrait of the Apple co-founder, written by Aaron Sorkin and directed by Danny Boyle, portrays Jobs ( Michael Fassbender ) as a complicated, ambitious man caught in a tangle of messy personal and business relationships.", "paragraph_id": "5d702994c8e4820a9b66d72e"} +{"question": "Where does workologist work?", "paragraph": "Send your workplace conundrums to workologist@nytimes.com, including your name and contact information (even if you want it withheld for publication). The Workologist is a guy with well-intentioned opinions, not a professional career adviser. Letters may be edited. I work at a small but rapidly growing software company that places a premium on customer service. I am the front-desk coordinator \u2014 the first person visitors see. We lack good systems for a number of things. For example, I am often not informed of expected guests, including V.I.P.s. I have to ask for a driver\u2019s license, add their names to our visitor log and ask whom they are visiting. I\u2019m sure they do not appreciate this cumbersome procedure, which could be minimized if I\u2019d had advance warning. Similar snags occur when caterers come and I don\u2019t know who ordered the food and where it goes, or when two groups want to use a conference room at the same time.", "answer": "software company", "sentence": "I work at a small but rapidly growing software company that places a premium on customer service.", "paragraph_sentence": "Send your workplace conundrums to workologist@nytimes.com, including your name and contact information (even if you want it withheld for publication). The Workologist is a guy with well-intentioned opinions, not a professional career adviser. Letters may be edited. I work at a small but rapidly growing software company that places a premium on customer service. I am the front-desk coordinator \u2014 the first person visitors see. We lack good systems for a number of things. For example, I am often not informed of expected guests, including V.I.P.s. I have to ask for a driver\u2019s license, add their names to our visitor log and ask whom they are visiting. I\u2019m sure they do not appreciate this cumbersome procedure, which could be minimized if I\u2019d had advance warning. Similar snags occur when caterers come and I don\u2019t know who ordered the food and where it goes, or when two groups want to use a conference room at the same time.", "paragraph_answer": "Send your workplace conundrums to workologist@nytimes.com, including your name and contact information (even if you want it withheld for publication). The Workologist is a guy with well-intentioned opinions, not a professional career adviser. Letters may be edited. I work at a small but rapidly growing software company that places a premium on customer service. I am the front-desk coordinator \u2014 the first person visitors see. We lack good systems for a number of things. For example, I am often not informed of expected guests, including V.I.P.s. I have to ask for a driver\u2019s license, add their names to our visitor log and ask whom they are visiting. I\u2019m sure they do not appreciate this cumbersome procedure, which could be minimized if I\u2019d had advance warning. Similar snags occur when caterers come and I don\u2019t know who ordered the food and where it goes, or when two groups want to use a conference room at the same time.", "sentence_answer": "I work at a small but rapidly growing software company that places a premium on customer service.", "paragraph_id": "5d7010fcc8e4820a9b66bd7c"} +{"question": "Who composed the Granada?", "paragraph": "Brahms described his Three Intermezzos (Op. 117) as \u201clullabies to my sorrows.\u201d Mr. Kissin played them with deep empathy, allowing the notes of the first to cling to one another in a show of quiet, poignant reluctance. In \u201cGranada,\u201d from Alb\u00e9niz\u2019s \u201cSuite Espa\u00f1ola,\u201d Mr. Kissin echoed some of the same melancholy but transposed it into a warmer, more sensual sound world. Three other city portraits by Alb\u00e9niz and the dazzling \u201cViva Navarra!\u201d by Larregla followed, showcases for Mr. Kissin\u2019s refined play of colors.", "answer": "Alb\u00e9niz\u2019s", "sentence": "In \u201cGranada,\u201d from Alb\u00e9niz\u2019s \u201cSuite Espa\u00f1ola,\u201d Mr. Kissin echoed some of the same melancholy but transposed it into a warmer, more sensual sound world.", "paragraph_sentence": "Brahms described his Three Intermezzos (Op. 117) as \u201clullabies to my sorrows.\u201d Mr. Kissin played them with deep empathy, allowing the notes of the first to cling to one another in a show of quiet, poignant reluctance. In \u201cGranada,\u201d from Alb\u00e9niz\u2019s \u201cSuite Espa\u00f1ola,\u201d Mr. Kissin echoed some of the same melancholy but transposed it into a warmer, more sensual sound world. Three other city portraits by Alb\u00e9niz and the dazzling \u201cViva Navarra!\u201d by Larregla followed, showcases for Mr. Kissin\u2019s refined play of colors.", "paragraph_answer": "Brahms described his Three Intermezzos (Op. 117) as \u201clullabies to my sorrows.\u201d Mr. Kissin played them with deep empathy, allowing the notes of the first to cling to one another in a show of quiet, poignant reluctance. In \u201cGranada,\u201d from Alb\u00e9niz\u2019s \u201cSuite Espa\u00f1ola,\u201d Mr. Kissin echoed some of the same melancholy but transposed it into a warmer, more sensual sound world. Three other city portraits by Alb\u00e9niz and the dazzling \u201cViva Navarra!\u201d by Larregla followed, showcases for Mr. Kissin\u2019s refined play of colors.", "sentence_answer": "In \u201cGranada,\u201d from Alb\u00e9niz\u2019s \u201cSuite Espa\u00f1ola,\u201d Mr. Kissin echoed some of the same melancholy but transposed it into a warmer, more sensual sound world.", "paragraph_id": "5d7028bac8e4820a9b66d675"} +{"question": "What drove through the streets without any customers?", "paragraph": "One of the strengths of the pacing is that for the first half of the book, the allies and villains are not completely distinguishable. The wasp queen calms Steve in a genuine way. Somebody else, whom the family calls Mr. Nobody, keeps calling the house and not saying anything. Despite my hunches, I found myself deliciously unsure whom to side with for a number of pages. In large part, this is due to the allure of Oppel\u2019s imagery, which is striking and scary at once: A dissected wasp with nothing inside it. A knife grinder who drives slowly around the streets but has no customers. A toy phone answered with glee by Steve\u2019s little sister. Occasional illustrations by the wonderful Jon Klassen, dark and secretive, only add to the mood.", "answer": "A knife grinder", "sentence": "A knife grinder who drives slowly around the streets but has no customers.", "paragraph_sentence": "One of the strengths of the pacing is that for the first half of the book, the allies and villains are not completely distinguishable. The wasp queen calms Steve in a genuine way. Somebody else, whom the family calls Mr. Nobody, keeps calling the house and not saying anything. Despite my hunches, I found myself deliciously unsure whom to side with for a number of pages. In large part, this is due to the allure of Oppel\u2019s imagery, which is striking and scary at once: A dissected wasp with nothing inside it. A knife grinder who drives slowly around the streets but has no customers. A toy phone answered with glee by Steve\u2019s little sister. Occasional illustrations by the wonderful Jon Klassen, dark and secretive, only add to the mood.", "paragraph_answer": "One of the strengths of the pacing is that for the first half of the book, the allies and villains are not completely distinguishable. The wasp queen calms Steve in a genuine way. Somebody else, whom the family calls Mr. Nobody, keeps calling the house and not saying anything. Despite my hunches, I found myself deliciously unsure whom to side with for a number of pages. In large part, this is due to the allure of Oppel\u2019s imagery, which is striking and scary at once: A dissected wasp with nothing inside it. A knife grinder who drives slowly around the streets but has no customers. A toy phone answered with glee by Steve\u2019s little sister. Occasional illustrations by the wonderful Jon Klassen, dark and secretive, only add to the mood.", "sentence_answer": " A knife grinder who drives slowly around the streets but has no customers.", "paragraph_id": "5d700c44c8e4820a9b66b741"} +{"question": "The author would prepare a meal to her mother and finish it off with a single English what?", "paragraph": "When she asked for some vegetables to nibble on, I fastidiously julienned a cucumber into thin slices, layering them atop one another in a semicircle on a florid porcelain plate. When she asked for a pita and hummus, I cut the bread into perfect little triangles, found elegant small bowls in her cupboards, and carefully quenelled three dipping options, as if Thomas Keller were watching over my shoulder. I proudly took every meal to her on her finest china, placed carefully on an ornate tray and finished off with a single English flower. I prepared every menu with meticulous detail, unsure if the meal I was taking to her bedside would be her last.", "answer": "flower", "sentence": "I proudly took every meal to her on her finest china, placed carefully on an ornate tray and finished off with a single English flower .", "paragraph_sentence": "When she asked for some vegetables to nibble on, I fastidiously julienned a cucumber into thin slices, layering them atop one another in a semicircle on a florid porcelain plate. When she asked for a pita and hummus, I cut the bread into perfect little triangles, found elegant small bowls in her cupboards, and carefully quenelled three dipping options, as if Thomas Keller were watching over my shoulder. I proudly took every meal to her on her finest china, placed carefully on an ornate tray and finished off with a single English flower . I prepared every menu with meticulous detail, unsure if the meal I was taking to her bedside would be her last.", "paragraph_answer": "When she asked for some vegetables to nibble on, I fastidiously julienned a cucumber into thin slices, layering them atop one another in a semicircle on a florid porcelain plate. When she asked for a pita and hummus, I cut the bread into perfect little triangles, found elegant small bowls in her cupboards, and carefully quenelled three dipping options, as if Thomas Keller were watching over my shoulder. I proudly took every meal to her on her finest china, placed carefully on an ornate tray and finished off with a single English flower . I prepared every menu with meticulous detail, unsure if the meal I was taking to her bedside would be her last.", "sentence_answer": "I proudly took every meal to her on her finest china, placed carefully on an ornate tray and finished off with a single English flower .", "paragraph_id": "5d7022dbc8e4820a9b66cede"} +{"question": "When are Gerber's shares going to start being traded on Euronext?", "paragraph": "Refresco Gerber expects its shares to begin trading on Euronext in Amsterdam on March 27. The I.P.O. will consist of new shares issued by Refresco Gerber and a sale of about 30.9 million shares held by Refresco Gerber\u2019s private equity owners, which include 3i Group. The company expects to receive gross proceeds of \u20ac100 million from the offering, which will be used to repay debt and give it additional financial flexibility. Institutional investors and retail investors in the Netherlands and certain institutional investors in other jurisdictions will be able to buy shares in the offering. Founded in 1999, Refresco Gerber has significantly expanded its business through a series of acquisitions, the most recent being Gerber Emig in 2013. It employs about 4,100 people in nine countries.", "answer": "March 27", "sentence": "Refresco Gerber expects its shares to begin trading on Euronext in Amsterdam on March 27 .", "paragraph_sentence": " Refresco Gerber expects its shares to begin trading on Euronext in Amsterdam on March 27 . The I.P.O. will consist of new shares issued by Refresco Gerber and a sale of about 30.9 million shares held by Refresco Gerber\u2019s private equity owners, which include 3i Group. The company expects to receive gross proceeds of \u20ac100 million from the offering, which will be used to repay debt and give it additional financial flexibility. Institutional investors and retail investors in the Netherlands and certain institutional investors in other jurisdictions will be able to buy shares in the offering. Founded in 1999, Refresco Gerber has significantly expanded its business through a series of acquisitions, the most recent being Gerber Emig in 2013. It employs about 4,100 people in nine countries.", "paragraph_answer": "Refresco Gerber expects its shares to begin trading on Euronext in Amsterdam on March 27 . The I.P.O. will consist of new shares issued by Refresco Gerber and a sale of about 30.9 million shares held by Refresco Gerber\u2019s private equity owners, which include 3i Group. The company expects to receive gross proceeds of \u20ac100 million from the offering, which will be used to repay debt and give it additional financial flexibility. Institutional investors and retail investors in the Netherlands and certain institutional investors in other jurisdictions will be able to buy shares in the offering. Founded in 1999, Refresco Gerber has significantly expanded its business through a series of acquisitions, the most recent being Gerber Emig in 2013. It employs about 4,100 people in nine countries.", "sentence_answer": "Refresco Gerber expects its shares to begin trading on Euronext in Amsterdam on March 27 .", "paragraph_id": "5d701ad6c8e4820a9b66c656"} +{"question": "what condition allowed the Charleston shooter to purchase a gun?", "paragraph": "The man who the police say killed nine Charleston churchgoers had not completed his background check, but he was allowed to buy a gun anyway under a so-called default proceed. Federal law permits a firearms dealer who has initiated a background check to proceed with a sale if the dealer has not been notified of violations within three business days. Representative James E. Clyburn, Democrat of South Carolina, filed legislation that would close the loophole, but Republican leaders have not acted on it.", "answer": "default proceed", "sentence": "The man who the police say killed nine Charleston churchgoers had not completed his background check, but he was allowed to buy a gun anyway under a so-called default proceed .", "paragraph_sentence": " The man who the police say killed nine Charleston churchgoers had not completed his background check, but he was allowed to buy a gun anyway under a so-called default proceed . Federal law permits a firearms dealer who has initiated a background check to proceed with a sale if the dealer has not been notified of violations within three business days. Representative James E. Clyburn, Democrat of South Carolina, filed legislation that would close the loophole, but Republican leaders have not acted on it.", "paragraph_answer": "The man who the police say killed nine Charleston churchgoers had not completed his background check, but he was allowed to buy a gun anyway under a so-called default proceed . Federal law permits a firearms dealer who has initiated a background check to proceed with a sale if the dealer has not been notified of violations within three business days. Representative James E. Clyburn, Democrat of South Carolina, filed legislation that would close the loophole, but Republican leaders have not acted on it.", "sentence_answer": "The man who the police say killed nine Charleston churchgoers had not completed his background check, but he was allowed to buy a gun anyway under a so-called default proceed .", "paragraph_id": "5d702c0ac8e4820a9b66d984"} +{"question": "Who won an Oscar for best actor in 1987?", "paragraph": "Mr. Brezner, who began his professional life as a New York City public-school teacher, managed a stable of artists that over the years also included Bette Midler, David Letterman, Robert Klein and Martin Short. He produced more than a dozen feature films, including \u201cThrow Momma From the Train\u201d (1987), starring Mr. Crystal and Danny DeVito, and \u201cGood Morning, Vietnam\u201d (1987), for which Mr. Williams earned his first Academy Award nomination. (The best actor Oscar that year went to Michael Douglas for \u201cWall Street.\u201d) At his death a principal in Brezner Steinberg Partners, based in Beverly Hills, Calif., Mr. Brezner was known throughout his career as an astute handicapper of comic talent.", "answer": "Michael Douglas", "sentence": "(The best actor Oscar that year went to Michael Douglas for \u201cWall Street.\u201d)", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Brezner, who began his professional life as a New York City public-school teacher, managed a stable of artists that over the years also included Bette Midler, David Letterman, Robert Klein and Martin Short. He produced more than a dozen feature films, including \u201cThrow Momma From the Train\u201d (1987), starring Mr. Crystal and Danny DeVito, and \u201cGood Morning, Vietnam\u201d (1987), for which Mr. Williams earned his first Academy Award nomination. (The best actor Oscar that year went to Michael Douglas for \u201cWall Street.\u201d) At his death a principal in Brezner Steinberg Partners, based in Beverly Hills, Calif., Mr. Brezner was known throughout his career as an astute handicapper of comic talent.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Brezner, who began his professional life as a New York City public-school teacher, managed a stable of artists that over the years also included Bette Midler, David Letterman, Robert Klein and Martin Short. He produced more than a dozen feature films, including \u201cThrow Momma From the Train\u201d (1987), starring Mr. Crystal and Danny DeVito, and \u201cGood Morning, Vietnam\u201d (1987), for which Mr. Williams earned his first Academy Award nomination. (The best actor Oscar that year went to Michael Douglas for \u201cWall Street.\u201d) At his death a principal in Brezner Steinberg Partners, based in Beverly Hills, Calif., Mr. Brezner was known throughout his career as an astute handicapper of comic talent.", "sentence_answer": "(The best actor Oscar that year went to Michael Douglas for \u201cWall Street.\u201d)", "paragraph_id": "5d700db7c8e4820a9b66b956"} +{"question": "What perils have they learned?", "paragraph": "The revelations about American wrongdoing in the Senate torture report, and, earlier, about the National Security Agency\u2019s surveillance abuses, have taught The Times a lesson, Mr. Baquet said. \u201cWe\u2019ve learned the perils of not monitoring and policing warfare\u201d as rigorously as possible, and of too readily agreeing to government requests to withhold information.", "answer": "not monitoring and policing warfare", "sentence": "\u201cWe\u2019ve learned the perils of not monitoring and policing warfare \u201d as rigorously as possible, and of too readily agreeing to government requests to withhold information.", "paragraph_sentence": "The revelations about American wrongdoing in the Senate torture report, and, earlier, about the National Security Agency\u2019s surveillance abuses, have taught The Times a lesson, Mr. Baquet said. \u201cWe\u2019ve learned the perils of not monitoring and policing warfare \u201d as rigorously as possible, and of too readily agreeing to government requests to withhold information. ", "paragraph_answer": "The revelations about American wrongdoing in the Senate torture report, and, earlier, about the National Security Agency\u2019s surveillance abuses, have taught The Times a lesson, Mr. Baquet said. \u201cWe\u2019ve learned the perils of not monitoring and policing warfare \u201d as rigorously as possible, and of too readily agreeing to government requests to withhold information.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe\u2019ve learned the perils of not monitoring and policing warfare \u201d as rigorously as possible, and of too readily agreeing to government requests to withhold information.", "paragraph_id": "5d7033c1c8e4820a9b66dec9"} +{"question": "What is the stadium that doesn't have good beer?", "paragraph": "Except that it\u2019s beer, not wine, that goes so naturally with baseball, hot dogs, peanuts and conversation, especially under the ideal conditions of afternoon sunshine. I came of drinking age as the craft beer revolution was taking off in this country. I am sad to say that I\u2019ve very rarely had a good beer in a ballpark, certainly not in Yankee Stadium, home of the team I\u2019ve rooted for all my life. Even as great craft brews are available in many ballparks around the country, Yankee Stadium has remained in thrall to the big distributors, squeezing out all but corporate products. But spring is the season of unrealistic hopes, so I can fantasize how I\u2019d stock my ideal concession. First, as a ballgame generally calls for multiple beers, you wouldn\u2019t want the heavy hitters, contemplative barley wines and other high-alcohol brews.", "answer": "Yankee Stadium", "sentence": "I am sad to say that I\u2019ve very rarely had a good beer in a ballpark, certainly not in Yankee Stadium , home of the team I\u2019ve rooted for all my life.", "paragraph_sentence": "Except that it\u2019s beer, not wine, that goes so naturally with baseball, hot dogs, peanuts and conversation, especially under the ideal conditions of afternoon sunshine. I came of drinking age as the craft beer revolution was taking off in this country. I am sad to say that I\u2019ve very rarely had a good beer in a ballpark, certainly not in Yankee Stadium , home of the team I\u2019ve rooted for all my life. Even as great craft brews are available in many ballparks around the country, Yankee Stadium has remained in thrall to the big distributors, squeezing out all but corporate products. But spring is the season of unrealistic hopes, so I can fantasize how I\u2019d stock my ideal concession. First, as a ballgame generally calls for multiple beers, you wouldn\u2019t want the heavy hitters, contemplative barley wines and other high-alcohol brews.", "paragraph_answer": "Except that it\u2019s beer, not wine, that goes so naturally with baseball, hot dogs, peanuts and conversation, especially under the ideal conditions of afternoon sunshine. I came of drinking age as the craft beer revolution was taking off in this country. I am sad to say that I\u2019ve very rarely had a good beer in a ballpark, certainly not in Yankee Stadium , home of the team I\u2019ve rooted for all my life. Even as great craft brews are available in many ballparks around the country, Yankee Stadium has remained in thrall to the big distributors, squeezing out all but corporate products. But spring is the season of unrealistic hopes, so I can fantasize how I\u2019d stock my ideal concession. First, as a ballgame generally calls for multiple beers, you wouldn\u2019t want the heavy hitters, contemplative barley wines and other high-alcohol brews.", "sentence_answer": "I am sad to say that I\u2019ve very rarely had a good beer in a ballpark, certainly not in Yankee Stadium , home of the team I\u2019ve rooted for all my life.", "paragraph_id": "5d701375c8e4820a9b66c009"} +{"question": "How many children does Moussa Mohammad have ?", "paragraph": "Europe is once again wary of Germany. This time, it is not an aggressive Germany that wants to expand its borders but an aggressively generous one that is opening its borders, recent controls notwithstanding. Two questions are frequently raised: Is Europe\u2019s richest and most populous country still trying to ease its conscience 70 years after the war? And does its new \u201cWillkommenskultur\u201d have a mercantilist edge given a shrinking and aging population? One German broadsheet, The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, recently suggested that when Germany thinks about refugees, it really thinks about itself. Such talk does not bother Moussa Mohammad, a cardiologist and father of four from Dara\u2019a, Syria, who received refugee status in Germany in February. \u201cIf Germany needs us, good,\u201d he said. \u201cBecause we need Germany.\u201d", "answer": "four", "sentence": "Such talk does not bother Moussa Mohammad, a cardiologist and father of four from Dara\u2019a, Syria, who received refugee status in Germany in February.", "paragraph_sentence": "Europe is once again wary of Germany. This time, it is not an aggressive Germany that wants to expand its borders but an aggressively generous one that is opening its borders, recent controls notwithstanding. Two questions are frequently raised: Is Europe\u2019s richest and most populous country still trying to ease its conscience 70 years after the war? And does its new \u201cWillkommenskultur\u201d have a mercantilist edge given a shrinking and aging population? One German broadsheet, The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, recently suggested that when Germany thinks about refugees, it really thinks about itself. Such talk does not bother Moussa Mohammad, a cardiologist and father of four from Dara\u2019a, Syria, who received refugee status in Germany in February. \u201cIf Germany needs us, good,\u201d he said. \u201cBecause we need Germany.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Europe is once again wary of Germany. This time, it is not an aggressive Germany that wants to expand its borders but an aggressively generous one that is opening its borders, recent controls notwithstanding. Two questions are frequently raised: Is Europe\u2019s richest and most populous country still trying to ease its conscience 70 years after the war? And does its new \u201cWillkommenskultur\u201d have a mercantilist edge given a shrinking and aging population? One German broadsheet, The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, recently suggested that when Germany thinks about refugees, it really thinks about itself. Such talk does not bother Moussa Mohammad, a cardiologist and father of four from Dara\u2019a, Syria, who received refugee status in Germany in February. \u201cIf Germany needs us, good,\u201d he said. \u201cBecause we need Germany.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Such talk does not bother Moussa Mohammad, a cardiologist and father of four from Dara\u2019a, Syria, who received refugee status in Germany in February.", "paragraph_id": "5d70124ec8e4820a9b66bec0"} +{"question": "What ban caused Ms. Smith to have no official status in Hannah's life?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe\u2019ve come so far here just recently; it\u2019s pretty amazing the speed of the change,\u201d said Janet Smith, a plaintiff in the case, who is seeking to adopt the 8-year-old daughter, Hannah Marie Phillips, she is raising with her wife, Donna Phillips. Because of the adoption ban, Ms. Smith has no official status in Hannah\u2019s life, Ms. Phillips being her only legal parent. \u201cWe\u2019ve had no problem, but I am in the military, so I could be called or activated at any time, and we are concerned about the legal aspects for Jan if something happened,\u201d said Ms. Phillips, who is a captain in the Mississippi Air National Guard.", "answer": "adoption", "sentence": "Because of the adoption ban, Ms. Smith has no official status in Hannah\u2019s life, Ms. Phillips being her only legal parent.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe\u2019ve come so far here just recently; it\u2019s pretty amazing the speed of the change,\u201d said Janet Smith, a plaintiff in the case, who is seeking to adopt the 8-year-old daughter, Hannah Marie Phillips, she is raising with her wife, Donna Phillips. Because of the adoption ban, Ms. Smith has no official status in Hannah\u2019s life, Ms. Phillips being her only legal parent. \u201cWe\u2019ve had no problem, but I am in the military, so I could be called or activated at any time, and we are concerned about the legal aspects for Jan if something happened,\u201d said Ms. Phillips, who is a captain in the Mississippi Air National Guard.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe\u2019ve come so far here just recently; it\u2019s pretty amazing the speed of the change,\u201d said Janet Smith, a plaintiff in the case, who is seeking to adopt the 8-year-old daughter, Hannah Marie Phillips, she is raising with her wife, Donna Phillips. Because of the adoption ban, Ms. Smith has no official status in Hannah\u2019s life, Ms. Phillips being her only legal parent. \u201cWe\u2019ve had no problem, but I am in the military, so I could be called or activated at any time, and we are concerned about the legal aspects for Jan if something happened,\u201d said Ms. Phillips, who is a captain in the Mississippi Air National Guard.", "sentence_answer": "Because of the adoption ban, Ms. Smith has no official status in Hannah\u2019s life, Ms. Phillips being her only legal parent.", "paragraph_id": "5d70057cc8e4820a9b66a915"} +{"question": "What country is being pressured by the U.C.C.?", "paragraph": "The church\u2019s boycott resolution reflects what supporters call the growing momentum of the Boycott, Divest and Sanction movement, which seeks to pressure Israel economically over the long-paralyzed Middle East peace process. The church said in a statement that it \u201cconsiders Tuesday\u2019s actions a next step in the U.C.C.\u2019s involvement with peace in the Middle East.\u201d The Rev. John Deckenback, conference minister of the church\u2019s Central Atlantic Conference, which submitted the boycott resolution, called the outcome a reflection of the church\u2019s \u201cspirit of love for both Israelis and Palestinians.\u201d", "answer": "Israel", "sentence": "The church\u2019s boycott resolution reflects what supporters call the growing momentum of the Boycott, Divest and Sanction movement, which seeks to pressure Israel economically over the long-paralyzed Middle East peace process.", "paragraph_sentence": " The church\u2019s boycott resolution reflects what supporters call the growing momentum of the Boycott, Divest and Sanction movement, which seeks to pressure Israel economically over the long-paralyzed Middle East peace process. The church said in a statement that it \u201cconsiders Tuesday\u2019s actions a next step in the U.C.C.\u2019s involvement with peace in the Middle East.\u201d The Rev. John Deckenback, conference minister of the church\u2019s Central Atlantic Conference, which submitted the boycott resolution, called the outcome a reflection of the church\u2019s \u201cspirit of love for both Israelis and Palestinians.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The church\u2019s boycott resolution reflects what supporters call the growing momentum of the Boycott, Divest and Sanction movement, which seeks to pressure Israel economically over the long-paralyzed Middle East peace process. The church said in a statement that it \u201cconsiders Tuesday\u2019s actions a next step in the U.C.C.\u2019s involvement with peace in the Middle East.\u201d The Rev. John Deckenback, conference minister of the church\u2019s Central Atlantic Conference, which submitted the boycott resolution, called the outcome a reflection of the church\u2019s \u201cspirit of love for both Israelis and Palestinians.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The church\u2019s boycott resolution reflects what supporters call the growing momentum of the Boycott, Divest and Sanction movement, which seeks to pressure Israel economically over the long-paralyzed Middle East peace process.", "paragraph_id": "5d70083fc8e4820a9b66afa6"} +{"question": "Creighton University is located in which city?", "paragraph": "Of course, most lawmakers in Washington spend long periods away from family. But by declaring the preservation of his family life a key concern in taking on a job that is a seven-day-a-week venture \u2014 the sort of job he sought once before, in 2012, when he was the Republican vice-presidential nominee \u2014 Mr. Ryan, 45, may be ushering in a new era for a position traditionally held by older congressmen who spent years rising through party ranks. \u201cIn U.S. society, we often talk about \u2018working moms\u2019 but not about \u2018working dads,\u2019 and the work-life policies that organizations do provide are often considered as being mainly for women,\u201d said Erika Kirby a professor of communication studies and an authority on work-life issues at Creighton University in Omaha. \u201cSo I think Representative Ryan\u2019s call for protecting his family time within a demanding job is extremely significant.\u201d", "answer": "Omaha", "sentence": "\u201cIn U.S. society, we often talk about \u2018working moms\u2019 but not about \u2018working dads,\u2019 and the work-life policies that organizations do provide are often considered as being mainly for women,\u201d said Erika Kirby a professor of communication studies and an authority on work-life issues at Creighton University in Omaha .", "paragraph_sentence": "Of course, most lawmakers in Washington spend long periods away from family. But by declaring the preservation of his family life a key concern in taking on a job that is a seven-day-a-week venture \u2014 the sort of job he sought once before, in 2012, when he was the Republican vice-presidential nominee \u2014 Mr. Ryan, 45, may be ushering in a new era for a position traditionally held by older congressmen who spent years rising through party ranks. \u201cIn U.S. society, we often talk about \u2018working moms\u2019 but not about \u2018working dads,\u2019 and the work-life policies that organizations do provide are often considered as being mainly for women,\u201d said Erika Kirby a professor of communication studies and an authority on work-life issues at Creighton University in Omaha . \u201cSo I think Representative Ryan\u2019s call for protecting his family time within a demanding job is extremely significant.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Of course, most lawmakers in Washington spend long periods away from family. But by declaring the preservation of his family life a key concern in taking on a job that is a seven-day-a-week venture \u2014 the sort of job he sought once before, in 2012, when he was the Republican vice-presidential nominee \u2014 Mr. Ryan, 45, may be ushering in a new era for a position traditionally held by older congressmen who spent years rising through party ranks. \u201cIn U.S. society, we often talk about \u2018working moms\u2019 but not about \u2018working dads,\u2019 and the work-life policies that organizations do provide are often considered as being mainly for women,\u201d said Erika Kirby a professor of communication studies and an authority on work-life issues at Creighton University in Omaha . \u201cSo I think Representative Ryan\u2019s call for protecting his family time within a demanding job is extremely significant.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIn U.S. society, we often talk about \u2018working moms\u2019 but not about \u2018working dads,\u2019 and the work-life policies that organizations do provide are often considered as being mainly for women,\u201d said Erika Kirby a professor of communication studies and an authority on work-life issues at Creighton University in Omaha .", "paragraph_id": "5d700632c8e4820a9b66aabe"} +{"question": "What group attended the United Church of Christ's meetings as observers?", "paragraph": "Two other American churches \u2014 the Episcopal Church and the Mennonite Church USA \u2014 were also debating Israeli divestment measures this week at their conventions. Last year, the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) approved a resolution to divest from three companies that it said supplied Israel with equipment used in the occupation of Palestinian territory. With about 1.8 million members, the church remains the largest to endorse divestment at a churchwide convention. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel and his subordinates have called the B.D.S. movement a new form of terrorism to delegitimize Israel. Supporters of the movement, including a growing number of American Jews, have called such criticism a scaremongering and divisive tactic meant to thwart legitimate debate about the Israeli occupation of lands seized in the 1967 Arab-Israeli war. Representatives of Jewish Voice for Peace, an advocacy group based in Oakland, Calif. that has endorsed the B.D.S. movement, attended the United Church of Christ meeting as observers. They said they welcomed the boycott resolution and described it as a reflection of growing impatience with what they called Israel\u2019s intransigence.", "answer": "Jewish Voice for Peace", "sentence": "Representatives of Jewish Voice for Peace , an advocacy group based in Oakland, Calif. that has endorsed the B.D.S. movement, attended the United Church of Christ meeting as observers.", "paragraph_sentence": "Two other American churches \u2014 the Episcopal Church and the Mennonite Church USA \u2014 were also debating Israeli divestment measures this week at their conventions. Last year, the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) approved a resolution to divest from three companies that it said supplied Israel with equipment used in the occupation of Palestinian territory. With about 1.8 million members, the church remains the largest to endorse divestment at a churchwide convention. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel and his subordinates have called the B.D.S. movement a new form of terrorism to delegitimize Israel. Supporters of the movement, including a growing number of American Jews, have called such criticism a scaremongering and divisive tactic meant to thwart legitimate debate about the Israeli occupation of lands seized in the 1967 Arab-Israeli war. Representatives of Jewish Voice for Peace , an advocacy group based in Oakland, Calif. that has endorsed the B.D.S. movement, attended the United Church of Christ meeting as observers. They said they welcomed the boycott resolution and described it as a reflection of growing impatience with what they called Israel\u2019s intransigence.", "paragraph_answer": "Two other American churches \u2014 the Episcopal Church and the Mennonite Church USA \u2014 were also debating Israeli divestment measures this week at their conventions. Last year, the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) approved a resolution to divest from three companies that it said supplied Israel with equipment used in the occupation of Palestinian territory. With about 1.8 million members, the church remains the largest to endorse divestment at a churchwide convention. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel and his subordinates have called the B.D.S. movement a new form of terrorism to delegitimize Israel. Supporters of the movement, including a growing number of American Jews, have called such criticism a scaremongering and divisive tactic meant to thwart legitimate debate about the Israeli occupation of lands seized in the 1967 Arab-Israeli war. Representatives of Jewish Voice for Peace , an advocacy group based in Oakland, Calif. that has endorsed the B.D.S. movement, attended the United Church of Christ meeting as observers. They said they welcomed the boycott resolution and described it as a reflection of growing impatience with what they called Israel\u2019s intransigence.", "sentence_answer": "Representatives of Jewish Voice for Peace , an advocacy group based in Oakland, Calif. that has endorsed the B.D.S. movement, attended the United Church of Christ meeting as observers.", "paragraph_id": "5d700c6fc8e4820a9b66b7b5"} +{"question": "How many people are speaking the words referred to in the paragraph?", "paragraph": "There\u2019s probably not one you haven\u2019t heard before. If you listen with half an ear, they sound, in combination, like the ordinary sentences you overhear every day. Listen more carefully, though, as these words are assembled into the exacting forms of declensions and syllogisms, or quaint questions and answers that suggest foreign language phrase books for travelers. Why, it\u2019s all gobbledygook. Except that something kind of wonderful has happened. These very pedestrian words seem to have sprouted wings, and resonate with surprising novelty. No wonder that the three people speaking them seem so delighted and perplexed. It\u2019s as if they\u2019d been born again as speakers of English.", "answer": "three people", "sentence": "No wonder that the three people speaking them seem so delighted and perplexed.", "paragraph_sentence": "There\u2019s probably not one you haven\u2019t heard before. If you listen with half an ear, they sound, in combination, like the ordinary sentences you overhear every day. Listen more carefully, though, as these words are assembled into the exacting forms of declensions and syllogisms, or quaint questions and answers that suggest foreign language phrase books for travelers. Why, it\u2019s all gobbledygook. Except that something kind of wonderful has happened. These very pedestrian words seem to have sprouted wings, and resonate with surprising novelty. No wonder that the three people speaking them seem so delighted and perplexed. It\u2019s as if they\u2019d been born again as speakers of English.", "paragraph_answer": "There\u2019s probably not one you haven\u2019t heard before. If you listen with half an ear, they sound, in combination, like the ordinary sentences you overhear every day. Listen more carefully, though, as these words are assembled into the exacting forms of declensions and syllogisms, or quaint questions and answers that suggest foreign language phrase books for travelers. Why, it\u2019s all gobbledygook. Except that something kind of wonderful has happened. These very pedestrian words seem to have sprouted wings, and resonate with surprising novelty. No wonder that the three people speaking them seem so delighted and perplexed. It\u2019s as if they\u2019d been born again as speakers of English.", "sentence_answer": "No wonder that the three people speaking them seem so delighted and perplexed.", "paragraph_id": "5d7087aec8e4820a9b66f473"} +{"question": "Who was scolded by Pliny?", "paragraph": "Literature has given us especially brilliant stories about office work \u2014 \u201cBartleby the Scrivener,\u201d by Melville; \u201cSomething Happened,\u201d by Joseph Heller; \u201cThen We Came to the End,\u201d by Joshua Ferris \u2014 and, also, oddly enough, about working in hotels: \u201cAn American Tragedy,\u201d by Theodore Dreiser; \u201cI Served the King of England,\u201d by Bohumil Hrabal; \u201cConfessions of Felix Krull,\u201d by Thomas Mann. Another through-line, of work that is miserable to do, can be traced from \u00c9mile Zola to Upton Sinclair to Barbara Ehrenreich. But then there are books that are about work not by having some kind of work as their subject matter, but instead by being incarnations of an extraordinary amount of work: a luxurious, wonderful kind of work, the elective work of learning. In order to finish his vast projects, amid his other state responsibilities, Pliny barely slept, never married and had someone read to him or take dictation even as he prepared for his bath. His nephew tells the story of how once after a dinner, when a book was being read aloud and another diner interrupted to correct the reader\u2019s pronunciation of a word, Pliny the Elder scolded him: \u201cWe have lost more than 10 lines through your interruption.\u201d", "answer": "diner", "sentence": "His nephew tells the story of how once after a dinner, when a book was being read aloud and another diner interrupted to correct the reader\u2019s pronunciation of a word, Pliny the Elder scolded him: \u201cWe have lost more than 10 lines through your interruption.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Literature has given us especially brilliant stories about office work \u2014 \u201cBartleby the Scrivener,\u201d by Melville; \u201cSomething Happened,\u201d by Joseph Heller; \u201cThen We Came to the End,\u201d by Joshua Ferris \u2014 and, also, oddly enough, about working in hotels: \u201cAn American Tragedy,\u201d by Theodore Dreiser; \u201cI Served the King of England,\u201d by Bohumil Hrabal; \u201cConfessions of Felix Krull,\u201d by Thomas Mann. Another through-line, of work that is miserable to do, can be traced from \u00c9mile Zola to Upton Sinclair to Barbara Ehrenreich. But then there are books that are about work not by having some kind of work as their subject matter, but instead by being incarnations of an extraordinary amount of work: a luxurious, wonderful kind of work, the elective work of learning. In order to finish his vast projects, amid his other state responsibilities, Pliny barely slept, never married and had someone read to him or take dictation even as he prepared for his bath. His nephew tells the story of how once after a dinner, when a book was being read aloud and another diner interrupted to correct the reader\u2019s pronunciation of a word, Pliny the Elder scolded him: \u201cWe have lost more than 10 lines through your interruption.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Literature has given us especially brilliant stories about office work \u2014 \u201cBartleby the Scrivener,\u201d by Melville; \u201cSomething Happened,\u201d by Joseph Heller; \u201cThen We Came to the End,\u201d by Joshua Ferris \u2014 and, also, oddly enough, about working in hotels: \u201cAn American Tragedy,\u201d by Theodore Dreiser; \u201cI Served the King of England,\u201d by Bohumil Hrabal; \u201cConfessions of Felix Krull,\u201d by Thomas Mann. Another through-line, of work that is miserable to do, can be traced from \u00c9mile Zola to Upton Sinclair to Barbara Ehrenreich. But then there are books that are about work not by having some kind of work as their subject matter, but instead by being incarnations of an extraordinary amount of work: a luxurious, wonderful kind of work, the elective work of learning. In order to finish his vast projects, amid his other state responsibilities, Pliny barely slept, never married and had someone read to him or take dictation even as he prepared for his bath. His nephew tells the story of how once after a dinner, when a book was being read aloud and another diner interrupted to correct the reader\u2019s pronunciation of a word, Pliny the Elder scolded him: \u201cWe have lost more than 10 lines through your interruption.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "His nephew tells the story of how once after a dinner, when a book was being read aloud and another diner interrupted to correct the reader\u2019s pronunciation of a word, Pliny the Elder scolded him: \u201cWe have lost more than 10 lines through your interruption.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d701138c8e4820a9b66bdbe"} +{"question": "At what age did Louise die?", "paragraph": "The sculptor Louise Nevelson took up a fair amount of space in New York in the 1960s and early \u201970s. She was one of the most prominent artists of her generation, known for her imperious personality and a penchant for false eyelashes, heavy jewelry and chinchilla capes. More important were her forward-looking wood reliefs, painted entirely black or white, which linked the found-object aesthetic of assemblage to the clean lines and orderly sequences of Minimalism (and also presaged the all-black assemblage sculptures of Rashid Johnson). But by the time she died at age 88 in 1988, the art world had moved on.", "answer": "88", "sentence": "But by the time she died at age 88 in 1988, the art world had moved on.", "paragraph_sentence": "The sculptor Louise Nevelson took up a fair amount of space in New York in the 1960s and early \u201970s. She was one of the most prominent artists of her generation, known for her imperious personality and a penchant for false eyelashes, heavy jewelry and chinchilla capes. More important were her forward-looking wood reliefs, painted entirely black or white, which linked the found-object aesthetic of assemblage to the clean lines and orderly sequences of Minimalism (and also presaged the all-black assemblage sculptures of Rashid Johnson). But by the time she died at age 88 in 1988, the art world had moved on. ", "paragraph_answer": "The sculptor Louise Nevelson took up a fair amount of space in New York in the 1960s and early \u201970s. She was one of the most prominent artists of her generation, known for her imperious personality and a penchant for false eyelashes, heavy jewelry and chinchilla capes. More important were her forward-looking wood reliefs, painted entirely black or white, which linked the found-object aesthetic of assemblage to the clean lines and orderly sequences of Minimalism (and also presaged the all-black assemblage sculptures of Rashid Johnson). But by the time she died at age 88 in 1988, the art world had moved on.", "sentence_answer": "But by the time she died at age 88 in 1988, the art world had moved on.", "paragraph_id": "5d70065bc8e4820a9b66ab26"} +{"question": "Who became prime minister in 2007?", "paragraph": "But Mr. Turnbull will have to lead not only the lawmakers in his own party \u2014 44 of whom did not vote for him on Monday night, against 54 who did \u2014 but also a country where policy in recent years often seems to have been made on the run, and often in response to flagging opinion polls. Australia\u2019s current political turmoil dates from the Labor Party government of Kevin Rudd, who became prime minister in 2007.", "answer": "Kevin Rudd", "sentence": "Australia\u2019s current political turmoil dates from the Labor Party government of Kevin Rudd , who became prime minister in 2007.", "paragraph_sentence": "But Mr. Turnbull will have to lead not only the lawmakers in his own party \u2014 44 of whom did not vote for him on Monday night, against 54 who did \u2014 but also a country where policy in recent years often seems to have been made on the run, and often in response to flagging opinion polls. Australia\u2019s current political turmoil dates from the Labor Party government of Kevin Rudd , who became prime minister in 2007. ", "paragraph_answer": "But Mr. Turnbull will have to lead not only the lawmakers in his own party \u2014 44 of whom did not vote for him on Monday night, against 54 who did \u2014 but also a country where policy in recent years often seems to have been made on the run, and often in response to flagging opinion polls. Australia\u2019s current political turmoil dates from the Labor Party government of Kevin Rudd , who became prime minister in 2007.", "sentence_answer": "Australia\u2019s current political turmoil dates from the Labor Party government of Kevin Rudd , who became prime minister in 2007.", "paragraph_id": "5d700cf7c8e4820a9b66b86d"} +{"question": "The article likens President Obama's change of strategy to the play of which football player?", "paragraph": "But back to the miracle finish last Sunday, and the lesson beyond pro football: It\u2019s not about the miracle, it\u2019s about the finish. Obama has been sleepwalking through the middle part of his presidency. The brutal midterm electoral crushing, with Republicans gaining their largest House majority since Herbert Hoover, slapped him from his stupor. No longer does he care about pleasing the insiders, or playing nice with the opposition, or conforming to the expectations of a lame duck. He said it\u2019s the fourth quarter of his presidency, \u201cand I\u2019m going to play offense.\u201d He\u2019s decided to be Russell Wilson after throwing four interceptions.", "answer": "Russell Wilson", "sentence": "He\u2019s decided to be Russell Wilson after throwing four interceptions.", "paragraph_sentence": "But back to the miracle finish last Sunday, and the lesson beyond pro football: It\u2019s not about the miracle, it\u2019s about the finish. Obama has been sleepwalking through the middle part of his presidency. The brutal midterm electoral crushing, with Republicans gaining their largest House majority since Herbert Hoover, slapped him from his stupor. No longer does he care about pleasing the insiders, or playing nice with the opposition, or conforming to the expectations of a lame duck. He said it\u2019s the fourth quarter of his presidency, \u201cand I\u2019m going to play offense.\u201d He\u2019s decided to be Russell Wilson after throwing four interceptions. ", "paragraph_answer": "But back to the miracle finish last Sunday, and the lesson beyond pro football: It\u2019s not about the miracle, it\u2019s about the finish. Obama has been sleepwalking through the middle part of his presidency. The brutal midterm electoral crushing, with Republicans gaining their largest House majority since Herbert Hoover, slapped him from his stupor. No longer does he care about pleasing the insiders, or playing nice with the opposition, or conforming to the expectations of a lame duck. He said it\u2019s the fourth quarter of his presidency, \u201cand I\u2019m going to play offense.\u201d He\u2019s decided to be Russell Wilson after throwing four interceptions.", "sentence_answer": "He\u2019s decided to be Russell Wilson after throwing four interceptions.", "paragraph_id": "5d703559c8e4820a9b66df88"} +{"question": "Who poured in fan mail to Ms. Basford?", "paragraph": "Surging demand caught Ms. Basford and her publisher off guard. Fan mail poured in from busy professionals and parents who confided to Ms. Basford that they found coloring in her books relaxing. More accolades flowed on social media, as people posted images from their coloring books. Hard-core fans often buy several copies of her books at a time, to experiment with different color combinations. Others have turned it into a social activity. Rebekah Jean Duthie, who lives in Queensland, Australia, and works for the Australian Red Cross, says she regularly gathers with friends for \u201ccoloring circles\u201d at cafes and in one another\u2019s homes. \u201cEach page can transport you back to a gentler time of life,\u201d she said of Ms. Basford\u2019s books in an email.", "answer": "busy professionals and parents", "sentence": "Fan mail poured in from busy professionals and parents who confided to Ms. Basford that they found coloring in her books relaxing.", "paragraph_sentence": "Surging demand caught Ms. Basford and her publisher off guard. Fan mail poured in from busy professionals and parents who confided to Ms. Basford that they found coloring in her books relaxing. More accolades flowed on social media, as people posted images from their coloring books. Hard-core fans often buy several copies of her books at a time, to experiment with different color combinations. Others have turned it into a social activity. Rebekah Jean Duthie, who lives in Queensland, Australia, and works for the Australian Red Cross, says she regularly gathers with friends for \u201ccoloring circles\u201d at cafes and in one another\u2019s homes. \u201cEach page can transport you back to a gentler time of life,\u201d she said of Ms. Basford\u2019s books in an email.", "paragraph_answer": "Surging demand caught Ms. Basford and her publisher off guard. Fan mail poured in from busy professionals and parents who confided to Ms. Basford that they found coloring in her books relaxing. More accolades flowed on social media, as people posted images from their coloring books. Hard-core fans often buy several copies of her books at a time, to experiment with different color combinations. Others have turned it into a social activity. Rebekah Jean Duthie, who lives in Queensland, Australia, and works for the Australian Red Cross, says she regularly gathers with friends for \u201ccoloring circles\u201d at cafes and in one another\u2019s homes. \u201cEach page can transport you back to a gentler time of life,\u201d she said of Ms. Basford\u2019s books in an email.", "sentence_answer": "Fan mail poured in from busy professionals and parents who confided to Ms. Basford that they found coloring in her books relaxing.", "paragraph_id": "5d70221ec8e4820a9b66ce26"} +{"question": "What number marriage is this for Mr. Chow?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt\u2019s not like I get impressed once, and I\u2019m over it, and I need something new,\u201d she said. \u201cI love this teacup. It impresses me. When I love something, whether things or people, I love them very deeply.\u201d She is the third Mrs. Chow. (Or maybe even the fourth; some magazine profiles over the years have indicated that Mr. Chow was briefly married in the 1960s. Asked to clarify, he responded: \u201cI\u2019m not a family lawyer, nor an accountant. I don\u2019t think it\u2019s relevant.\u201d) She was preceded by the model Tina Chow, who died in 1992; and, before that, Grace Coddington, who is now the creative director at Vogue.", "answer": "third", "sentence": "She is the third Mrs. Chow.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s not like I get impressed once, and I\u2019m over it, and I need something new,\u201d she said. \u201cI love this teacup. It impresses me. When I love something, whether things or people, I love them very deeply.\u201d She is the third Mrs. Chow. (Or maybe even the fourth; some magazine profiles over the years have indicated that Mr. Chow was briefly married in the 1960s. Asked to clarify, he responded: \u201cI\u2019m not a family lawyer, nor an accountant. I don\u2019t think it\u2019s relevant.\u201d) She was preceded by the model Tina Chow, who died in 1992; and, before that, Grace Coddington, who is now the creative director at Vogue.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s not like I get impressed once, and I\u2019m over it, and I need something new,\u201d she said. \u201cI love this teacup. It impresses me. When I love something, whether things or people, I love them very deeply.\u201d She is the third Mrs. Chow. (Or maybe even the fourth; some magazine profiles over the years have indicated that Mr. Chow was briefly married in the 1960s. Asked to clarify, he responded: \u201cI\u2019m not a family lawyer, nor an accountant. I don\u2019t think it\u2019s relevant.\u201d) She was preceded by the model Tina Chow, who died in 1992; and, before that, Grace Coddington, who is now the creative director at Vogue.", "sentence_answer": "She is the third Mrs. Chow.", "paragraph_id": "5d700778c8e4820a9b66adc7"} +{"question": "What was the name of the case?", "paragraph": "Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. concurred on similar grounds. When one hears the term \u201ctangible object,\u201d he said, \u201ca fish does not spring to mind \u2014 nor does an antelope, a colonial farmhouse, a hydrofoil or an oil derrick.\u201d In dissent, Justice Elena Kagan wrote that the real issue in the case, Yates v. United States, No. 13-7451, was that the law is too harsh. It is, she wrote, \u201ctoo broad and undifferentiated, with too-high maximum penalties, which give prosecutors too much leverage and sentencers too much discretion.\u201d She added, \u201cAnd I\u2019d go further: In those ways,\u201d the law \u201cis unfortunately not an outlier, but an emblem of a deeper pathology in the federal criminal code.\u201d Still, she said, \u201cthis court does not get to rewrite the law.\u201d She said it was \u201cbroad but clear.\u201d \u201cA fish is, of course, a discrete thing that possesses physical form,\u201d Justice Kagan wrote, citing as authority the Dr. Seuss classic \u201cOne Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish.\u201d", "answer": "Yates v. United States, No. 13-7451", "sentence": "In dissent, Justice Elena Kagan wrote that the real issue in the case, Yates v. United States, No. 13-7451 , was that the law is too harsh.", "paragraph_sentence": "Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. concurred on similar grounds. When one hears the term \u201ctangible object,\u201d he said, \u201ca fish does not spring to mind \u2014 nor does an antelope, a colonial farmhouse, a hydrofoil or an oil derrick.\u201d In dissent, Justice Elena Kagan wrote that the real issue in the case, Yates v. United States, No. 13-7451 , was that the law is too harsh. It is, she wrote, \u201ctoo broad and undifferentiated, with too-high maximum penalties, which give prosecutors too much leverage and sentencers too much discretion.\u201d She added, \u201cAnd I\u2019d go further: In those ways,\u201d the law \u201cis unfortunately not an outlier, but an emblem of a deeper pathology in the federal criminal code.\u201d Still, she said, \u201cthis court does not get to rewrite the law.\u201d She said it was \u201cbroad but clear.\u201d \u201cA fish is, of course, a discrete thing that possesses physical form,\u201d Justice Kagan wrote, citing as authority the Dr. Seuss classic \u201cOne Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. concurred on similar grounds. When one hears the term \u201ctangible object,\u201d he said, \u201ca fish does not spring to mind \u2014 nor does an antelope, a colonial farmhouse, a hydrofoil or an oil derrick.\u201d In dissent, Justice Elena Kagan wrote that the real issue in the case, Yates v. United States, No. 13-7451 , was that the law is too harsh. It is, she wrote, \u201ctoo broad and undifferentiated, with too-high maximum penalties, which give prosecutors too much leverage and sentencers too much discretion.\u201d She added, \u201cAnd I\u2019d go further: In those ways,\u201d the law \u201cis unfortunately not an outlier, but an emblem of a deeper pathology in the federal criminal code.\u201d Still, she said, \u201cthis court does not get to rewrite the law.\u201d She said it was \u201cbroad but clear.\u201d \u201cA fish is, of course, a discrete thing that possesses physical form,\u201d Justice Kagan wrote, citing as authority the Dr. Seuss classic \u201cOne Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In dissent, Justice Elena Kagan wrote that the real issue in the case, Yates v. United States, No. 13-7451 , was that the law is too harsh.", "paragraph_id": "5d7041c7c8e4820a9b66e5e1"} +{"question": "Which country announced an official investigation into accusations about its soldiers?", "paragraph": "Whether peacekeepers serve the United Nations or are under their own national commanders \u2014 as in the case of the French troops in Bangui \u2014 it is ultimately up to the soldiers\u2019 home countries to investigate and prosecute such cases. The United Nations does not have the legal authority to prosecute or punish a country\u2019s soldiers, even when they are serving under the banner of the United Nations. France has announced an official investigation into the accusations against its troops. But in many instances, including cases of sexual abuse allegations against peacekeepers on United Nations missions, some countries do not respond to queries from United Nations headquarters at all about how \u2014 or whether \u2014 they investigate their soldiers abroad, according to a recent internal audit obtained by The New York Times.", "answer": "France", "sentence": "France has announced an official investigation into the accusations against its troops.", "paragraph_sentence": "Whether peacekeepers serve the United Nations or are under their own national commanders \u2014 as in the case of the French troops in Bangui \u2014 it is ultimately up to the soldiers\u2019 home countries to investigate and prosecute such cases. The United Nations does not have the legal authority to prosecute or punish a country\u2019s soldiers, even when they are serving under the banner of the United Nations. France has announced an official investigation into the accusations against its troops. But in many instances, including cases of sexual abuse allegations against peacekeepers on United Nations missions, some countries do not respond to queries from United Nations headquarters at all about how \u2014 or whether \u2014 they investigate their soldiers abroad, according to a recent internal audit obtained by The New York Times.", "paragraph_answer": "Whether peacekeepers serve the United Nations or are under their own national commanders \u2014 as in the case of the French troops in Bangui \u2014 it is ultimately up to the soldiers\u2019 home countries to investigate and prosecute such cases. The United Nations does not have the legal authority to prosecute or punish a country\u2019s soldiers, even when they are serving under the banner of the United Nations. France has announced an official investigation into the accusations against its troops. But in many instances, including cases of sexual abuse allegations against peacekeepers on United Nations missions, some countries do not respond to queries from United Nations headquarters at all about how \u2014 or whether \u2014 they investigate their soldiers abroad, according to a recent internal audit obtained by The New York Times.", "sentence_answer": " France has announced an official investigation into the accusations against its troops.", "paragraph_id": "5d7005bbc8e4820a9b66a97b"} +{"question": "What are the first five 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.", "paragraph_id": "5d7007dec8e4820a9b66aebd"} +{"question": "What was Mr. Harrell's earliest release date?", "paragraph": "Mr. Harrell also had a history of heart disease and drug abuse, which the autopsy report said contributed to his death. The day he died, several inmates described him as being depressed and withdrawn. Ibrahim Camara said he found Mr. Harrell sitting alone, watching television and asked what was wrong. \u201cI said, \u2018Is it your mom, family or something?\u2019 \u201d Mr. Camara recalled in a phone interview from prison. \u201cHe shook his head yes.\u201d Mr. Harrell\u2019s mother had died in November. Around 8:30 that night, Mr. Harrell \u2014 whose nickname was JRock \u2014 told two officers that his wife and sister were coming to pick him up and take him home, according to one inmate\u2019s affidavit. His earliest release date from prison was September 2020.", "answer": "September 2020", "sentence": "His earliest release date from prison was September 2020 .", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Harrell also had a history of heart disease and drug abuse, which the autopsy report said contributed to his death. The day he died, several inmates described him as being depressed and withdrawn. Ibrahim Camara said he found Mr. Harrell sitting alone, watching television and asked what was wrong. \u201cI said, \u2018Is it your mom, family or something?\u2019 \u201d Mr. Camara recalled in a phone interview from prison. \u201cHe shook his head yes.\u201d Mr. Harrell\u2019s mother had died in November. Around 8:30 that night, Mr. Harrell \u2014 whose nickname was JRock \u2014 told two officers that his wife and sister were coming to pick him up and take him home, according to one inmate\u2019s affidavit. His earliest release date from prison was September 2020 . ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Harrell also had a history of heart disease and drug abuse, which the autopsy report said contributed to his death. The day he died, several inmates described him as being depressed and withdrawn. Ibrahim Camara said he found Mr. Harrell sitting alone, watching television and asked what was wrong. \u201cI said, \u2018Is it your mom, family or something?\u2019 \u201d Mr. Camara recalled in a phone interview from prison. \u201cHe shook his head yes.\u201d Mr. Harrell\u2019s mother had died in November. Around 8:30 that night, Mr. Harrell \u2014 whose nickname was JRock \u2014 told two officers that his wife and sister were coming to pick him up and take him home, according to one inmate\u2019s affidavit. His earliest release date from prison was September 2020 .", "sentence_answer": "His earliest release date from prison was September 2020 .", "paragraph_id": "5d701e87c8e4820a9b66ca29"} +{"question": "Which medication was administered to the wolverine in order to calm it down?", "paragraph": "\u201cShe said it was growling and stuff like that, but maybe they do that all the time, walk around and make noise,\u201d Mike Miller, executive director of the conservation center, said. A wildlife officer and a Port Authority police officer were summoned to Terminal C. The cage was carefully placed in a transport van, Mr. Pentangelo said, \u201cjust to add another level of security, so that the wolverine wasn\u2019t a threat to himself or the public.\u201d A new, uncompromised cage was procured from the Bronx Zoo, as was a wild animal veterinarian. The cages were put face to face and Kasper was encouraged to walk into the new one. \u201cHe balked,\u201d Mr. Pentangelo said. \u201cHe did not want to go. He made it very clear.\u201d The veterinarian administered a shot of ketamine, a tranquilizer. Kasper dropped off to sleep. The cage transfer was accomplished. And after an overnight stay at Terminal C, Kasper resumed his journey. Kristiansand Zoo in Norway, which had sent Kasper, was closed on Wednesday evening when a reporter called, and no one there could be reached.", "answer": "ketamine", "sentence": "The veterinarian administered a shot of ketamine , a tranquilizer.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cShe said it was growling and stuff like that, but maybe they do that all the time, walk around and make noise,\u201d Mike Miller, executive director of the conservation center, said. A wildlife officer and a Port Authority police officer were summoned to Terminal C. The cage was carefully placed in a transport van, Mr. Pentangelo said, \u201cjust to add another level of security, so that the wolverine wasn\u2019t a threat to himself or the public.\u201d A new, uncompromised cage was procured from the Bronx Zoo, as was a wild animal veterinarian. The cages were put face to face and Kasper was encouraged to walk into the new one. \u201cHe balked,\u201d Mr. Pentangelo said. \u201cHe did not want to go. He made it very clear.\u201d The veterinarian administered a shot of ketamine , a tranquilizer. Kasper dropped off to sleep. The cage transfer was accomplished. And after an overnight stay at Terminal C, Kasper resumed his journey. Kristiansand Zoo in Norway, which had sent Kasper, was closed on Wednesday evening when a reporter called, and no one there could be reached.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cShe said it was growling and stuff like that, but maybe they do that all the time, walk around and make noise,\u201d Mike Miller, executive director of the conservation center, said. A wildlife officer and a Port Authority police officer were summoned to Terminal C. The cage was carefully placed in a transport van, Mr. Pentangelo said, \u201cjust to add another level of security, so that the wolverine wasn\u2019t a threat to himself or the public.\u201d A new, uncompromised cage was procured from the Bronx Zoo, as was a wild animal veterinarian. The cages were put face to face and Kasper was encouraged to walk into the new one. \u201cHe balked,\u201d Mr. Pentangelo said. \u201cHe did not want to go. He made it very clear.\u201d The veterinarian administered a shot of ketamine , a tranquilizer. Kasper dropped off to sleep. The cage transfer was accomplished. And after an overnight stay at Terminal C, Kasper resumed his journey. Kristiansand Zoo in Norway, which had sent Kasper, was closed on Wednesday evening when a reporter called, and no one there could be reached.", "sentence_answer": "The veterinarian administered a shot of ketamine , a tranquilizer.", "paragraph_id": "5d702d96c8e4820a9b66db0f"} +{"question": "Which meeting did Putin fly home early from?", "paragraph": "The applause, of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade. Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early.", "answer": "the last G-20 meeting", "sentence": "Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early.", "paragraph_sentence": "The applause, of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade. Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early. ", "paragraph_answer": "The applause, of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade. Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early.", "sentence_answer": "Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early.", "paragraph_id": "5d701bcec8e4820a9b66c74d"} +{"question": "What trait does Brown believe James has that is unique for his age?", "paragraph": "In the end, James and Brown are separated by age and their sports but connected by Cleveland and by a real understanding of the role leadership plays in championship moments. Scoring touchdowns was not the only source of Brown\u2019s greatness, nor are points the sole source for James\u2019s. What Brown did, and what James is now trying to do, is inspire those around them to reach higher than they thought possible. \u201cThe way he expresses himself, the way that he plays, and the understanding that he has of what his role is, is very refreshing,\u201d Brown said of James. \u201cIt\u2019s rare for a man that young to have that kind of wisdom.\u201d", "answer": "wisdom", "sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s rare for a man that young to have that kind of wisdom .", "paragraph_sentence": "In the end, James and Brown are separated by age and their sports but connected by Cleveland and by a real understanding of the role leadership plays in championship moments. Scoring touchdowns was not the only source of Brown\u2019s greatness, nor are points the sole source for James\u2019s. What Brown did, and what James is now trying to do, is inspire those around them to reach higher than they thought possible. \u201cThe way he expresses himself, the way that he plays, and the understanding that he has of what his role is, is very refreshing,\u201d Brown said of James. \u201cIt\u2019s rare for a man that young to have that kind of wisdom . \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "In the end, James and Brown are separated by age and their sports but connected by Cleveland and by a real understanding of the role leadership plays in championship moments. Scoring touchdowns was not the only source of Brown\u2019s greatness, nor are points the sole source for James\u2019s. What Brown did, and what James is now trying to do, is inspire those around them to reach higher than they thought possible. \u201cThe way he expresses himself, the way that he plays, and the understanding that he has of what his role is, is very refreshing,\u201d Brown said of James. \u201cIt\u2019s rare for a man that young to have that kind of wisdom .\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s rare for a man that young to have that kind of wisdom .", "paragraph_id": "5d70281ac8e4820a9b66d5d2"} +{"question": "Who was overcome with compassion for Woods?", "paragraph": "SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. \u2014 Watching Tiger Woods launch wildly errant drives was hard. Watching his ground-ball chip shots was harder. But the hardest part of watching Woods\u2019s career-worst round Friday at the Phoenix Open was seeing the greatest golfer of his generation turn into the lovable last-place straggler. Fans at T.P.C. Scottsdale, renowned for their crassness, were overcome with compassion as Woods, who was No. 1 in the world at this time last year, struggled to an 11-over-par 82 and a 36-hole total of 13-over 155. It was only the second time in 303 PGA Tour starts as a professional that Woods had failed to break 80 (the other time was in the third round of the 2002 British Open, played in hellacious conditions). For Woods, who has been breaking 80 since age 8, the score was full of foreboding. He might as well have had the Grim Reaper on his bag instead of his trusty caddie, Joe LaCava.", "answer": "Fans", "sentence": "Fans at T.P.C. Scottsdale, renowned for their crassness, were overcome with compassion as Woods, who was No. 1 in the world at this time last year, struggled to an 11-over-par 82 and a 36-hole total of 13-over 155.", "paragraph_sentence": "SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. \u2014 Watching Tiger Woods launch wildly errant drives was hard. Watching his ground-ball chip shots was harder. But the hardest part of watching Woods\u2019s career-worst round Friday at the Phoenix Open was seeing the greatest golfer of his generation turn into the lovable last-place straggler. Fans at T.P.C. Scottsdale, renowned for their crassness, were overcome with compassion as Woods, who was No. 1 in the world at this time last year, struggled to an 11-over-par 82 and a 36-hole total of 13-over 155. It was only the second time in 303 PGA Tour starts as a professional that Woods had failed to break 80 (the other time was in the third round of the 2002 British Open, played in hellacious conditions). For Woods, who has been breaking 80 since age 8, the score was full of foreboding. He might as well have had the Grim Reaper on his bag instead of his trusty caddie, Joe LaCava.", "paragraph_answer": "SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. \u2014 Watching Tiger Woods launch wildly errant drives was hard. Watching his ground-ball chip shots was harder. But the hardest part of watching Woods\u2019s career-worst round Friday at the Phoenix Open was seeing the greatest golfer of his generation turn into the lovable last-place straggler. Fans at T.P.C. Scottsdale, renowned for their crassness, were overcome with compassion as Woods, who was No. 1 in the world at this time last year, struggled to an 11-over-par 82 and a 36-hole total of 13-over 155. It was only the second time in 303 PGA Tour starts as a professional that Woods had failed to break 80 (the other time was in the third round of the 2002 British Open, played in hellacious conditions). For Woods, who has been breaking 80 since age 8, the score was full of foreboding. He might as well have had the Grim Reaper on his bag instead of his trusty caddie, Joe LaCava.", "sentence_answer": " Fans at T.P.C. Scottsdale, renowned for their crassness, were overcome with compassion as Woods, who was No. 1 in the world at this time last year, struggled to an 11-over-par 82 and a 36-hole total of 13-over 155.", "paragraph_id": "5d702213c8e4820a9b66ce1f"} +{"question": "What year was she appointed interim sheriff?", "paragraph": "In the Sheriff\u2019s Department, she became the youngest captain in 1983, and, in 1997, was promoted to chief deputy. This was her first run for political office. Ms. Hennessy said that she did not see herself as an activist like Mr. Mirkarimi, but as more of an executive and administrator. \u201cI\u2019m open to ideas,\u201d she said. \u201cI don\u2019t have to be the one to come up with them.\u201d In 2008, she was appointed by Mayor Gavin Newsom, now the lieutenant governor of California, to be the director of the San Francisco Department of Emergency Management, overseeing emergency response teams for the Police and Fire Departments. And in 2012, she was appointed interim sheriff when Mr. Mirkarimi was suspended after a domestic dispute with his wife. This summer Mr. Mirkarimi announced that the department would allow transgender prisoners to be housed in jail according to the gender with which they identify. This caused consternation among deputies who said that they had not had enough involvement in determining how the policy would work.", "answer": "2012", "sentence": "And in 2012 , she was appointed interim sheriff when Mr. Mirkarimi was suspended after a domestic dispute with his wife.", "paragraph_sentence": "In the Sheriff\u2019s Department, she became the youngest captain in 1983, and, in 1997, was promoted to chief deputy. This was her first run for political office. Ms. Hennessy said that she did not see herself as an activist like Mr. Mirkarimi, but as more of an executive and administrator. \u201cI\u2019m open to ideas,\u201d she said. \u201cI don\u2019t have to be the one to come up with them.\u201d In 2008, she was appointed by Mayor Gavin Newsom, now the lieutenant governor of California, to be the director of the San Francisco Department of Emergency Management, overseeing emergency response teams for the Police and Fire Departments. And in 2012 , she was appointed interim sheriff when Mr. Mirkarimi was suspended after a domestic dispute with his wife. This summer Mr. Mirkarimi announced that the department would allow transgender prisoners to be housed in jail according to the gender with which they identify. This caused consternation among deputies who said that they had not had enough involvement in determining how the policy would work.", "paragraph_answer": "In the Sheriff\u2019s Department, she became the youngest captain in 1983, and, in 1997, was promoted to chief deputy. This was her first run for political office. Ms. Hennessy said that she did not see herself as an activist like Mr. Mirkarimi, but as more of an executive and administrator. \u201cI\u2019m open to ideas,\u201d she said. \u201cI don\u2019t have to be the one to come up with them.\u201d In 2008, she was appointed by Mayor Gavin Newsom, now the lieutenant governor of California, to be the director of the San Francisco Department of Emergency Management, overseeing emergency response teams for the Police and Fire Departments. And in 2012 , she was appointed interim sheriff when Mr. Mirkarimi was suspended after a domestic dispute with his wife. This summer Mr. Mirkarimi announced that the department would allow transgender prisoners to be housed in jail according to the gender with which they identify. This caused consternation among deputies who said that they had not had enough involvement in determining how the policy would work.", "sentence_answer": "And in 2012 , she was appointed interim sheriff when Mr. Mirkarimi was suspended after a domestic dispute with his wife.", "paragraph_id": "5d7021f1c8e4820a9b66ce05"} +{"question": "What is Ikea calling its catalog?", "paragraph": "Mr. Siegel added that Patagonia had begun printing on 100 percent recycled paper. \u201cWe had to make some trade-offs in terms of circulation and other expenses, but it brought the mode of communication in line with our values,\u201d he said. Across segments, retailers are seeking to make their catalogs more of an experience, and celebrating print as something retro. Ikea recently produced a humorous advertisement for its catalog. \u201cIt\u2019s not a digital book, or an e-book,\u201d the ad says. \u201cIt\u2019s a \u2018bookbook.\u2019 The 2015 Ikea catalog comes fully charged, and the battery life is eternal.\u201d", "answer": "bookbook.", "sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s a \u2018 bookbook. \u2019 The 2015 Ikea catalog comes fully charged, and the battery life is eternal.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Siegel added that Patagonia had begun printing on 100 percent recycled paper. \u201cWe had to make some trade-offs in terms of circulation and other expenses, but it brought the mode of communication in line with our values,\u201d he said. Across segments, retailers are seeking to make their catalogs more of an experience, and celebrating print as something retro. Ikea recently produced a humorous advertisement for its catalog. \u201cIt\u2019s not a digital book, or an e-book,\u201d the ad says. \u201cIt\u2019s a \u2018 bookbook. \u2019 The 2015 Ikea catalog comes fully charged, and the battery life is eternal.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Siegel added that Patagonia had begun printing on 100 percent recycled paper. \u201cWe had to make some trade-offs in terms of circulation and other expenses, but it brought the mode of communication in line with our values,\u201d he said. Across segments, retailers are seeking to make their catalogs more of an experience, and celebrating print as something retro. Ikea recently produced a humorous advertisement for its catalog. \u201cIt\u2019s not a digital book, or an e-book,\u201d the ad says. \u201cIt\u2019s a \u2018 bookbook. \u2019 The 2015 Ikea catalog comes fully charged, and the battery life is eternal.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s a \u2018 bookbook. \u2019 The 2015 Ikea catalog comes fully charged, and the battery life is eternal.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d70298cc8e4820a9b66d71d"} +{"question": "What was the name of the \"big\" chip manufacturer?", "paragraph": "NXP Semiconductors, a big chip manufacturer, is near a deal to acquire a smaller peer, Freescale Semiconductor, in a cash-and-stock transaction, people briefed on the matter said on Sunday. An agreement could be announced as soon as Sunday evening, one of these people said, while cautioning that the talks could still collapse. If completed, the combination would unite two big makers of chips for industries ranging from automobiles to networking to mobile payments. As of Friday evening, NXP had a market value of about $21 billion, while Freescale had a market capitalization of about $11 billion.", "answer": "NXP Semiconductors", "sentence": "NXP Semiconductors , a big chip manufacturer, is near a deal to acquire a smaller peer, Freescale Semiconductor, in a cash-and-stock transaction, people briefed on the matter said on Sunday.", "paragraph_sentence": " NXP Semiconductors , a big chip manufacturer, is near a deal to acquire a smaller peer, Freescale Semiconductor, in a cash-and-stock transaction, people briefed on the matter said on Sunday. An agreement could be announced as soon as Sunday evening, one of these people said, while cautioning that the talks could still collapse. If completed, the combination would unite two big makers of chips for industries ranging from automobiles to networking to mobile payments. As of Friday evening, NXP had a market value of about $21 billion, while Freescale had a market capitalization of about $11 billion.", "paragraph_answer": " NXP Semiconductors , a big chip manufacturer, is near a deal to acquire a smaller peer, Freescale Semiconductor, in a cash-and-stock transaction, people briefed on the matter said on Sunday. An agreement could be announced as soon as Sunday evening, one of these people said, while cautioning that the talks could still collapse. If completed, the combination would unite two big makers of chips for industries ranging from automobiles to networking to mobile payments. As of Friday evening, NXP had a market value of about $21 billion, while Freescale had a market capitalization of about $11 billion.", "sentence_answer": " NXP Semiconductors , a big chip manufacturer, is near a deal to acquire a smaller peer, Freescale Semiconductor, in a cash-and-stock transaction, people briefed on the matter said on Sunday.", "paragraph_id": "5d7045c2c8e4820a9b66e80f"} +{"question": "What Mr. Drobny's reasoning for helping Mr. Rodman in building homes in Haiti?", "paragraph": "Even more important, according to Mr. Rodham, was what he said was going to be Mr. Clinton\u2019s help on his Haiti rebuilding project. That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti. \u201cWe were trying to help. Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio, the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview. He called the effort \u201chumanitarian.\u201d", "answer": "humanitarian", "sentence": "He called the effort \u201c humanitarian .", "paragraph_sentence": "Even more important, according to Mr. Rodham, was what he said was going to be Mr. Clinton\u2019s help on his Haiti rebuilding project. That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti. \u201cWe were trying to help. Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio, the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview. He called the effort \u201c humanitarian . \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Even more important, according to Mr. Rodham, was what he said was going to be Mr. Clinton\u2019s help on his Haiti rebuilding project. That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti. \u201cWe were trying to help. Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio, the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview. He called the effort \u201c humanitarian .\u201d", "sentence_answer": "He called the effort \u201c humanitarian .", "paragraph_id": "5d7129cac8e4820a9b66f781"} +{"question": "Who made the money on clothing that record labels didn't?", "paragraph": "Commercialism has long been one of hip-hop\u2019s prime ambitions. Yet \u201cRap Tees\u201d (powerHouse) suggests that for many years hip-hop had in fact been under-merchandised. It\u2019s striking how many of the best shirts weren\u2019t official or for sale. Several were promotional items, given out to tastemakers and fans. And many weren\u2019t by the musicians at all, but bootlegs made on the cheap and distributed broadly. That means that this book begins as a document of the hip-hop industry\u2019s efforts to branch out beyond music, and by the end shifts to the flea markets, swap meets, sidewalk stalls and parking lots where street-level entrepreneurs, recognizing that rabid fans were also underserved customers, collected money that the rappers and their record labels were leaving on the table.", "answer": "street-level entrepreneurs", "sentence": "That means that this book begins as a document of the hip-hop industry\u2019s efforts to branch out beyond music, and by the end shifts to the flea markets, swap meets, sidewalk stalls and parking lots where street-level entrepreneurs , recognizing that rabid fans were also underserved customers, collected money that the rappers and their record labels were leaving on the table.", "paragraph_sentence": "Commercialism has long been one of hip-hop\u2019s prime ambitions. Yet \u201cRap Tees\u201d (powerHouse) suggests that for many years hip-hop had in fact been under-merchandised. It\u2019s striking how many of the best shirts weren\u2019t official or for sale. Several were promotional items, given out to tastemakers and fans. And many weren\u2019t by the musicians at all, but bootlegs made on the cheap and distributed broadly. That means that this book begins as a document of the hip-hop industry\u2019s efforts to branch out beyond music, and by the end shifts to the flea markets, swap meets, sidewalk stalls and parking lots where street-level entrepreneurs , recognizing that rabid fans were also underserved customers, collected money that the rappers and their record labels were leaving on the table. ", "paragraph_answer": "Commercialism has long been one of hip-hop\u2019s prime ambitions. Yet \u201cRap Tees\u201d (powerHouse) suggests that for many years hip-hop had in fact been under-merchandised. It\u2019s striking how many of the best shirts weren\u2019t official or for sale. Several were promotional items, given out to tastemakers and fans. And many weren\u2019t by the musicians at all, but bootlegs made on the cheap and distributed broadly. That means that this book begins as a document of the hip-hop industry\u2019s efforts to branch out beyond music, and by the end shifts to the flea markets, swap meets, sidewalk stalls and parking lots where street-level entrepreneurs , recognizing that rabid fans were also underserved customers, collected money that the rappers and their record labels were leaving on the table.", "sentence_answer": "That means that this book begins as a document of the hip-hop industry\u2019s efforts to branch out beyond music, and by the end shifts to the flea markets, swap meets, sidewalk stalls and parking lots where street-level entrepreneurs , recognizing that rabid fans were also underserved customers, collected money that the rappers and their record labels were leaving on the table.", "paragraph_id": "5d702435c8e4820a9b66d066"} +{"question": "what did the star pianist present on his solo recital?", "paragraph": "On Tuesday evening, this star pianist presented an uncommonly introspective solo recital built around Beethoven\u2019s \u201cAppassionata\u201d Sonata and selections of Spanish music. On Friday he will repeat the program. Mr. Kissin is the first pianist at Carnegie since Vladimir Horowitz in 1979 to double up like this on a solo recital, and his ability to draw big crowds, with additional seats set up behind him onstage, proves the depth of the public\u2019s craving for his blend of technical mastery and eloquent artistry.", "answer": "Beethoven\u2019s \u201cAppassionata\u201d Sonata and selections of Spanish music", "sentence": "On Tuesday evening, this star pianist presented an uncommonly introspective solo recital built around Beethoven\u2019s \u201cAppassionata\u201d Sonata and selections of Spanish music .", "paragraph_sentence": " On Tuesday evening, this star pianist presented an uncommonly introspective solo recital built around Beethoven\u2019s \u201cAppassionata\u201d Sonata and selections of Spanish music . On Friday he will repeat the program. Mr. Kissin is the first pianist at Carnegie since Vladimir Horowitz in 1979 to double up like this on a solo recital, and his ability to draw big crowds, with additional seats set up behind him onstage, proves the depth of the public\u2019s craving for his blend of technical mastery and eloquent artistry.", "paragraph_answer": "On Tuesday evening, this star pianist presented an uncommonly introspective solo recital built around Beethoven\u2019s \u201cAppassionata\u201d Sonata and selections of Spanish music . On Friday he will repeat the program. Mr. Kissin is the first pianist at Carnegie since Vladimir Horowitz in 1979 to double up like this on a solo recital, and his ability to draw big crowds, with additional seats set up behind him onstage, proves the depth of the public\u2019s craving for his blend of technical mastery and eloquent artistry.", "sentence_answer": "On Tuesday evening, this star pianist presented an uncommonly introspective solo recital built around Beethoven\u2019s \u201cAppassionata\u201d Sonata and selections of Spanish music .", "paragraph_id": "5d70268ec8e4820a9b66d2dd"} +{"question": "What did Ms. Brody do after the crossing arm closed onto her car?", "paragraph": "The witness told investigators that a crossing arm closed onto Ms. Brody\u2019s car, prompting her to walk outside and touch the gate shortly before getting back into the car and moving the vehicle forward, into the train\u2019s path. Thirty-nine seconds before the crash, Mr. Sumwalt said, warning lights at the crossing had illuminated \u2014 brightly enough to have been seen by drivers. Then the arms closed. Meanwhile, the approaching train sounded the proper warning cadence \u2014 two long blasts, followed by a short blast and a long blast. It was going 2 miles per hour under the speed limit, at 58 m.p.h., Mr. Sumwalt said.", "answer": "walk outside and touch the gate shortly before getting back into the car and moving the vehicle forward, into the train\u2019s path", "sentence": "The witness told investigators that a crossing arm closed onto Ms. Brody\u2019s car, prompting her to walk outside and touch the gate shortly before getting back into the car and moving the vehicle forward, into the train\u2019s path .", "paragraph_sentence": " The witness told investigators that a crossing arm closed onto Ms. Brody\u2019s car, prompting her to walk outside and touch the gate shortly before getting back into the car and moving the vehicle forward, into the train\u2019s path . Thirty-nine seconds before the crash, Mr. Sumwalt said, warning lights at the crossing had illuminated \u2014 brightly enough to have been seen by drivers. Then the arms closed. Meanwhile, the approaching train sounded the proper warning cadence \u2014 two long blasts, followed by a short blast and a long blast. It was going 2 miles per hour under the speed limit, at 58 m.p.h. , Mr. Sumwalt said.", "paragraph_answer": "The witness told investigators that a crossing arm closed onto Ms. Brody\u2019s car, prompting her to walk outside and touch the gate shortly before getting back into the car and moving the vehicle forward, into the train\u2019s path . Thirty-nine seconds before the crash, Mr. Sumwalt said, warning lights at the crossing had illuminated \u2014 brightly enough to have been seen by drivers. Then the arms closed. Meanwhile, the approaching train sounded the proper warning cadence \u2014 two long blasts, followed by a short blast and a long blast. It was going 2 miles per hour under the speed limit, at 58 m.p.h., Mr. Sumwalt said.", "sentence_answer": "The witness told investigators that a crossing arm closed onto Ms. Brody\u2019s car, prompting her to walk outside and touch the gate shortly before getting back into the car and moving the vehicle forward, into the train\u2019s path .", "paragraph_id": "5d7069bac8e4820a9b66f120"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700bc3c8e4820a9b66b6a9"} +{"question": "Who requested that the authority to review its standards for the ads?", "paragraph": "His company submitted three ads as part of its protection-themed campaign: the couple touching amid moving boxes, a father clad in industrial goggles changing a diaper, and a man pleading for help from the Mafia. He moved forward with the other two. The authority reviewed its standards after the request by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo\u2019s office last year. While it did not result in a formal policy change, officials have worked with advertisers to \u201ccome up with a compelling advertising message in a somewhat less explicit way,\u201d Adam Lisberg, a spokesman for the agency, said, adding a comment over the cleavage controversy The News brought about.", "answer": "Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo\u2019s office", "sentence": "The authority reviewed its standards after the request by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo\u2019s office last year.", "paragraph_sentence": "His company submitted three ads as part of its protection-themed campaign: the couple touching amid moving boxes, a father clad in industrial goggles changing a diaper, and a man pleading for help from the Mafia. He moved forward with the other two. The authority reviewed its standards after the request by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo\u2019s office last year. While it did not result in a formal policy change, officials have worked with advertisers to \u201ccome up with a compelling advertising message in a somewhat less explicit way,\u201d Adam Lisberg, a spokesman for the agency, said, adding a comment over the cleavage controversy The News brought about.", "paragraph_answer": "His company submitted three ads as part of its protection-themed campaign: the couple touching amid moving boxes, a father clad in industrial goggles changing a diaper, and a man pleading for help from the Mafia. He moved forward with the other two. The authority reviewed its standards after the request by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo\u2019s office last year. While it did not result in a formal policy change, officials have worked with advertisers to \u201ccome up with a compelling advertising message in a somewhat less explicit way,\u201d Adam Lisberg, a spokesman for the agency, said, adding a comment over the cleavage controversy The News brought about.", "sentence_answer": "The authority reviewed its standards after the request by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo\u2019s office last year.", "paragraph_id": "5d701cebc8e4820a9b66c860"} +{"question": "Who had no idea of Mr. Harper-Mercer's fascination about guns?", "paragraph": "But as she was leaving, the sheriff and his deputies intercepted her and broke the news that her son was the gunman. Ms. Harper, who divorced her husband a decade ago, appears to have been by far the most significant figure in her son\u2019s troubled life; neighbors say he rarely left their apartment. Unlike his father, who said on television that he had no idea Mr. Harper-Mercer cared so deeply about guns, his mother was well aware of his fascination. In fact, she shared it: In a series of online postings over a decade, Ms. Harper, a nurse, said she kept numerous firearms in her home and expressed pride in her knowledge about them, as well as in her son\u2019s expertise on the subject. She also opened up about her difficulties raising a son who used to bang his head against the wall, and said that both she and her son struggled with Asperger\u2019s syndrome, an autism spectrum disorder. She tried to counsel others whose children faced similar problems. All the while, she expressed hope that her son could lead a successful life in finance or as a filmmaker. Ms. Harper did not respond to messages seeking comment.", "answer": "his father", "sentence": "Unlike his father , who said on television that he had no idea Mr. Harper-Mercer cared so deeply about guns, his mother was well aware of his fascination.", "paragraph_sentence": "But as she was leaving, the sheriff and his deputies intercepted her and broke the news that her son was the gunman. Ms. Harper, who divorced her husband a decade ago, appears to have been by far the most significant figure in her son\u2019s troubled life; neighbors say he rarely left their apartment. Unlike his father , who said on television that he had no idea Mr. Harper-Mercer cared so deeply about guns, his mother was well aware of his fascination. In fact, she shared it: In a series of online postings over a decade, Ms. Harper, a nurse, said she kept numerous firearms in her home and expressed pride in her knowledge about them, as well as in her son\u2019s expertise on the subject. She also opened up about her difficulties raising a son who used to bang his head against the wall, and said that both she and her son struggled with Asperger\u2019s syndrome, an autism spectrum disorder. She tried to counsel others whose children faced similar problems. All the while, she expressed hope that her son could lead a successful life in finance or as a filmmaker. Ms. Harper did not respond to messages seeking comment.", "paragraph_answer": "But as she was leaving, the sheriff and his deputies intercepted her and broke the news that her son was the gunman. Ms. Harper, who divorced her husband a decade ago, appears to have been by far the most significant figure in her son\u2019s troubled life; neighbors say he rarely left their apartment. Unlike his father , who said on television that he had no idea Mr. Harper-Mercer cared so deeply about guns, his mother was well aware of his fascination. In fact, she shared it: In a series of online postings over a decade, Ms. Harper, a nurse, said she kept numerous firearms in her home and expressed pride in her knowledge about them, as well as in her son\u2019s expertise on the subject. She also opened up about her difficulties raising a son who used to bang his head against the wall, and said that both she and her son struggled with Asperger\u2019s syndrome, an autism spectrum disorder. She tried to counsel others whose children faced similar problems. All the while, she expressed hope that her son could lead a successful life in finance or as a filmmaker. Ms. Harper did not respond to messages seeking comment.", "sentence_answer": "Unlike his father , who said on television that he had no idea Mr. Harper-Mercer cared so deeply about guns, his mother was well aware of his fascination.", "paragraph_id": "5d703aa4c8e4820a9b66e243"} +{"question": "What does unfinished business means for the hotel?", "paragraph": "At the beginning of the season we discussed how a hotel makes for a natural horror setting Hidden staircases, strangers coming and going, messes made and erased. Liz Taylor, our stylish concierge and bar tender, has seen it all, but what touches her most is an old couple come to the Cortez to end their lives together. Elegant in her cheongsam, the score remarkably similar to Shigeru Umebayashi\u2019s \u201cYumeji\u2019s Theme,\u201d best known for its use in Wong Kar Wai\u2019s luxurious film \u201cIn the Mood For Love,\u201d Liz decides she\u2019s had enough. \u201cI feel like I\u2019ll never be happy again,\u201d she said. \u201cI pretend that I\u2019m O.K. living in a world without Tristan, but it\u2019s... It\u2019s been difficult. Besides, knowing the Countess, it\u2019s just a matter of time before she slits my throat.\u201d Liz isn\u2019t the only one who wants out; even vampire Iris has had enough: \u201cDonovan was my one true love. I thought when he brought me back from the brink of death, it was because he loved me. He doesn\u2019t love me. He never will.\u201d But while the indifference of Iris\u2019s son is driving her to death, Liz\u2019s son, whom she left behind, is the reason their death pact has to wait. Like in other seasons, the mythology of \u201cHotel\u201d is fairly standard: unfinished business means ghosts will be trapped wherever they died.", "answer": "ghosts will be trapped wherever they died.", "sentence": "Like in other seasons, the mythology of \u201cHotel\u201d is fairly standard: unfinished business means ghosts will be trapped wherever they died.", "paragraph_sentence": "At the beginning of the season we discussed how a hotel makes for a natural horror setting Hidden staircases, strangers coming and going, messes made and erased. Liz Taylor, our stylish concierge and bar tender, has seen it all, but what touches her most is an old couple come to the Cortez to end their lives together. Elegant in her cheongsam, the score remarkably similar to Shigeru Umebayashi\u2019s \u201cYumeji\u2019s Theme,\u201d best known for its use in Wong Kar Wai\u2019s luxurious film \u201cIn the Mood For Love,\u201d Liz decides she\u2019s had enough. \u201cI feel like I\u2019ll never be happy again,\u201d she said. \u201cI pretend that I\u2019m O.K. living in a world without Tristan, but it\u2019s... It\u2019s been difficult. Besides, knowing the Countess, it\u2019s just a matter of time before she slits my throat.\u201d Liz isn\u2019t the only one who wants out; even vampire Iris has had enough: \u201cDonovan was my one true love. I thought when he brought me back from the brink of death, it was because he loved me. He doesn\u2019t love me. He never will.\u201d But while the indifference of Iris\u2019s son is driving her to death, Liz\u2019s son, whom she left behind, is the reason their death pact has to wait. Like in other seasons, the mythology of \u201cHotel\u201d is fairly standard: unfinished business means ghosts will be trapped wherever they died. ", "paragraph_answer": "At the beginning of the season we discussed how a hotel makes for a natural horror setting Hidden staircases, strangers coming and going, messes made and erased. Liz Taylor, our stylish concierge and bar tender, has seen it all, but what touches her most is an old couple come to the Cortez to end their lives together. Elegant in her cheongsam, the score remarkably similar to Shigeru Umebayashi\u2019s \u201cYumeji\u2019s Theme,\u201d best known for its use in Wong Kar Wai\u2019s luxurious film \u201cIn the Mood For Love,\u201d Liz decides she\u2019s had enough. \u201cI feel like I\u2019ll never be happy again,\u201d she said. \u201cI pretend that I\u2019m O.K. living in a world without Tristan, but it\u2019s... It\u2019s been difficult. Besides, knowing the Countess, it\u2019s just a matter of time before she slits my throat.\u201d Liz isn\u2019t the only one who wants out; even vampire Iris has had enough: \u201cDonovan was my one true love. I thought when he brought me back from the brink of death, it was because he loved me. He doesn\u2019t love me. He never will.\u201d But while the indifference of Iris\u2019s son is driving her to death, Liz\u2019s son, whom she left behind, is the reason their death pact has to wait. Like in other seasons, the mythology of \u201cHotel\u201d is fairly standard: unfinished business means ghosts will be trapped wherever they died. ", "sentence_answer": "Like in other seasons, the mythology of \u201cHotel\u201d is fairly standard: unfinished business means ghosts will be trapped wherever they died. ", "paragraph_id": "5d703b41c8e4820a9b66e299"} +{"question": "Where was the team from that the Tigers faced?", "paragraph": "Texas Southern\u2019s Madarious Gibbs led the Tigers with 15 points. But once behind minutes after tip-off, the Tigers never mustered a meaningful run to reverse Arizona\u2019s momentum. \u201cThey just overwhelmed us with length, size, athleticism in the first half,\u201d Texas Southern Coach Mike Davis said. Arizona, the Pacific-12 Conference regular-season and tournament champion, will meet No. 10 Ohio State on Saturday for a slot in the round of 16. Last year, Arizona was a No. 1 seed and lost in overtime to Wisconsin in the round of 8. But that team was without the 6-foot-9 forward Brandon Ashley, whose midseason foot injury kept him out of the postseason. Ashley, fully healthy, was the outstanding player in Arizona\u2019s romp through the Pacific-12 tournament last week. Against Texas Southern (22-13), he scored 14 points and grabbed 4 rebounds.", "answer": "Arizona", "sentence": "But once behind minutes after tip-off, the Tigers never mustered a meaningful run to reverse Arizona \u2019s momentum.", "paragraph_sentence": "Texas Southern\u2019s Madarious Gibbs led the Tigers with 15 points. But once behind minutes after tip-off, the Tigers never mustered a meaningful run to reverse Arizona \u2019s momentum. \u201cThey just overwhelmed us with length, size, athleticism in the first half,\u201d Texas Southern Coach Mike Davis said. Arizona, the Pacific-12 Conference regular-season and tournament champion, will meet No. 10 Ohio State on Saturday for a slot in the round of 16. Last year, Arizona was a No. 1 seed and lost in overtime to Wisconsin in the round of 8. But that team was without the 6-foot-9 forward Brandon Ashley, whose midseason foot injury kept him out of the postseason. Ashley, fully healthy, was the outstanding player in Arizona\u2019s romp through the Pacific-12 tournament last week. Against Texas Southern (22-13), he scored 14 points and grabbed 4 rebounds.", "paragraph_answer": "Texas Southern\u2019s Madarious Gibbs led the Tigers with 15 points. But once behind minutes after tip-off, the Tigers never mustered a meaningful run to reverse Arizona \u2019s momentum. \u201cThey just overwhelmed us with length, size, athleticism in the first half,\u201d Texas Southern Coach Mike Davis said. Arizona, the Pacific-12 Conference regular-season and tournament champion, will meet No. 10 Ohio State on Saturday for a slot in the round of 16. Last year, Arizona was a No. 1 seed and lost in overtime to Wisconsin in the round of 8. But that team was without the 6-foot-9 forward Brandon Ashley, whose midseason foot injury kept him out of the postseason. Ashley, fully healthy, was the outstanding player in Arizona\u2019s romp through the Pacific-12 tournament last week. Against Texas Southern (22-13), he scored 14 points and grabbed 4 rebounds.", "sentence_answer": "But once behind minutes after tip-off, the Tigers never mustered a meaningful run to reverse Arizona \u2019s momentum.", "paragraph_id": "5d702784c8e4820a9b66d54a"} +{"question": "What character does Jessica Williams play?", "paragraph": "Charlie speaks in double talk. Announcing the end of her marriage to Will, she says she loves him. \u201cThe problem is I don\u2019t love my life,\u201d she explains. A whiny, high-strung control freak and compulsive scold, she is such a pill that you wonder what the brokenhearted Will, who moves to Astoria, Queens, could possibly have seen in her. The story jumps ahead a year. After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane (Regina Hall), a teacher of American literature at Columbia. When they meet, it is obvious that they are compatible. At the very moment when \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d has a chance to soar, it turns prissy, indecisive and picayune. The story meanders along with too-cute scenes of Will bonding with his daughters. Meanwhile, Charlie, now pregnant, plans to get married. As the movie fizzles, Mr. Clement\u2019s endearing performance breathes what little life is left into a movie that, much like the insufferable Charlie, can\u2019t make up its mind about where to go or how to get there. \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). Language, mild sexual situations and brief nudity.", "answer": "Kat", "sentence": "After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane (Regina Hall), a teacher of American literature at Columbia.", "paragraph_sentence": "Charlie speaks in double talk. Announcing the end of her marriage to Will, she says she loves him. \u201cThe problem is I don\u2019t love my life,\u201d she explains. A whiny, high-strung control freak and compulsive scold, she is such a pill that you wonder what the brokenhearted Will, who moves to Astoria, Queens, could possibly have seen in her. The story jumps ahead a year. After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane (Regina Hall), a teacher of American literature at Columbia. When they meet, it is obvious that they are compatible. At the very moment when \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d has a chance to soar, it turns prissy, indecisive and picayune. The story meanders along with too-cute scenes of Will bonding with his daughters. Meanwhile, Charlie, now pregnant, plans to get married. As the movie fizzles, Mr. Clement\u2019s endearing performance breathes what little life is left into a movie that, much like the insufferable Charlie, can\u2019t make up its mind about where to go or how to get there. \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). Language, mild sexual situations and brief nudity.", "paragraph_answer": "Charlie speaks in double talk. Announcing the end of her marriage to Will, she says she loves him. \u201cThe problem is I don\u2019t love my life,\u201d she explains. A whiny, high-strung control freak and compulsive scold, she is such a pill that you wonder what the brokenhearted Will, who moves to Astoria, Queens, could possibly have seen in her. The story jumps ahead a year. After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane (Regina Hall), a teacher of American literature at Columbia. When they meet, it is obvious that they are compatible. At the very moment when \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d has a chance to soar, it turns prissy, indecisive and picayune. The story meanders along with too-cute scenes of Will bonding with his daughters. Meanwhile, Charlie, now pregnant, plans to get married. As the movie fizzles, Mr. Clement\u2019s endearing performance breathes what little life is left into a movie that, much like the insufferable Charlie, can\u2019t make up its mind about where to go or how to get there. \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). Language, mild sexual situations and brief nudity.", "sentence_answer": "After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane (Regina Hall), a teacher of American literature at Columbia.", "paragraph_id": "5d707b60c8e4820a9b66f32c"} +{"question": "Did Woods show is worry?", "paragraph": "In theater terms, Woods is in previews. For him, opening night is April 9, the first day of the Masters. If he is worried about the state of his game, Woods hid it behind his actor\u2019s mask. After signing his scorecard, he stepped to the microphone and deadpanned, \u201cI\u2019m just doing this so I won\u2019t get fined.\u201d Everybody, starting with Woods, laughed at his sendup of the media-averse Seattle Seahawks running back Marshawn Lynch. Woods\u2019s stab at humor hit closer to the funny bone than the attempt by the marshal at the par-3 seventh hole on Thursday. As Woods\u2019s group approached the tee box, the man announced to the fans, \u201cNo jokes about missing teeth, blondes or 5-irons.\u201d", "answer": "Woods hid it", "sentence": "If he is worried about the state of his game, Woods hid it behind his actor\u2019s mask.", "paragraph_sentence": "In theater terms, Woods is in previews. For him, opening night is April 9, the first day of the Masters. If he is worried about the state of his game, Woods hid it behind his actor\u2019s mask. After signing his scorecard, he stepped to the microphone and deadpanned, \u201cI\u2019m just doing this so I won\u2019t get fined.\u201d Everybody, starting with Woods, laughed at his sendup of the media-averse Seattle Seahawks running back Marshawn Lynch. Woods\u2019s stab at humor hit closer to the funny bone than the attempt by the marshal at the par-3 seventh hole on Thursday. As Woods\u2019s group approached the tee box, the man announced to the fans, \u201cNo jokes about missing teeth, blondes or 5-irons.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "In theater terms, Woods is in previews. For him, opening night is April 9, the first day of the Masters. If he is worried about the state of his game, Woods hid it behind his actor\u2019s mask. After signing his scorecard, he stepped to the microphone and deadpanned, \u201cI\u2019m just doing this so I won\u2019t get fined.\u201d Everybody, starting with Woods, laughed at his sendup of the media-averse Seattle Seahawks running back Marshawn Lynch. Woods\u2019s stab at humor hit closer to the funny bone than the attempt by the marshal at the par-3 seventh hole on Thursday. As Woods\u2019s group approached the tee box, the man announced to the fans, \u201cNo jokes about missing teeth, blondes or 5-irons.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "If he is worried about the state of his game, Woods hid it behind his actor\u2019s mask.", "paragraph_id": "5d70238ec8e4820a9b66cfa4"} +{"question": "Why are PC sales going down?", "paragraph": "PC sales are in a long decline, as customers increasingly use online services connected to mobile devices. While Microsoft and others try to revive the market with new designs and tabletlike models, in the most recent quarter worldwide PC shipments fell 10.8 percent from the year before, according to IDC. Making PC chips is still a big business, but not the way it once was. The data center group also has much higher profit margins: Operating profit from PC chips was $2.1 billion, down 20 percent from a year ago, while data center chips had an operating profit of $2.1 billion, up 9 percent. That matters, because Intel is already stressing products in networking and advanced cloud systems, to feed the profitability of cloud systems as PCs continue to wane. That means cloud computing leaders like Amazon and Google could benefit even more, and expand their online operations. Having missed much of the market for chips in mobile devices, Intel is also investing in sensors for devices connected to cloud systems.", "answer": "customers increasingly use online services connected to mobile devices", "sentence": "PC sales are in a long decline, as customers increasingly use online services connected to mobile devices .", "paragraph_sentence": " PC sales are in a long decline, as customers increasingly use online services connected to mobile devices . While Microsoft and others try to revive the market with new designs and tabletlike models, in the most recent quarter worldwide PC shipments fell 10.8 percent from the year before, according to IDC. Making PC chips is still a big business, but not the way it once was. The data center group also has much higher profit margins: Operating profit from PC chips was $2.1 billion, down 20 percent from a year ago, while data center chips had an operating profit of $2.1 billion, up 9 percent. That matters, because Intel is already stressing products in networking and advanced cloud systems, to feed the profitability of cloud systems as PCs continue to wane. That means cloud computing leaders like Amazon and Google could benefit even more, and expand their online operations. Having missed much of the market for chips in mobile devices, Intel is also investing in sensors for devices connected to cloud systems.", "paragraph_answer": "PC sales are in a long decline, as customers increasingly use online services connected to mobile devices . While Microsoft and others try to revive the market with new designs and tabletlike models, in the most recent quarter worldwide PC shipments fell 10.8 percent from the year before, according to IDC. Making PC chips is still a big business, but not the way it once was. The data center group also has much higher profit margins: Operating profit from PC chips was $2.1 billion, down 20 percent from a year ago, while data center chips had an operating profit of $2.1 billion, up 9 percent. That matters, because Intel is already stressing products in networking and advanced cloud systems, to feed the profitability of cloud systems as PCs continue to wane. That means cloud computing leaders like Amazon and Google could benefit even more, and expand their online operations. Having missed much of the market for chips in mobile devices, Intel is also investing in sensors for devices connected to cloud systems.", "sentence_answer": "PC sales are in a long decline, as customers increasingly use online services connected to mobile devices .", "paragraph_id": "5d701fabc8e4820a9b66cb49"} +{"question": "Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create how many units?", "paragraph": "These conversions include 12 East 88th Street, a red-brick 13-story building near Fifth Avenue designed by Rosario Candela, the architect responsible for much of the Upper East Side\u2019s elegant look. Under an approved offering plan, Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create up to 53 units for sale in the building, ranging from one- to five-bedrooms, after combining some of the existing 65 apartments. Seventeen of the units currently have tenants paying regulated rents. Just outside the Carnegie Hill Historic District, the property, completed in 1931 and on the same block as the Guggenheim Museum, can be altered without city approval. But other than upgrading windows, the developer said there were no plans to change the exterior.", "answer": "53", "sentence": "Under an approved offering plan, Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create up to 53 units for sale in the building, ranging from one- to five-bedrooms, after combining some of the existing 65 apartments.", "paragraph_sentence": "These conversions include 12 East 88th Street, a red-brick 13-story building near Fifth Avenue designed by Rosario Candela, the architect responsible for much of the Upper East Side\u2019s elegant look. Under an approved offering plan, Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create up to 53 units for sale in the building, ranging from one- to five-bedrooms, after combining some of the existing 65 apartments. Seventeen of the units currently have tenants paying regulated rents. Just outside the Carnegie Hill Historic District, the property, completed in 1931 and on the same block as the Guggenheim Museum, can be altered without city approval. But other than upgrading windows, the developer said there were no plans to change the exterior.", "paragraph_answer": "These conversions include 12 East 88th Street, a red-brick 13-story building near Fifth Avenue designed by Rosario Candela, the architect responsible for much of the Upper East Side\u2019s elegant look. Under an approved offering plan, Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create up to 53 units for sale in the building, ranging from one- to five-bedrooms, after combining some of the existing 65 apartments. Seventeen of the units currently have tenants paying regulated rents. Just outside the Carnegie Hill Historic District, the property, completed in 1931 and on the same block as the Guggenheim Museum, can be altered without city approval. But other than upgrading windows, the developer said there were no plans to change the exterior.", "sentence_answer": "Under an approved offering plan, Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create up to 53 units for sale in the building, ranging from one- to five-bedrooms, after combining some of the existing 65 apartments.", "paragraph_id": "5d7014edc8e4820a9b66c0f5"} +{"question": "When did the three-foot alligator died?", "paragraph": "A three-foot-long alligator that attained fleeting fame on Thursday night after the police posted a picture of it on Twitter crossing a busy Manhattan street during the evening rush died unexpectedly on Friday, according to a spokeswoman for the Animal Care Centers of NYC. Officers from the Police Department\u2019s 34th Precinct found the animal crossing Ninth Avenue at 205th Street in the Inwood section of Manhattan on Thursday night and, after posting the photo and a series of jokes on Twitter, took it to the agency\u2019s Manhattan Animal Care Center, said Alexandra Silver, the spokeswoman.", "answer": "Friday", "sentence": "A three-foot-long alligator that attained fleeting fame on Thursday night after the police posted a picture of it on Twitter crossing a busy Manhattan street during the evening rush died unexpectedly on Friday , according to a spokeswoman for the Animal Care Centers of NYC.", "paragraph_sentence": " A three-foot-long alligator that attained fleeting fame on Thursday night after the police posted a picture of it on Twitter crossing a busy Manhattan street during the evening rush died unexpectedly on Friday , according to a spokeswoman for the Animal Care Centers of NYC. Officers from the Police Department\u2019s 34th Precinct found the animal crossing Ninth Avenue at 205th Street in the Inwood section of Manhattan on Thursday night and, after posting the photo and a series of jokes on Twitter, took it to the agency\u2019s Manhattan Animal Care Center, said Alexandra Silver, the spokeswoman.", "paragraph_answer": "A three-foot-long alligator that attained fleeting fame on Thursday night after the police posted a picture of it on Twitter crossing a busy Manhattan street during the evening rush died unexpectedly on Friday , according to a spokeswoman for the Animal Care Centers of NYC. Officers from the Police Department\u2019s 34th Precinct found the animal crossing Ninth Avenue at 205th Street in the Inwood section of Manhattan on Thursday night and, after posting the photo and a series of jokes on Twitter, took it to the agency\u2019s Manhattan Animal Care Center, said Alexandra Silver, the spokeswoman.", "sentence_answer": "A three-foot-long alligator that attained fleeting fame on Thursday night after the police posted a picture of it on Twitter crossing a busy Manhattan street during the evening rush died unexpectedly on Friday , according to a spokeswoman for the Animal Care Centers of NYC.", "paragraph_id": "5d70201fc8e4820a9b66cbc6"} +{"question": "Which hospital team won between the Bulls and Miami Heat?", "paragraph": "\u201cI was just tired,\u201d Rose said. That scene was all too reminiscent of the night that everything changed for the Bulls and their star point guard, then 23. They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat. Late in Game 1 of their playoff opener against Philadelphia, as Rose drove, his knee gave out. The 76ers then dispatched the Bulls. What followed has been well chronicled, with Rose\u2019s career taking on the arc of a tragic novel. The A.C.L. injury cost him all of the next year; his teammates, many battling injuries themselves, fought valiantly in the playoffs, beating the Nets in seven games before succumbing to the Heat.", "answer": "Miami Heat", "sentence": "They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI was just tired,\u201d Rose said. That scene was all too reminiscent of the night that everything changed for the Bulls and their star point guard, then 23. They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat . Late in Game 1 of their playoff opener against Philadelphia, as Rose drove, his knee gave out. The 76ers then dispatched the Bulls. What followed has been well chronicled, with Rose\u2019s career taking on the arc of a tragic novel. The A.C.L. injury cost him all of the next year; his teammates, many battling injuries themselves, fought valiantly in the playoffs, beating the Nets in seven games before succumbing to the Heat.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI was just tired,\u201d Rose said. That scene was all too reminiscent of the night that everything changed for the Bulls and their star point guard, then 23. They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat . Late in Game 1 of their playoff opener against Philadelphia, as Rose drove, his knee gave out. The 76ers then dispatched the Bulls. What followed has been well chronicled, with Rose\u2019s career taking on the arc of a tragic novel. The A.C.L. injury cost him all of the next year; his teammates, many battling injuries themselves, fought valiantly in the playoffs, beating the Nets in seven games before succumbing to the Heat.", "sentence_answer": "They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat .", "paragraph_id": "5d70d273c8e4820a9b66f734"} +{"question": "Who has become one of the project's most vocal champions?", "paragraph": "The Flussbad speaks to a tradition here; there are other urban Flussbads in this part of the world, so the idea has local resonance. Gottfried Ludewig is a young member of the Berlin City Parliament from the center-right Christian Democratic Union, Angela Merkel\u2019s party. He has become one of the project\u2019s most vocal champions, enlisting political allies across the aisle, corralling money for a feasibility study and promoting a grass-roots, community-based campaign. Neither he nor Tim Edler would divulge the project\u2019s projected cost, which must be many, many millions of dollars. But both said the major hurdle would not be money. The real struggle is over civic identity.", "answer": "Gottfried Ludewig", "sentence": "Gottfried Ludewig is a young member of the Berlin City Parliament from the center-right Christian Democratic Union, Angela Merkel\u2019s party.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Flussbad speaks to a tradition here; there are other urban Flussbads in this part of the world, so the idea has local resonance. Gottfried Ludewig is a young member of the Berlin City Parliament from the center-right Christian Democratic Union, Angela Merkel\u2019s party. He has become one of the project\u2019s most vocal champions, enlisting political allies across the aisle, corralling money for a feasibility study and promoting a grass-roots, community-based campaign. Neither he nor Tim Edler would divulge the project\u2019s projected cost, which must be many, many millions of dollars. But both said the major hurdle would not be money. The real struggle is over civic identity.", "paragraph_answer": "The Flussbad speaks to a tradition here; there are other urban Flussbads in this part of the world, so the idea has local resonance. Gottfried Ludewig is a young member of the Berlin City Parliament from the center-right Christian Democratic Union, Angela Merkel\u2019s party. He has become one of the project\u2019s most vocal champions, enlisting political allies across the aisle, corralling money for a feasibility study and promoting a grass-roots, community-based campaign. Neither he nor Tim Edler would divulge the project\u2019s projected cost, which must be many, many millions of dollars. But both said the major hurdle would not be money. The real struggle is over civic identity.", "sentence_answer": " Gottfried Ludewig is a young member of the Berlin City Parliament from the center-right Christian Democratic Union, Angela Merkel\u2019s party.", "paragraph_id": "5d703f1cc8e4820a9b66e44b"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d70094ac8e4820a9b66b1ae"} +{"question": "How much land is included with the home?", "paragraph": "Off the living room is a short hallway leading to the new wing. The family room here has a pitched ceiling and walls of glass on three sides. The master suite is also part of the addition, and connected to the rest of the house by a hallway lined with floor-to-ceiling chestnut cabinetry. The master suite has a pitched ceiling and a grand hand-carved fireplace mantel, as well as a sitting alcove with a large arched window. The glassed-in steam shower in the en-suite bathroom faces the yard, giving the impression of an outdoor shower. The basement is finished and has a fireplace, one of seven in the house. OUTDOOR SPACE: The house is on about an acre and a half, with a pool and a screened gazebo. There is an attached garage. TAXES: Approximately $22,077 a year CONTACT: Sarah Eagleson, Keller Williams Classic Properties, (614) 804-8470; searchcolumbusproperties.com", "answer": "acre and a half", "sentence": "The house is on about an acre and a half , with a pool and a screened gazebo.", "paragraph_sentence": "Off the living room is a short hallway leading to the new wing. The family room here has a pitched ceiling and walls of glass on three sides. The master suite is also part of the addition, and connected to the rest of the house by a hallway lined with floor-to-ceiling chestnut cabinetry. The master suite has a pitched ceiling and a grand hand-carved fireplace mantel, as well as a sitting alcove with a large arched window. The glassed-in steam shower in the en-suite bathroom faces the yard, giving the impression of an outdoor shower. The basement is finished and has a fireplace, one of seven in the house. OUTDOOR SPACE: The house is on about an acre and a half , with a pool and a screened gazebo. There is an attached garage. TAXES: Approximately $22,077 a year CONTACT: Sarah Eagleson, Keller Williams Classic Properties, (614) 804-8470; searchcolumbusproperties.com", "paragraph_answer": "Off the living room is a short hallway leading to the new wing. The family room here has a pitched ceiling and walls of glass on three sides. The master suite is also part of the addition, and connected to the rest of the house by a hallway lined with floor-to-ceiling chestnut cabinetry. The master suite has a pitched ceiling and a grand hand-carved fireplace mantel, as well as a sitting alcove with a large arched window. The glassed-in steam shower in the en-suite bathroom faces the yard, giving the impression of an outdoor shower. The basement is finished and has a fireplace, one of seven in the house. OUTDOOR SPACE: The house is on about an acre and a half , with a pool and a screened gazebo. There is an attached garage. TAXES: Approximately $22,077 a year CONTACT: Sarah Eagleson, Keller Williams Classic Properties, (614) 804-8470; searchcolumbusproperties.com", "sentence_answer": "The house is on about an acre and a half , with a pool and a screened gazebo.", "paragraph_id": "5d701d22c8e4820a9b66c8a1"} +{"question": "What paper will have a special feature on the NHL", "paragraph": "Every Tuesday, The New York Times will look at the week ahead in the N.H.L., highlighting hot \u2014 or not so hot \u2014 teams and players. Minnesota Wild at Chicago Blackhawks, Tuesday, 8 p.m., NBCSN Blackhawks forward Patrick Kane has scored a point in 19 straight games, compiling 11 goals and 20 assists in that span. He will go for his 20th in a row as Chicago returns home from a six-game Western trip. Sidney Crosby in 2010 was the last player to record a point in 20 straight games. Don\u2019t get too excited about Kane breaking the N.H.L. record for point streaks, though. It is 51 games, set by Wayne Gretzky in 1983-84. Rangers at Islanders, Wednesday, 8 p.m., NBCSN", "answer": "The New York Times", "sentence": "Every Tuesday, The New York Times will look at the week ahead in the N.H.L., highlighting hot \u2014 or not so hot \u2014 teams and players.", "paragraph_sentence": " Every Tuesday, The New York Times will look at the week ahead in the N.H.L., highlighting hot \u2014 or not so hot \u2014 teams and players. Minnesota Wild at Chicago Blackhawks, Tuesday, 8 p.m., NBCSN Blackhawks forward Patrick Kane has scored a point in 19 straight games, compiling 11 goals and 20 assists in that span. He will go for his 20th in a row as Chicago returns home from a six-game Western trip. Sidney Crosby in 2010 was the last player to record a point in 20 straight games. Don\u2019t get too excited about Kane breaking the N.H.L. record for point streaks, though. It is 51 games, set by Wayne Gretzky in 1983-84. Rangers at Islanders, Wednesday, 8 p.m., NBCSN", "paragraph_answer": "Every Tuesday, The New York Times will look at the week ahead in the N.H.L., highlighting hot \u2014 or not so hot \u2014 teams and players. Minnesota Wild at Chicago Blackhawks, Tuesday, 8 p.m., NBCSN Blackhawks forward Patrick Kane has scored a point in 19 straight games, compiling 11 goals and 20 assists in that span. He will go for his 20th in a row as Chicago returns home from a six-game Western trip. Sidney Crosby in 2010 was the last player to record a point in 20 straight games. Don\u2019t get too excited about Kane breaking the N.H.L. record for point streaks, though. It is 51 games, set by Wayne Gretzky in 1983-84. Rangers at Islanders, Wednesday, 8 p.m., NBCSN", "sentence_answer": "Every Tuesday, The New York Times will look at the week ahead in the N.H.L., highlighting hot \u2014 or not so hot \u2014 teams and players.", "paragraph_id": "5d701e61c8e4820a9b66c9ea"} +{"question": "What percentage of the equipment was manufactured in the past decade?", "paragraph": "For a moment, he twirled the rope in his hands like a lasso, then threw the hook over the wire, and tugged hard, testing for explosives. When nothing happened he signaled two comrades, who ran up and started snipping the wire with cutters. Although this was a typical training exercise for raw recruits in an elemental soldierly skill, there was nothing typical about the scene. Far from enlistees, these soldiers were regulars in the Ukrainian National Guard, presumably battle-hardened after months on the front lines in eastern Ukraine. And the trainer was an American military instructor, drilling troops for battle with the United States\u2019 former Cold War foe, Russia, and Russian-backed separatists. \u201cIt\u2019s been a long time since I heard a target called an Ivan,\u201d First Sgt. David Dzwik, one of the trainers, said in an interview out in the sunny forest, while observing the Ukrainians run through drills. \u201cNow, I\u2019m hearing it again.\u201d The course on cutting wire is one of 63 classes of remedial military instruction being provided by 300 United States Army trainers in three consecutive two-month courses. Here in western Ukraine, they are far from the fighting, and their job is to instill some basic military know-how in Ukrainian soldiers, who the trainers have discovered are woefully unprepared. The largely unschooled troops are learning such basic skills as how to use an encrypted walkie-talkie; how to break open a door with a sledgehammer and a crowbar; and how to drag a wounded colleague across a field while holding a rifle at the ready. When the war began a year ago, the Ukrainian Army was all but worthless \u2014 rife with corruption and Russian spies, and made up largely of \u201cskeleton\u201d battalions of officers with just a few men. About 1 percent of the equipment was manufactured in the past decade.", "answer": "1 percent", "sentence": "About 1 percent of the equipment was manufactured in the past decade.", "paragraph_sentence": "For a moment, he twirled the rope in his hands like a lasso, then threw the hook over the wire, and tugged hard, testing for explosives. When nothing happened he signaled two comrades, who ran up and started snipping the wire with cutters. Although this was a typical training exercise for raw recruits in an elemental soldierly skill, there was nothing typical about the scene. Far from enlistees, these soldiers were regulars in the Ukrainian National Guard, presumably battle-hardened after months on the front lines in eastern Ukraine. And the trainer was an American military instructor, drilling troops for battle with the United States\u2019 former Cold War foe, Russia, and Russian-backed separatists. \u201cIt\u2019s been a long time since I heard a target called an Ivan,\u201d First Sgt. David Dzwik, one of the trainers, said in an interview out in the sunny forest, while observing the Ukrainians run through drills. \u201cNow, I\u2019m hearing it again.\u201d The course on cutting wire is one of 63 classes of remedial military instruction being provided by 300 United States Army trainers in three consecutive two-month courses. Here in western Ukraine, they are far from the fighting, and their job is to instill some basic military know-how in Ukrainian soldiers, who the trainers have discovered are woefully unprepared. The largely unschooled troops are learning such basic skills as how to use an encrypted walkie-talkie; how to break open a door with a sledgehammer and a crowbar; and how to drag a wounded colleague across a field while holding a rifle at the ready. When the war began a year ago, the Ukrainian Army was all but worthless \u2014 rife with corruption and Russian spies, and made up largely of \u201cskeleton\u201d battalions of officers with just a few men. About 1 percent of the equipment was manufactured in the past decade. ", "paragraph_answer": "For a moment, he twirled the rope in his hands like a lasso, then threw the hook over the wire, and tugged hard, testing for explosives. When nothing happened he signaled two comrades, who ran up and started snipping the wire with cutters. Although this was a typical training exercise for raw recruits in an elemental soldierly skill, there was nothing typical about the scene. Far from enlistees, these soldiers were regulars in the Ukrainian National Guard, presumably battle-hardened after months on the front lines in eastern Ukraine. And the trainer was an American military instructor, drilling troops for battle with the United States\u2019 former Cold War foe, Russia, and Russian-backed separatists. \u201cIt\u2019s been a long time since I heard a target called an Ivan,\u201d First Sgt. David Dzwik, one of the trainers, said in an interview out in the sunny forest, while observing the Ukrainians run through drills. \u201cNow, I\u2019m hearing it again.\u201d The course on cutting wire is one of 63 classes of remedial military instruction being provided by 300 United States Army trainers in three consecutive two-month courses. Here in western Ukraine, they are far from the fighting, and their job is to instill some basic military know-how in Ukrainian soldiers, who the trainers have discovered are woefully unprepared. The largely unschooled troops are learning such basic skills as how to use an encrypted walkie-talkie; how to break open a door with a sledgehammer and a crowbar; and how to drag a wounded colleague across a field while holding a rifle at the ready. When the war began a year ago, the Ukrainian Army was all but worthless \u2014 rife with corruption and Russian spies, and made up largely of \u201cskeleton\u201d battalions of officers with just a few men. About 1 percent of the equipment was manufactured in the past decade.", "sentence_answer": "About 1 percent of the equipment was manufactured in the past decade.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026d7c8e4820a9b66d351"} +{"question": "Who made a splash with an automated highway driving feature?", "paragraph": "AUTOMAKERS descended on New York for the city\u2019s annual auto show this week with vehicles ready to do more than just respond to drivers\u2019 commands. However, the question of whether drivers want their cars to take charge remained unanswered. The path to fully autonomous driving will still take years to reach consumers, but car manufacturers demonstrated this week that they are now able to offer buyers several levels of so-called active safety features \u2014 in which the car takes over driving in certain instances. And they plan to introduce even more advanced semiautonomous capabilities in the coming months. Tesla Motors made a splash when it recently announced plans to add automated highway driving features, which it calls autopilot, to its Model S sedans by the summer. But such capabilities are coming to a range of vehicles sooner than many realize.", "answer": "Tesla Motors", "sentence": "Tesla Motors made a splash when it recently announced plans to add automated highway driving features, which it calls autopilot, to its Model S sedans by the summer.", "paragraph_sentence": "AUTOMAKERS descended on New York for the city\u2019s annual auto show this week with vehicles ready to do more than just respond to drivers\u2019 commands. However, the question of whether drivers want their cars to take charge remained unanswered. The path to fully autonomous driving will still take years to reach consumers, but car manufacturers demonstrated this week that they are now able to offer buyers several levels of so-called active safety features \u2014 in which the car takes over driving in certain instances. And they plan to introduce even more advanced semiautonomous capabilities in the coming months. Tesla Motors made a splash when it recently announced plans to add automated highway driving features, which it calls autopilot, to its Model S sedans by the summer. But such capabilities are coming to a range of vehicles sooner than many realize.", "paragraph_answer": "AUTOMAKERS descended on New York for the city\u2019s annual auto show this week with vehicles ready to do more than just respond to drivers\u2019 commands. However, the question of whether drivers want their cars to take charge remained unanswered. The path to fully autonomous driving will still take years to reach consumers, but car manufacturers demonstrated this week that they are now able to offer buyers several levels of so-called active safety features \u2014 in which the car takes over driving in certain instances. And they plan to introduce even more advanced semiautonomous capabilities in the coming months. Tesla Motors made a splash when it recently announced plans to add automated highway driving features, which it calls autopilot, to its Model S sedans by the summer. But such capabilities are coming to a range of vehicles sooner than many realize.", "sentence_answer": " Tesla Motors made a splash when it recently announced plans to add automated highway driving features, which it calls autopilot, to its Model S sedans by the summer.", "paragraph_id": "5d702924c8e4820a9b66d6f1"} +{"question": "What is the name of the recent Brooklyn Law School graduate?", "paragraph": "Though not eligible for the program, Jared Brenner, 25, a recent Brooklyn Law School graduate with a job offer from a large firm to do transactional work for start-up companies, believed it would encourage students to take risks after leaving school. Brooklyn Law School graduates could pursue their passion, he said, knowing that the school would provide some financial relief if that pursuit proved fruitless. Mr. Leipold, of the law placement association, said Brooklyn Law School\u2019s program struck him as unusual, though he noted that other law schools were trying different ways to help students navigate a challenging job market. \u201cIt\u2019s a time of experimentation and risk-taking for law schools,\u201d he said. A more common approach, he said, was for schools to finance fellowships for students, often at nonprofits, to help them gain experience until they can find full-time jobs. Such programs can, however, be expensive for the schools, he added. For Brian Hoffman, 25, who, like Ms. Friedman, has started a two-year program at Brooklyn Law School, the tuition-reimbursement program provides some reassurance. \u201cIt\u2019s something that I hope I don\u2019t have to bank on,\u201d he said, \u201cbut it\u2019s nice to have.\u201d", "answer": "Jared Brenner", "sentence": "Though not eligible for the program, Jared Brenner , 25, a recent Brooklyn Law School graduate with a job offer from a large firm to do transactional work for start-up companies, believed it would encourage students to take risks after leaving school.", "paragraph_sentence": " Though not eligible for the program, Jared Brenner , 25, a recent Brooklyn Law School graduate with a job offer from a large firm to do transactional work for start-up companies, believed it would encourage students to take risks after leaving school. Brooklyn Law School graduates could pursue their passion, he said, knowing that the school would provide some financial relief if that pursuit proved fruitless. Mr. Leipold, of the law placement association, said Brooklyn Law School\u2019s program struck him as unusual, though he noted that other law schools were trying different ways to help students navigate a challenging job market. \u201cIt\u2019s a time of experimentation and risk-taking for law schools,\u201d he said. A more common approach, he said, was for schools to finance fellowships for students, often at nonprofits, to help them gain experience until they can find full-time jobs. Such programs can, however, be expensive for the schools, he added. For Brian Hoffman, 25, who, like Ms. Friedman, has started a two-year program at Brooklyn Law School, the tuition-reimbursement program provides some reassurance. \u201cIt\u2019s something that I hope I don\u2019t have to bank on,\u201d he said, \u201cbut it\u2019s nice to have.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Though not eligible for the program, Jared Brenner , 25, a recent Brooklyn Law School graduate with a job offer from a large firm to do transactional work for start-up companies, believed it would encourage students to take risks after leaving school. Brooklyn Law School graduates could pursue their passion, he said, knowing that the school would provide some financial relief if that pursuit proved fruitless. Mr. Leipold, of the law placement association, said Brooklyn Law School\u2019s program struck him as unusual, though he noted that other law schools were trying different ways to help students navigate a challenging job market. \u201cIt\u2019s a time of experimentation and risk-taking for law schools,\u201d he said. A more common approach, he said, was for schools to finance fellowships for students, often at nonprofits, to help them gain experience until they can find full-time jobs. Such programs can, however, be expensive for the schools, he added. For Brian Hoffman, 25, who, like Ms. Friedman, has started a two-year program at Brooklyn Law School, the tuition-reimbursement program provides some reassurance. \u201cIt\u2019s something that I hope I don\u2019t have to bank on,\u201d he said, \u201cbut it\u2019s nice to have.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Though not eligible for the program, Jared Brenner , 25, a recent Brooklyn Law School graduate with a job offer from a large firm to do transactional work for start-up companies, believed it would encourage students to take risks after leaving school.", "paragraph_id": "5d704363c8e4820a9b66e6af"} +{"question": "Who did Emily sit down with to discuss Sandy's situation?", "paragraph": "Emily was angry at her father for speaking so pragmatically about her mother\u2019s death. She was angry too at her mother for choosing a date that was so soon, and at her mother\u2019s inner circle for allowing all of it to happen. That night, she sat with her parents and Robyn while they discussed the situation. Emily felt as though she was defending her mother\u2019s life against everyone who wanted her to end it. \u201cYou\u2019re just doing the math,\u201d she told Daryl. \u201cIt\u2019s like you\u2019re just calculating: Judging by the rate of decline of X amount, you can predict that by time Y this will be the case. But you can\u2019t!\u201d \u201cO.K., so maybe not June,\u201d Daryl said, backing off. He had spent his life avoiding conflict. \u201cWe just thought that with your mother turning 70 on June 22, that might be a good time.\u201d \u201cWell, that\u2019s nuts,\u201d Emily said. \u201cHow can you just pick a month like that?\u201d \u201cWhat month did we say, again?\u201d Sandy asked.", "answer": "her parents and Robyn", "sentence": "That night, she sat with her parents and Robyn while they discussed the situation.", "paragraph_sentence": "Emily was angry at her father for speaking so pragmatically about her mother\u2019s death. She was angry too at her mother for choosing a date that was so soon, and at her mother\u2019s inner circle for allowing all of it to happen. That night, she sat with her parents and Robyn while they discussed the situation. Emily felt as though she was defending her mother\u2019s life against everyone who wanted her to end it. \u201cYou\u2019re just doing the math,\u201d she told Daryl. \u201cIt\u2019s like you\u2019re just calculating: Judging by the rate of decline of X amount, you can predict that by time Y this will be the case. But you can\u2019t!\u201d \u201cO.K., so maybe not June,\u201d Daryl said, backing off. He had spent his life avoiding conflict. \u201cWe just thought that with your mother turning 70 on June 22, that might be a good time.\u201d \u201cWell, that\u2019s nuts,\u201d Emily said. \u201cHow can you just pick a month like that?\u201d \u201cWhat month did we say, again?\u201d Sandy asked.", "paragraph_answer": "Emily was angry at her father for speaking so pragmatically about her mother\u2019s death. She was angry too at her mother for choosing a date that was so soon, and at her mother\u2019s inner circle for allowing all of it to happen. That night, she sat with her parents and Robyn while they discussed the situation. Emily felt as though she was defending her mother\u2019s life against everyone who wanted her to end it. \u201cYou\u2019re just doing the math,\u201d she told Daryl. \u201cIt\u2019s like you\u2019re just calculating: Judging by the rate of decline of X amount, you can predict that by time Y this will be the case. But you can\u2019t!\u201d \u201cO.K., so maybe not June,\u201d Daryl said, backing off. He had spent his life avoiding conflict. \u201cWe just thought that with your mother turning 70 on June 22, that might be a good time.\u201d \u201cWell, that\u2019s nuts,\u201d Emily said. \u201cHow can you just pick a month like that?\u201d \u201cWhat month did we say, again?\u201d Sandy asked.", "sentence_answer": "That night, she sat with her parents and Robyn while they discussed the situation.", "paragraph_id": "5d70431fc8e4820a9b66e680"} +{"question": "Who is the famous landscape painter?", "paragraph": "We all agreed signs pointed toward a lager renaissance. \u201cIt\u2019s just a cool time for lagers,\u201d Chase said. Why now? Aside from an initial distaste for diving into the style that epitomized industrial brewing, many early craft brewers had other reasons for avoiding lagers, one of the two major forms of beer, along with ales. Minimalist lagers, in general, are more difficult to produce than fruity, complex ales. They are subtle, demanding more precision and more specialized equipment. Ales, by contrast, tend to be more forgiving of errors. It\u2019s a little like the syndicated-television landscape painter Bob Ross, who would earnestly advise turning an accidental blob of paint on canvas into \u201canother happy tree.\u201d That works for ales, but with minimalist lagers, that ugly blob stands out as a flaw.", "answer": "Bob Ross", "sentence": "It\u2019s a little like the syndicated-television landscape painter Bob Ross , who would earnestly advise turning an accidental blob of paint on canvas into \u201canother happy tree.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "We all agreed signs pointed toward a lager renaissance. \u201cIt\u2019s just a cool time for lagers,\u201d Chase said. Why now? Aside from an initial distaste for diving into the style that epitomized industrial brewing, many early craft brewers had other reasons for avoiding lagers, one of the two major forms of beer, along with ales. Minimalist lagers, in general, are more difficult to produce than fruity, complex ales. They are subtle, demanding more precision and more specialized equipment. Ales, by contrast, tend to be more forgiving of errors. It\u2019s a little like the syndicated-television landscape painter Bob Ross , who would earnestly advise turning an accidental blob of paint on canvas into \u201canother happy tree.\u201d That works for ales, but with minimalist lagers, that ugly blob stands out as a flaw.", "paragraph_answer": "We all agreed signs pointed toward a lager renaissance. \u201cIt\u2019s just a cool time for lagers,\u201d Chase said. Why now? Aside from an initial distaste for diving into the style that epitomized industrial brewing, many early craft brewers had other reasons for avoiding lagers, one of the two major forms of beer, along with ales. Minimalist lagers, in general, are more difficult to produce than fruity, complex ales. They are subtle, demanding more precision and more specialized equipment. Ales, by contrast, tend to be more forgiving of errors. It\u2019s a little like the syndicated-television landscape painter Bob Ross , who would earnestly advise turning an accidental blob of paint on canvas into \u201canother happy tree.\u201d That works for ales, but with minimalist lagers, that ugly blob stands out as a flaw.", "sentence_answer": "It\u2019s a little like the syndicated-television landscape painter Bob Ross , who would earnestly advise turning an accidental blob of paint on canvas into \u201canother happy tree.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d701532c8e4820a9b66c13a"} +{"question": "What did the 2003 Military Affirmative Action ruling allow?", "paragraph": "WASHINGTON \u2014 The most influential friend-of-the-court brief in living memory was filed by a group of retired military officers in a 2003 affirmative action case. When the case was argued, the justices echoed the brief\u2019s argument that military preparedness would be threatened if service academies could not ensure a diverse officer corps. Justice Sandra Day O\u2019Connor\u2019s majority opinion, allowing race-conscious admissions at public universities, quoted at length from the brief. The law firm that filed the brief, now called Sidley Austin, has filed a new one by former military officials in the same-sex marriage cases to be heard next week. Their message this time is that the patchwork of marriage laws around the country hurts military families and threatens national security.", "answer": "race-conscious admissions at public universities", "sentence": "Justice Sandra Day O\u2019Connor\u2019s majority opinion, allowing race-conscious admissions at public universities , quoted at length from the brief.", "paragraph_sentence": "WASHINGTON \u2014 The most influential friend-of-the-court brief in living memory was filed by a group of retired military officers in a 2003 affirmative action case. When the case was argued, the justices echoed the brief\u2019s argument that military preparedness would be threatened if service academies could not ensure a diverse officer corps. Justice Sandra Day O\u2019Connor\u2019s majority opinion, allowing race-conscious admissions at public universities , quoted at length from the brief. The law firm that filed the brief, now called Sidley Austin, has filed a new one by former military officials in the same-sex marriage cases to be heard next week. Their message this time is that the patchwork of marriage laws around the country hurts military families and threatens national security.", "paragraph_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 The most influential friend-of-the-court brief in living memory was filed by a group of retired military officers in a 2003 affirmative action case. When the case was argued, the justices echoed the brief\u2019s argument that military preparedness would be threatened if service academies could not ensure a diverse officer corps. Justice Sandra Day O\u2019Connor\u2019s majority opinion, allowing race-conscious admissions at public universities , quoted at length from the brief. The law firm that filed the brief, now called Sidley Austin, has filed a new one by former military officials in the same-sex marriage cases to be heard next week. Their message this time is that the patchwork of marriage laws around the country hurts military families and threatens national security.", "sentence_answer": "Justice Sandra Day O\u2019Connor\u2019s majority opinion, allowing race-conscious admissions at public universities , quoted at length from the brief.", "paragraph_id": "5d700796c8e4820a9b66ae1f"} +{"question": "What did Araeen develop a version of?", "paragraph": "Overlooked amid all these accomplishments was Mr. Araeen\u2019s art, a selection of which is at Aicon Gallery in his first New York solo exhibition. Trained as a civil engineer, he became an artist after seeing Anthony Caro\u2019s sculptures. His own early pieces combined Mr. Caro\u2019s use of industrial materials with openwork structures adapted from architecture. In the early 1960s he developed a version of what would come to be called Minimalism before its introduction in New York by Donald Judd and others.", "answer": "Minimalism", "sentence": "In the early 1960s he developed a version of what would come to be called Minimalism before its introduction in New York by Donald Judd and others.", "paragraph_sentence": "Overlooked amid all these accomplishments was Mr. Araeen\u2019s art, a selection of which is at Aicon Gallery in his first New York solo exhibition. Trained as a civil engineer, he became an artist after seeing Anthony Caro\u2019s sculptures. His own early pieces combined Mr. Caro\u2019s use of industrial materials with openwork structures adapted from architecture. In the early 1960s he developed a version of what would come to be called Minimalism before its introduction in New York by Donald Judd and others. ", "paragraph_answer": "Overlooked amid all these accomplishments was Mr. Araeen\u2019s art, a selection of which is at Aicon Gallery in his first New York solo exhibition. Trained as a civil engineer, he became an artist after seeing Anthony Caro\u2019s sculptures. His own early pieces combined Mr. Caro\u2019s use of industrial materials with openwork structures adapted from architecture. In the early 1960s he developed a version of what would come to be called Minimalism before its introduction in New York by Donald Judd and others.", "sentence_answer": "In the early 1960s he developed a version of what would come to be called Minimalism before its introduction in New York by Donald Judd and others.", "paragraph_id": "5d70227ac8e4820a9b66ce9a"} +{"question": "When is Myanmar's final landmark election?", "paragraph": "BANGKOK \u2014 Myanmar\u2019s election commission on Friday announced the final tally of the country\u2019s Nov. 8 landmark election, a rout by the opposition, led by the Nobel Peace Prize laureate Daw Aung San Suu Kyi. Her party, the National League for Democracy, won 390 seats compared with 42 for the governing party, a state-run television station reported in its Friday evening broadcast. The remaining 59 available seats in Parliament were won by smaller parties. One-quarter of the seats were not contested and are controlled by the military.", "answer": "Nov. 8", "sentence": "BANGKOK \u2014 Myanmar\u2019s election commission on Friday announced the final tally of the country\u2019s Nov. 8 landmark election, a rout by the opposition, led by the Nobel Peace Prize laureate Daw Aung San Suu Kyi.", "paragraph_sentence": " BANGKOK \u2014 Myanmar\u2019s election commission on Friday announced the final tally of the country\u2019s Nov. 8 landmark election, a rout by the opposition, led by the Nobel Peace Prize laureate Daw Aung San Suu Kyi. Her party, the National League for Democracy, won 390 seats compared with 42 for the governing party, a state-run television station reported in its Friday evening broadcast. The remaining 59 available seats in Parliament were won by smaller parties. One-quarter of the seats were not contested and are controlled by the military.", "paragraph_answer": "BANGKOK \u2014 Myanmar\u2019s election commission on Friday announced the final tally of the country\u2019s Nov. 8 landmark election, a rout by the opposition, led by the Nobel Peace Prize laureate Daw Aung San Suu Kyi. Her party, the National League for Democracy, won 390 seats compared with 42 for the governing party, a state-run television station reported in its Friday evening broadcast. The remaining 59 available seats in Parliament were won by smaller parties. One-quarter of the seats were not contested and are controlled by the military.", "sentence_answer": "BANGKOK \u2014 Myanmar\u2019s election commission on Friday announced the final tally of the country\u2019s Nov. 8 landmark election, a rout by the opposition, led by the Nobel Peace Prize laureate Daw Aung San Suu Kyi.", "paragraph_id": "5d700771c8e4820a9b66ad97"} +{"question": "On which day of the week did Boehner announce his retirement?", "paragraph": "When Mr. Thomas retired in 2006, Mr. McCarthy, who was serving in the California State Assembly, ran for his seat. Mr. McCarthy rose quickly through the Republican ranks in part because of his fund-raising skills. Along with Representatives Eric Cantor of Virginia and Paul D. Ryan of Wisconsin, Mr. McCarthy was part of a group of so-called Young Guns in 2010 who were crucial to Republicans\u2019 regaining the majority. During that cycle, Mr. McCarthy was head of recruiting for the National Republican Congressional Committee, which provides another base of support for him among the rank and file. The No. 2 Republican in the House is often such a shoo-in for the speaker\u2019s job that the fight for that lower post generates the fiercest competition among lawmakers climbing the ranks. Mr. Boehner said on Friday that he had planned to resign last year, but reversed his decision after the unexpected election loss of Mr. Cantor, the No. 2 Republican at the time, left Mr. Boehner without an obvious successor.", "answer": "Friday", "sentence": "Mr. Boehner said on Friday that he had planned to resign last year, but reversed his decision after the unexpected election loss of Mr. Cantor, the No. 2 Republican at the time, left Mr. Boehner without an obvious successor.", "paragraph_sentence": "When Mr. Thomas retired in 2006, Mr. McCarthy, who was serving in the California State Assembly, ran for his seat. Mr. McCarthy rose quickly through the Republican ranks in part because of his fund-raising skills. Along with Representatives Eric Cantor of Virginia and Paul D. Ryan of Wisconsin, Mr. McCarthy was part of a group of so-called Young Guns in 2010 who were crucial to Republicans\u2019 regaining the majority. During that cycle, Mr. McCarthy was head of recruiting for the National Republican Congressional Committee, which provides another base of support for him among the rank and file. The No. 2 Republican in the House is often such a shoo-in for the speaker\u2019s job that the fight for that lower post generates the fiercest competition among lawmakers climbing the ranks. Mr. Boehner said on Friday that he had planned to resign last year, but reversed his decision after the unexpected election loss of Mr. Cantor, the No. 2 Republican at the time, left Mr. Boehner without an obvious successor. ", "paragraph_answer": "When Mr. Thomas retired in 2006, Mr. McCarthy, who was serving in the California State Assembly, ran for his seat. Mr. McCarthy rose quickly through the Republican ranks in part because of his fund-raising skills. Along with Representatives Eric Cantor of Virginia and Paul D. Ryan of Wisconsin, Mr. McCarthy was part of a group of so-called Young Guns in 2010 who were crucial to Republicans\u2019 regaining the majority. During that cycle, Mr. McCarthy was head of recruiting for the National Republican Congressional Committee, which provides another base of support for him among the rank and file. The No. 2 Republican in the House is often such a shoo-in for the speaker\u2019s job that the fight for that lower post generates the fiercest competition among lawmakers climbing the ranks. Mr. Boehner said on Friday that he had planned to resign last year, but reversed his decision after the unexpected election loss of Mr. Cantor, the No. 2 Republican at the time, left Mr. Boehner without an obvious successor.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Boehner said on Friday that he had planned to resign last year, but reversed his decision after the unexpected election loss of Mr. Cantor, the No. 2 Republican at the time, left Mr. Boehner without an obvious successor.", "paragraph_id": "5d7031ffc8e4820a9b66dd9e"} +{"question": "What protections are negotiators are trying to include?", "paragraph": "One mistake the Nafta negotiators made more than two decades ago was taking worker rights and environmental protections out of the agreement itself and putting them into a side letter. They were never effectively enforced. Those negotiating the Trans-Pacific Partnership expect to rectify that error this go-round. They are also aiming to pry open the Japanese auto and agricultural markets to American producers, and include protections for a free and open Internet. It has, in other words, a lot more potential to do good than harm.", "answer": "protections for a free and open Internet", "sentence": "They are also aiming to pry open the Japanese auto and agricultural markets to American producers, and include protections for a free and open Internet .", "paragraph_sentence": "One mistake the Nafta negotiators made more than two decades ago was taking worker rights and environmental protections out of the agreement itself and putting them into a side letter. They were never effectively enforced. Those negotiating the Trans-Pacific Partnership expect to rectify that error this go-round. They are also aiming to pry open the Japanese auto and agricultural markets to American producers, and include protections for a free and open Internet . It has, in other words, a lot more potential to do good than harm.", "paragraph_answer": "One mistake the Nafta negotiators made more than two decades ago was taking worker rights and environmental protections out of the agreement itself and putting them into a side letter. They were never effectively enforced. Those negotiating the Trans-Pacific Partnership expect to rectify that error this go-round. They are also aiming to pry open the Japanese auto and agricultural markets to American producers, and include protections for a free and open Internet . It has, in other words, a lot more potential to do good than harm.", "sentence_answer": "They are also aiming to pry open the Japanese auto and agricultural markets to American producers, and include protections for a free and open Internet .", "paragraph_id": "5d701600c8e4820a9b66c210"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d70091cc8e4820a9b66b191"} +{"question": "How much is the mansion tax in New York?", "paragraph": "Currently, the state has a \u201cmansion tax\u201d of 1 percent on the sales of homes over $1 million. The de Blasio administration is calling for an additional 1 percent tax on the sale of homes in New York City over $1.75 million, which would rise to 1.5 percent tax on sales over $5 million. State Senator Liz Krueger, a Democrat from Manhattan, said there may be a \u201cwindow of opportunity\u201d in Albany right now, where no one wants to be seen to be favoring programs that are viewed as giveaways to real estate interests. \u201cEverything is very fluid right now,\u201d she said. Ms. Krueger supports the de Blasio administration\u2019s push to strengthen rent regulations, but she said the 421-a tax abatement program should be scrapped. \u201cWhy not keep the money and spend it on programs that work,\u201d she said.", "answer": "1 percent on the sales of homes over $1 million", "sentence": "Currently, the state has a \u201cmansion tax\u201d of 1 percent on the sales of homes over $1 million .", "paragraph_sentence": " Currently, the state has a \u201cmansion tax\u201d of 1 percent on the sales of homes over $1 million . The de Blasio administration is calling for an additional 1 percent tax on the sale of homes in New York City over $1.75 million, which would rise to 1.5 percent tax on sales over $5 million. State Senator Liz Krueger, a Democrat from Manhattan, said there may be a \u201cwindow of opportunity\u201d in Albany right now, where no one wants to be seen to be favoring programs that are viewed as giveaways to real estate interests. \u201cEverything is very fluid right now,\u201d she said. Ms. Krueger supports the de Blasio administration\u2019s push to strengthen rent regulations, but she said the 421-a tax abatement program should be scrapped. \u201cWhy not keep the money and spend it on programs that work,\u201d she said.", "paragraph_answer": "Currently, the state has a \u201cmansion tax\u201d of 1 percent on the sales of homes over $1 million . The de Blasio administration is calling for an additional 1 percent tax on the sale of homes in New York City over $1.75 million, which would rise to 1.5 percent tax on sales over $5 million. State Senator Liz Krueger, a Democrat from Manhattan, said there may be a \u201cwindow of opportunity\u201d in Albany right now, where no one wants to be seen to be favoring programs that are viewed as giveaways to real estate interests. \u201cEverything is very fluid right now,\u201d she said. Ms. Krueger supports the de Blasio administration\u2019s push to strengthen rent regulations, but she said the 421-a tax abatement program should be scrapped. \u201cWhy not keep the money and spend it on programs that work,\u201d she said.", "sentence_answer": "Currently, the state has a \u201cmansion tax\u201d of 1 percent on the sales of homes over $1 million .", "paragraph_id": "5d702362c8e4820a9b66cf87"} +{"question": "What W.N.B.A team with Thomas become the president of?", "paragraph": "Dolan announced that Thomas, a Hall of Fame point guard, would serve as president of the W.N.B.A.\u2019s Liberty, the city\u2019s women\u2019s basketball team. \u201cWe believe Isiah belongs in basketball,\u201d Madison Square Garden officials said in a statement, \u201cand are grateful that he has committed his considerable talent to help the Liberty succeed.\u201d This statement is fine as far as it goes, particularly if you\u2019ve suffered catastrophic memory loss. Thomas and Dolan last roamed together in the corporate suites at the Garden in 2008. A year before that, a jury found that Thomas had sexually harassed a team executive in the crudest of terms. The executive, now known professionally as Anucha Browne, testified that Thomas had used misogynistic slurs. When she complained to top officials at the Garden, Dolan personally insisted on firing her. Who among us does not believe in repentance and second chances? I called to ask the Garden about Thomas and the boss. Have the two men repented? Do they have second thoughts? Or have they rethought their first thoughts? This email statement arrived in my inbox:", "answer": "Liberty", "sentence": "Dolan announced that Thomas, a Hall of Fame point guard, would serve as president of the W.N.B.A.\u2019s Liberty , the city\u2019s women\u2019s basketball team.", "paragraph_sentence": " Dolan announced that Thomas, a Hall of Fame point guard, would serve as president of the W.N.B.A.\u2019s Liberty , the city\u2019s women\u2019s basketball team. \u201cWe believe Isiah belongs in basketball,\u201d Madison Square Garden officials said in a statement, \u201cand are grateful that he has committed his considerable talent to help the Liberty succeed.\u201d This statement is fine as far as it goes, particularly if you\u2019ve suffered catastrophic memory loss. Thomas and Dolan last roamed together in the corporate suites at the Garden in 2008. A year before that, a jury found that Thomas had sexually harassed a team executive in the crudest of terms. The executive, now known professionally as Anucha Browne, testified that Thomas had used misogynistic slurs. When she complained to top officials at the Garden, Dolan personally insisted on firing her. Who among us does not believe in repentance and second chances? I called to ask the Garden about Thomas and the boss. Have the two men repented? Do they have second thoughts? Or have they rethought their first thoughts? This email statement arrived in my inbox:", "paragraph_answer": "Dolan announced that Thomas, a Hall of Fame point guard, would serve as president of the W.N.B.A.\u2019s Liberty , the city\u2019s women\u2019s basketball team. \u201cWe believe Isiah belongs in basketball,\u201d Madison Square Garden officials said in a statement, \u201cand are grateful that he has committed his considerable talent to help the Liberty succeed.\u201d This statement is fine as far as it goes, particularly if you\u2019ve suffered catastrophic memory loss. Thomas and Dolan last roamed together in the corporate suites at the Garden in 2008. A year before that, a jury found that Thomas had sexually harassed a team executive in the crudest of terms. The executive, now known professionally as Anucha Browne, testified that Thomas had used misogynistic slurs. When she complained to top officials at the Garden, Dolan personally insisted on firing her. Who among us does not believe in repentance and second chances? I called to ask the Garden about Thomas and the boss. Have the two men repented? Do they have second thoughts? Or have they rethought their first thoughts? This email statement arrived in my inbox:", "sentence_answer": "Dolan announced that Thomas, a Hall of Fame point guard, would serve as president of the W.N.B.A.\u2019s Liberty , the city\u2019s women\u2019s basketball team.", "paragraph_id": "5d7041a2c8e4820a9b66e5b4"} +{"question": "what was the rate of inflation in November?", "paragraph": "FRANKFURT \u2014 A strong indication on Friday that the European Central Bank is on the verge of aggressive action to stimulate the economy, just as the Federal Reserve is dialing back its stimulus, helped push the euro to its lowest level against the dollar since 2010. Mario Draghi, the president of the European Central Bank, said in an interview published in the German newspaper Handelsblatt that the risk that the central bank would not be able to meet its main task of keeping inflation from being too low or too high was greater than it had been six months ago. At 0.3 percent in November, inflation in the eurozone was far below the central bank\u2019s official target of close to 2 percent. Investors interpreted Mr. Draghi\u2019s comments to mean that the central bank is moving closer to broad-based purchases of government bonds, the same kind of \u201cquantitative easing\u201d that the Fed used to push down market interest rates in the United States \u2014 and is phasing out as growth picks up.", "answer": "0.3 percent", "sentence": "At 0.3 percent in November, inflation in the eurozone was far below the central bank\u2019s official target of close to 2 percent.", "paragraph_sentence": "FRANKFURT \u2014 A strong indication on Friday that the European Central Bank is on the verge of aggressive action to stimulate the economy, just as the Federal Reserve is dialing back its stimulus, helped push the euro to its lowest level against the dollar since 2010. Mario Draghi, the president of the European Central Bank, said in an interview published in the German newspaper Handelsblatt that the risk that the central bank would not be able to meet its main task of keeping inflation from being too low or too high was greater than it had been six months ago. At 0.3 percent in November, inflation in the eurozone was far below the central bank\u2019s official target of close to 2 percent. Investors interpreted Mr. Draghi\u2019s comments to mean that the central bank is moving closer to broad-based purchases of government bonds, the same kind of \u201cquantitative easing\u201d that the Fed used to push down market interest rates in the United States \u2014 and is phasing out as growth picks up.", "paragraph_answer": "FRANKFURT \u2014 A strong indication on Friday that the European Central Bank is on the verge of aggressive action to stimulate the economy, just as the Federal Reserve is dialing back its stimulus, helped push the euro to its lowest level against the dollar since 2010. Mario Draghi, the president of the European Central Bank, said in an interview published in the German newspaper Handelsblatt that the risk that the central bank would not be able to meet its main task of keeping inflation from being too low or too high was greater than it had been six months ago. At 0.3 percent in November, inflation in the eurozone was far below the central bank\u2019s official target of close to 2 percent. Investors interpreted Mr. Draghi\u2019s comments to mean that the central bank is moving closer to broad-based purchases of government bonds, the same kind of \u201cquantitative easing\u201d that the Fed used to push down market interest rates in the United States \u2014 and is phasing out as growth picks up.", "sentence_answer": "At 0.3 percent in November, inflation in the eurozone was far below the central bank\u2019s official target of close to 2 percent.", "paragraph_id": "5d706342c8e4820a9b66f058"} +{"question": "How much did John Rakis spend on care for his mother-in-law?", "paragraph": "She spent about $65,000 of her own money and her mother\u2019s in the five years before her mother died. As for her mother\u2019s money, by the time she died, \u201cit was gone,\u201d Ms. Olson said. John Rakis, a consultant in New York, spent more than $189,000 in less than two years for caregivers and other expenses for his mother-in-law, 92, who has dementia and lives in a housing project in Manhattan. He promised his wife, who died in January 2013, that he would take care of her mother. She left a portion of her life insurance and death benefit money to her mother, and Mr. Rakis spent it on her care. Until it was gone. \u201cThe money ran out in June,\u201d Mr. Rakis said. \u201cI was losing sleep.\u201d", "answer": "more than $189,000", "sentence": "John Rakis, a consultant in New York, spent more than $189,000 in less than two years for caregivers and other expenses for his mother-in-law, 92, who has dementia and lives in a housing project in Manhattan.", "paragraph_sentence": "She spent about $65,000 of her own money and her mother\u2019s in the five years before her mother died. As for her mother\u2019s money, by the time she died, \u201cit was gone,\u201d Ms. Olson said. John Rakis, a consultant in New York, spent more than $189,000 in less than two years for caregivers and other expenses for his mother-in-law, 92, who has dementia and lives in a housing project in Manhattan. He promised his wife, who died in January 2013, that he would take care of her mother. She left a portion of her life insurance and death benefit money to her mother, and Mr. Rakis spent it on her care. Until it was gone. \u201cThe money ran out in June,\u201d Mr. Rakis said. \u201cI was losing sleep.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "She spent about $65,000 of her own money and her mother\u2019s in the five years before her mother died. As for her mother\u2019s money, by the time she died, \u201cit was gone,\u201d Ms. Olson said. John Rakis, a consultant in New York, spent more than $189,000 in less than two years for caregivers and other expenses for his mother-in-law, 92, who has dementia and lives in a housing project in Manhattan. He promised his wife, who died in January 2013, that he would take care of her mother. She left a portion of her life insurance and death benefit money to her mother, and Mr. Rakis spent it on her care. Until it was gone. \u201cThe money ran out in June,\u201d Mr. Rakis said. \u201cI was losing sleep.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "John Rakis, a consultant in New York, spent more than $189,000 in less than two years for caregivers and other expenses for his mother-in-law, 92, who has dementia and lives in a housing project in Manhattan.", "paragraph_id": "5d7032e1c8e4820a9b66de19"} +{"question": "Who is a major regional power in the Middle East?", "paragraph": "Iran is a major regional power. Keeping it fully within the structures of the Nonproliferation Treaty is an important element in building the rule of law in a region that is being torn apart by national, religious and local conflict. We very much hope that our legislative colleagues in the United States Congress, in their deliberations on these issues, will bear in mind the multilateral nature of the agreement, the value of sustaining that coalition for its successful implementation, and the views that we have expressed. We trust also that they appreciate that these views are shared by a majority of the United States\u2019 most loyal allies, including the members of the European Union and the European members of NATO.", "answer": "Iran", "sentence": "Iran is a major regional power.", "paragraph_sentence": " Iran is a major regional power. Keeping it fully within the structures of the Nonproliferation Treaty is an important element in building the rule of law in a region that is being torn apart by national, religious and local conflict. We very much hope that our legislative colleagues in the United States Congress, in their deliberations on these issues, will bear in mind the multilateral nature of the agreement, the value of sustaining that coalition for its successful implementation, and the views that we have expressed. We trust also that they appreciate that these views are shared by a majority of the United States\u2019 most loyal allies, including the members of the European Union and the European members of NATO.", "paragraph_answer": " Iran is a major regional power. Keeping it fully within the structures of the Nonproliferation Treaty is an important element in building the rule of law in a region that is being torn apart by national, religious and local conflict. We very much hope that our legislative colleagues in the United States Congress, in their deliberations on these issues, will bear in mind the multilateral nature of the agreement, the value of sustaining that coalition for its successful implementation, and the views that we have expressed. We trust also that they appreciate that these views are shared by a majority of the United States\u2019 most loyal allies, including the members of the European Union and the European members of NATO.", "sentence_answer": " Iran is a major regional power.", "paragraph_id": "5d704009c8e4820a9b66e4b8"} +{"question": "Of the two main styles of beer which is harder to produce?", "paragraph": "We all agreed signs pointed toward a lager renaissance. \u201cIt\u2019s just a cool time for lagers,\u201d Chase said. Why now? Aside from an initial distaste for diving into the style that epitomized industrial brewing, many early craft brewers had other reasons for avoiding lagers, one of the two major forms of beer, along with ales. Minimalist lagers, in general, are more difficult to produce than fruity, complex ales. They are subtle, demanding more precision and more specialized equipment. Ales, by contrast, tend to be more forgiving of errors. It\u2019s a little like the syndicated-television landscape painter Bob Ross, who would earnestly advise turning an accidental blob of paint on canvas into \u201canother happy tree.\u201d That works for ales, but with minimalist lagers, that ugly blob stands out as a flaw.", "answer": "lagers", "sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s just a cool time for lagers ,\u201d Chase said.", "paragraph_sentence": "We all agreed signs pointed toward a lager renaissance. \u201cIt\u2019s just a cool time for lagers ,\u201d Chase said. Why now? Aside from an initial distaste for diving into the style that epitomized industrial brewing, many early craft brewers had other reasons for avoiding lagers, one of the two major forms of beer, along with ales. Minimalist lagers, in general, are more difficult to produce than fruity, complex ales. They are subtle, demanding more precision and more specialized equipment. Ales, by contrast, tend to be more forgiving of errors. It\u2019s a little like the syndicated-television landscape painter Bob Ross, who would earnestly advise turning an accidental blob of paint on canvas into \u201canother happy tree.\u201d That works for ales, but with minimalist lagers, that ugly blob stands out as a flaw.", "paragraph_answer": "We all agreed signs pointed toward a lager renaissance. \u201cIt\u2019s just a cool time for lagers ,\u201d Chase said. Why now? Aside from an initial distaste for diving into the style that epitomized industrial brewing, many early craft brewers had other reasons for avoiding lagers, one of the two major forms of beer, along with ales. Minimalist lagers, in general, are more difficult to produce than fruity, complex ales. They are subtle, demanding more precision and more specialized equipment. Ales, by contrast, tend to be more forgiving of errors. It\u2019s a little like the syndicated-television landscape painter Bob Ross, who would earnestly advise turning an accidental blob of paint on canvas into \u201canother happy tree.\u201d That works for ales, but with minimalist lagers, that ugly blob stands out as a flaw.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s just a cool time for lagers ,\u201d Chase said.", "paragraph_id": "5d701532c8e4820a9b66c13b"} +{"question": "The article about Diana misidentified the church there in Yekaterinburg Russia, what is the accurate name?", "paragraph": "An article on Wednesday about Diana Taurasi\u2019s experiences playing professional basketball in Yekaterinburg, Russia, misidentified the church there that is built over the cellar where the Romanovs were assassinated. It is the Church on Blood in Honor of All Saints Resplendent in the Russian Land \u2014 not the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood, which is in St. Petersburg. THE ARTS A listing of credits on Wednesday with a theater review of \u201cThe Evening,\u201d at the Kitchen in Manhattan, omitted two organizations that are presenting the play in addition to New York City Players. They are the Kitchen and Performance Space 122.", "answer": "It is the Church on Blood in Honor of All Saints Resplendent in the Russian Land", "sentence": "It is the Church on Blood in Honor of All Saints Resplendent in the Russian Land \u2014 not the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood, which is in St. Petersburg.", "paragraph_sentence": "An article on Wednesday about Diana Taurasi\u2019s experiences playing professional basketball in Yekaterinburg, Russia, misidentified the church there that is built over the cellar where the Romanovs were assassinated. It is the Church on Blood in Honor of All Saints Resplendent in the Russian Land \u2014 not the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood, which is in St. Petersburg. THE ARTS A listing of credits on Wednesday with a theater review of \u201cThe Evening,\u201d at the Kitchen in Manhattan, omitted two organizations that are presenting the play in addition to New York City Players. They are the Kitchen and Performance Space 122.", "paragraph_answer": "An article on Wednesday about Diana Taurasi\u2019s experiences playing professional basketball in Yekaterinburg, Russia, misidentified the church there that is built over the cellar where the Romanovs were assassinated. It is the Church on Blood in Honor of All Saints Resplendent in the Russian Land \u2014 not the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood, which is in St. Petersburg. THE ARTS A listing of credits on Wednesday with a theater review of \u201cThe Evening,\u201d at the Kitchen in Manhattan, omitted two organizations that are presenting the play in addition to New York City Players. They are the Kitchen and Performance Space 122.", "sentence_answer": " It is the Church on Blood in Honor of All Saints Resplendent in the Russian Land \u2014 not the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood, which is in St. Petersburg.", "paragraph_id": "5d70523ec8e4820a9b66ebba"} +{"question": "How did PolitiFact rate the truthfulness of Fiorina's comments?", "paragraph": "But more importantly during Wednesday\u2019s debate, Fiorina unleashed a scurrilous attack in her pitch to defund Planned Parenthood, saying of the attack videos released about the group: \u201cI dare Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama to watch these tapes. Watch a fully formed fetus on the table, its heart beating, its legs kicking, while someone says, \u2018We have to keep it alive to harvest its brain.\u2019 \u201c In fact, the footage of the fetus was \u201cstock footage\u201d that \u201cwas added to the video to dramatize its content,\u201d according to PolitiFact, which rated Fiorina\u2019s comments as \u201cmostly false.\u201d FactCheck.org also said: \u201cWe are aware of no video showing such a scene.\u201d As Talking Points Memo\u2019s Josh Marshall put it Friday: \u201cFiorina has a habit of simply making things up.\u201d", "answer": "mostly false.", "sentence": "\u201c In fact, the footage of the fetus was \u201cstock footage\u201d that \u201cwas added to the video to dramatize its content,\u201d according to PolitiFact, which rated Fiorina\u2019s comments as \u201c mostly false. \u201d FactCheck.org also said: \u201cWe are aware of no video showing such a scene.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "But more importantly during Wednesday\u2019s debate, Fiorina unleashed a scurrilous attack in her pitch to defund Planned Parenthood, saying of the attack videos released about the group: \u201cI dare Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama to watch these tapes. Watch a fully formed fetus on the table, its heart beating, its legs kicking, while someone says, \u2018We have to keep it alive to harvest its brain.\u2019 \u201c In fact, the footage of the fetus was \u201cstock footage\u201d that \u201cwas added to the video to dramatize its content,\u201d according to PolitiFact, which rated Fiorina\u2019s comments as \u201c mostly false. \u201d FactCheck.org also said: \u201cWe are aware of no video showing such a scene.\u201d As Talking Points Memo\u2019s Josh Marshall put it Friday: \u201cFiorina has a habit of simply making things up.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "But more importantly during Wednesday\u2019s debate, Fiorina unleashed a scurrilous attack in her pitch to defund Planned Parenthood, saying of the attack videos released about the group: \u201cI dare Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama to watch these tapes. Watch a fully formed fetus on the table, its heart beating, its legs kicking, while someone says, \u2018We have to keep it alive to harvest its brain.\u2019 \u201c In fact, the footage of the fetus was \u201cstock footage\u201d that \u201cwas added to the video to dramatize its content,\u201d according to PolitiFact, which rated Fiorina\u2019s comments as \u201c mostly false. \u201d FactCheck.org also said: \u201cWe are aware of no video showing such a scene.\u201d As Talking Points Memo\u2019s Josh Marshall put it Friday: \u201cFiorina has a habit of simply making things up.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201c In fact, the footage of the fetus was \u201cstock footage\u201d that \u201cwas added to the video to dramatize its content,\u201d according to PolitiFact, which rated Fiorina\u2019s comments as \u201c mostly false. \u201d FactCheck.org also said: \u201cWe are aware of no video showing such a scene.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d702b99c8e4820a9b66d938"} +{"question": "What is the name of shooter?", "paragraph": "A 20-year-old former community college student was being sought for the fatal shooting of a campus print shop director whom he used to work under, the authorities said Monday. The former student, Kenneth M. Stancil III, was accused of killing Ron Lane, who was shot as he arrived for his job Monday morning at Wayne Community College in Goldsboro. The police did not release a motive for the shooting. Mr. Stancil was a third-year student at the college but it was not immediately clear when he last attended. Mr. Lane had been his work-study boss.", "answer": "Kenneth M. Stancil III", "sentence": "The former student, Kenneth M. Stancil III , was accused of killing Ron Lane, who was shot as he arrived for his job Monday morning at Wayne Community College in Goldsboro.", "paragraph_sentence": "A 20-year-old former community college student was being sought for the fatal shooting of a campus print shop director whom he used to work under, the authorities said Monday. The former student, Kenneth M. Stancil III , was accused of killing Ron Lane, who was shot as he arrived for his job Monday morning at Wayne Community College in Goldsboro. The police did not release a motive for the shooting. Mr. Stancil was a third-year student at the college but it was not immediately clear when he last attended. Mr. Lane had been his work-study boss.", "paragraph_answer": "A 20-year-old former community college student was being sought for the fatal shooting of a campus print shop director whom he used to work under, the authorities said Monday. The former student, Kenneth M. Stancil III , was accused of killing Ron Lane, who was shot as he arrived for his job Monday morning at Wayne Community College in Goldsboro. The police did not release a motive for the shooting. Mr. Stancil was a third-year student at the college but it was not immediately clear when he last attended. Mr. Lane had been his work-study boss.", "sentence_answer": "The former student, Kenneth M. Stancil III , was accused of killing Ron Lane, who was shot as he arrived for his job Monday morning at Wayne Community College in Goldsboro.", "paragraph_id": "5d702acfc8e4820a9b66d85d"} +{"question": "How old is her eldest daughter?", "paragraph": "One of her children is thriving in a special education program where he gets one-to-one attention, and she is thrilled that the school provides regular updates on his progress. In Dallas, she did not learn that he had been attending the wrong class until she received a notice requiring her to appear at truancy court. Her eldest daughter, 14, has started to talk about going to college. \u201cIt\u2019s so quiet out here,\u201d Ms. White said as she sat in the living room of the first house she has lived in, the family\u2019s new dog on her lap. \u201cI love it.\u201d The government has tried before to fix the rent subsidy program. In the early 1990s, an experiment called Moving to Opportunity required some families to use their vouchers in more expensive neighborhoods. In 2000, a broader initiative raised the value of all vouchers in 49 metropolitan areas. Officials hoped the change would make it possible for families to find rental apartments in a broader range of neighborhoods. Instead, a recent study by the economists Peter Ganong of Harvard and Robert Collinson of New York University found that most families ended up paying higher rents in the same neighborhoods \u2014 and often for the same units.", "answer": "14", "sentence": "Her eldest daughter, 14 , has started to talk about going to college.", "paragraph_sentence": "One of her children is thriving in a special education program where he gets one-to-one attention, and she is thrilled that the school provides regular updates on his progress. In Dallas, she did not learn that he had been attending the wrong class until she received a notice requiring her to appear at truancy court. Her eldest daughter, 14 , has started to talk about going to college. \u201cIt\u2019s so quiet out here,\u201d Ms. White said as she sat in the living room of the first house she has lived in, the family\u2019s new dog on her lap. \u201cI love it.\u201d The government has tried before to fix the rent subsidy program. In the early 1990s, an experiment called Moving to Opportunity required some families to use their vouchers in more expensive neighborhoods. In 2000, a broader initiative raised the value of all vouchers in 49 metropolitan areas. Officials hoped the change would make it possible for families to find rental apartments in a broader range of neighborhoods. Instead, a recent study by the economists Peter Ganong of Harvard and Robert Collinson of New York University found that most families ended up paying higher rents in the same neighborhoods \u2014 and often for the same units.", "paragraph_answer": "One of her children is thriving in a special education program where he gets one-to-one attention, and she is thrilled that the school provides regular updates on his progress. In Dallas, she did not learn that he had been attending the wrong class until she received a notice requiring her to appear at truancy court. Her eldest daughter, 14 , has started to talk about going to college. \u201cIt\u2019s so quiet out here,\u201d Ms. White said as she sat in the living room of the first house she has lived in, the family\u2019s new dog on her lap. \u201cI love it.\u201d The government has tried before to fix the rent subsidy program. In the early 1990s, an experiment called Moving to Opportunity required some families to use their vouchers in more expensive neighborhoods. In 2000, a broader initiative raised the value of all vouchers in 49 metropolitan areas. Officials hoped the change would make it possible for families to find rental apartments in a broader range of neighborhoods. Instead, a recent study by the economists Peter Ganong of Harvard and Robert Collinson of New York University found that most families ended up paying higher rents in the same neighborhoods \u2014 and often for the same units.", "sentence_answer": "Her eldest daughter, 14 , has started to talk about going to college.", "paragraph_id": "5d704766c8e4820a9b66e888"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700840c8e4820a9b66afaf"} +{"question": "In what year was Mr. Harrell first incarcerated?", "paragraph": "Mr. Harrell had served several stints in prison for drug crimes starting in 2002. He had five disciplinary infractions while incarcerated, including one days before his death for possessing contraband, according to prison records. None involved violence. Inmates and family members say that any erratic behavior more likely stemmed from his mental illness. In the weeks before his death, they said, he had been depressed. In 2010 he learned he had bipolar disorder and was hospitalized, according to medical records. His wife, Diane Harrell, said that when he was not taking his medication, he would go through the house turning over family photographs for fear they were staring at him. He also believed the television was talking to him, she said.", "answer": "2002", "sentence": "Mr. Harrell had served several stints in prison for drug crimes starting in 2002 .", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Harrell had served several stints in prison for drug crimes starting in 2002 . He had five disciplinary infractions while incarcerated, including one days before his death for possessing contraband, according to prison records. None involved violence. Inmates and family members say that any erratic behavior more likely stemmed from his mental illness. In the weeks before his death, they said, he had been depressed. In 2010 he learned he had bipolar disorder and was hospitalized, according to medical records. His wife, Diane Harrell, said that when he was not taking his medication, he would go through the house turning over family photographs for fear they were staring at him. He also believed the television was talking to him, she said.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Harrell had served several stints in prison for drug crimes starting in 2002 . He had five disciplinary infractions while incarcerated, including one days before his death for possessing contraband, according to prison records. None involved violence. Inmates and family members say that any erratic behavior more likely stemmed from his mental illness. In the weeks before his death, they said, he had been depressed. In 2010 he learned he had bipolar disorder and was hospitalized, according to medical records. His wife, Diane Harrell, said that when he was not taking his medication, he would go through the house turning over family photographs for fear they were staring at him. He also believed the television was talking to him, she said.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Harrell had served several stints in prison for drug crimes starting in 2002 .", "paragraph_id": "5d701da1c8e4820a9b66c914"} +{"question": "What was the most difficult decision that I decided to make?", "paragraph": "The most difficult decision was when I decided to change the way the group was working. Before, there were silos with specialists working solo \u2014 a big network of people working independently. But I was convinced we needed to change. When you create something for the long term, you have to accept that you may have some collateral damage in the short term. To my surprise, people really followed the vision and we didn\u2019t have the slowdown that we had anticipated. Now I want to build on the momentum. The industry will continue to change, so we need to stay agile and adapt. I don\u2019t know what the future will be, but I know I want us to stay the most forward-thinking agency. That means constantly reassessing, never taking anything for granted. Nothing lasts forever and our group is the prime example. It has changed many times, depending on the economic environment. Dinosaurs no longer exist, and they were at the top of the food chain. Q. Do you miss being an entrepreneur?", "answer": "change the way the group was working", "sentence": "The most difficult decision was when I decided to change the way the group was working .", "paragraph_sentence": " The most difficult decision was when I decided to change the way the group was working . Before, there were silos with specialists working solo \u2014 a big network of people working independently. But I was convinced we needed to change. When you create something for the long term, you have to accept that you may have some collateral damage in the short term. To my surprise, people really followed the vision and we didn\u2019t have the slowdown that we had anticipated. Now I want to build on the momentum. The industry will continue to change, so we need to stay agile and adapt. I don\u2019t know what the future will be, but I know I want us to stay the most forward-thinking agency. That means constantly reassessing, never taking anything for granted. Nothing lasts forever and our group is the prime example. It has changed many times, depending on the economic environment. Dinosaurs no longer exist, and they were at the top of the food chain. Q. Do you miss being an entrepreneur?", "paragraph_answer": "The most difficult decision was when I decided to change the way the group was working . Before, there were silos with specialists working solo \u2014 a big network of people working independently. But I was convinced we needed to change. When you create something for the long term, you have to accept that you may have some collateral damage in the short term. To my surprise, people really followed the vision and we didn\u2019t have the slowdown that we had anticipated. Now I want to build on the momentum. The industry will continue to change, so we need to stay agile and adapt. I don\u2019t know what the future will be, but I know I want us to stay the most forward-thinking agency. That means constantly reassessing, never taking anything for granted. Nothing lasts forever and our group is the prime example. It has changed many times, depending on the economic environment. Dinosaurs no longer exist, and they were at the top of the food chain. Q. Do you miss being an entrepreneur?", "sentence_answer": "The most difficult decision was when I decided to change the way the group was working .", "paragraph_id": "5d7074f0c8e4820a9b66f25d"} +{"question": "What recently caused damage to the property?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt may be a maternal refusal to face facts,\u201d says Mann plaintively when challeged about her fine distinctions. \u201cI only wish that people looked at the pictures the way I do.\u201d As Mann and I sit on the steps of the cabin at the 400-acre farm she owns with her brothers, Jessie and Virginia are splashing in the Maury River below, having stripped as soon we arrived. Most of the photographs in the family series were taken here, deep in the woods, miles from electricity. A flood has recently wrecked the place. With the wind billowing the curtains from the paneless windows behind us, Mann watches her children and talks about her fears for them and for the pictures. \u201cTheir lives have been so fulfilling,\u201d she says sadly. \u201cAdults have treated them with respect. They have no idea what\u2019s out there in the world. I know what to be afraid of. They don\u2019t. \u201cWhen I went to that Federal prosecutor, she said: \u2018Do you know what you really have to watch for? Someone who sees these pictures and moves to Lexington and ingratiates himself into your family life. They\u2019ll come after Jessie and Virginia because they seem so pliable, so broken in.\u2019", "answer": "flood", "sentence": "A flood has recently wrecked the place.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt may be a maternal refusal to face facts,\u201d says Mann plaintively when challeged about her fine distinctions. \u201cI only wish that people looked at the pictures the way I do.\u201d As Mann and I sit on the steps of the cabin at the 400-acre farm she owns with her brothers, Jessie and Virginia are splashing in the Maury River below, having stripped as soon we arrived. Most of the photographs in the family series were taken here, deep in the woods, miles from electricity. A flood has recently wrecked the place. With the wind billowing the curtains from the paneless windows behind us, Mann watches her children and talks about her fears for them and for the pictures. \u201cTheir lives have been so fulfilling,\u201d she says sadly. \u201cAdults have treated them with respect. They have no idea what\u2019s out there in the world. I know what to be afraid of. They don\u2019t. \u201cWhen I went to that Federal prosecutor, she said: \u2018Do you know what you really have to watch for? Someone who sees these pictures and moves to Lexington and ingratiates himself into your family life. They\u2019ll come after Jessie and Virginia because they seem so pliable, so broken in.\u2019", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt may be a maternal refusal to face facts,\u201d says Mann plaintively when challeged about her fine distinctions. \u201cI only wish that people looked at the pictures the way I do.\u201d As Mann and I sit on the steps of the cabin at the 400-acre farm she owns with her brothers, Jessie and Virginia are splashing in the Maury River below, having stripped as soon we arrived. Most of the photographs in the family series were taken here, deep in the woods, miles from electricity. A flood has recently wrecked the place. With the wind billowing the curtains from the paneless windows behind us, Mann watches her children and talks about her fears for them and for the pictures. \u201cTheir lives have been so fulfilling,\u201d she says sadly. \u201cAdults have treated them with respect. They have no idea what\u2019s out there in the world. I know what to be afraid of. They don\u2019t. \u201cWhen I went to that Federal prosecutor, she said: \u2018Do you know what you really have to watch for? Someone who sees these pictures and moves to Lexington and ingratiates himself into your family life. They\u2019ll come after Jessie and Virginia because they seem so pliable, so broken in.\u2019", "sentence_answer": "A flood has recently wrecked the place.", "paragraph_id": "5d700b22c8e4820a9b66b576"} +{"question": "What are two things South Korea provides North Korean defectors with?", "paragraph": "Historically, the North\u2019s propagandists vilified the South and its economy, but now that more Northerners know some of the truth through illegally smuggled South Korean television shows and other contraband, Pyongyang has redefined the difference in economies in relative terms: Though South Korea may be rich, any North Koreans foolish enough to chase Southern dreams will only find a life of hardship and poverty there. The double defectors play right into Pyongyang\u2019s new narrative. Many of them are featured in scripted press conferences in which they claim to have encountered a life of misery in the South. The double-defector propaganda has also given the regime a defense against human rights criticism from abroad: If North Korea really is so horrible, why do so many people keep returning? South Korea already provides a lot of support for defectors, including living expenses and a place to live. It also helps with our education and finding jobs. Despite this generous assistance, which some struggling South Koreans resent, we need more emotional support and ongoing counseling to help with the integration process.", "answer": "living expenses and a place to live", "sentence": "South Korea already provides a lot of support for defectors, including living expenses and a place to live .", "paragraph_sentence": "Historically, the North\u2019s propagandists vilified the South and its economy, but now that more Northerners know some of the truth through illegally smuggled South Korean television shows and other contraband, Pyongyang has redefined the difference in economies in relative terms: Though South Korea may be rich, any North Koreans foolish enough to chase Southern dreams will only find a life of hardship and poverty there. The double defectors play right into Pyongyang\u2019s new narrative. Many of them are featured in scripted press conferences in which they claim to have encountered a life of misery in the South. The double-defector propaganda has also given the regime a defense against human rights criticism from abroad: If North Korea really is so horrible, why do so many people keep returning? South Korea already provides a lot of support for defectors, including living expenses and a place to live . It also helps with our education and finding jobs. Despite this generous assistance, which some struggling South Koreans resent, we need more emotional support and ongoing counseling to help with the integration process.", "paragraph_answer": "Historically, the North\u2019s propagandists vilified the South and its economy, but now that more Northerners know some of the truth through illegally smuggled South Korean television shows and other contraband, Pyongyang has redefined the difference in economies in relative terms: Though South Korea may be rich, any North Koreans foolish enough to chase Southern dreams will only find a life of hardship and poverty there. The double defectors play right into Pyongyang\u2019s new narrative. Many of them are featured in scripted press conferences in which they claim to have encountered a life of misery in the South. The double-defector propaganda has also given the regime a defense against human rights criticism from abroad: If North Korea really is so horrible, why do so many people keep returning? South Korea already provides a lot of support for defectors, including living expenses and a place to live . It also helps with our education and finding jobs. Despite this generous assistance, which some struggling South Koreans resent, we need more emotional support and ongoing counseling to help with the integration process.", "sentence_answer": "South Korea already provides a lot of support for defectors, including living expenses and a place to live .", "paragraph_id": "5d70b163c8e4820a9b66f6ee"} +{"question": "How much does \"The Orchid Show: Chandeliers\" cost?", "paragraph": "BRONX Lehman College Art Gallery \u201cThe Gee\u2019s Bend Tradition,\u201d group show. Through April 24. Tuesdays through Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Lehman College Art Gallery, 250 Bedford Park Boulevard West. 718-960-8731; lehman.edu/gallery. BRONX The New York Botanical Garden \u201cThe Orchid Show: Chandeliers,\u201d in the Enid A. Haupt Conservatory. Through April 19. $8 to $25; children under 2, free. Tuesdays through Sundays, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. The New York Botanical Garden, Southern Boulevard. 718-817-8700; nybg.org. DOBBS FERRY The Donald Gallery \u201cA Place to Remember,\u201d paintings by Emily Stedman. Through April 12. Tuesdays through Sundays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The Donald Gallery, 343 Broadway. southpres.org/thedonaldgallery.shtml; 914-693-0473. GARRISON Garrison Art Center \u201cCrossing the Lines,\u201d group show. \u201cSuspended Carbon,\u201d Keiko Sono. Through May 3. Tuesdays through Sundays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Garrison Art Center, 23 Garrison\u2019s Landing. garrisonartcenter.org; 845-424-3960. HASTINGS-ON-HUDSON Upstream Gallery Works by Jerry Vis and Arline Simon. Through April 19. Thursdays through Sundays, 12:30 to 5:30 p.m.; and by appointment. Upstream Gallery, 8 Main Street. upstreamgallery.com; 914-674-8548. HUDSON 510 Warren Street Gallery \u201cDiana Felber: Our Woods in Oil and Water.\u201d Through April 26. Fridays and Saturdays, noon to 6 p.m.; Sundays, noon to 5 p.m. 510 Warren Street Gallery, 510 Warren Street. 510warrenstgallery.com; 518-822-0510. HUDSON Carrie Haddad Gallery \u201cRichard Merkin: Some of His Favorite Things,\u201d paintings. Through April 19. Mondays through Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sundays, noon to 5 p.m. Carrie Haddad Gallery, 622 Warren Street. 518-828-1915; carriehaddadgallery.com. HUDSON Curatorium \u201cVeiled Actions,\u201d George Hildrew. \u201cEveryday Places,\u201d Cathryn Griffin. Through May 7. Thursdays through Sundays, noon to 5 p.m.; and by appointment. Curatorium, 60 South Front Street. 212-537-6029; curatoriumhudson.org. HUDSON Davis Orton Gallery \u201cNight Photography: From Cities to Towns to Way, Way Beyond.\u201d Through May 10. Fridays through Sundays, noon to 6 p.m.; and by appointment. Davis Orton Gallery, 114 Warren Street. davisortongallery.com; 518-697-0266.", "answer": "$8 to $25; children under 2, free", "sentence": "$8 to $25; children under 2, free .", "paragraph_sentence": "BRONX Lehman College Art Gallery \u201cThe Gee\u2019s Bend Tradition,\u201d group show. Through April 24. Tuesdays through Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Lehman College Art Gallery, 250 Bedford Park Boulevard West. 718-960-8731; lehman.edu/gallery. BRONX The New York Botanical Garden \u201cThe Orchid Show: Chandeliers,\u201d in the Enid A. Haupt Conservatory. Through April 19. $8 to $25; children under 2, free . Tuesdays through Sundays, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. The New York Botanical Garden, Southern Boulevard. 718-817-8700; nybg.org. DOBBS FERRY The Donald Gallery \u201cA Place to Remember,\u201d paintings by Emily Stedman. Through April 12. Tuesdays through Sundays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The Donald Gallery, 343 Broadway. southpres.org/thedonaldgallery.shtml; 914-693-0473. GARRISON Garrison Art Center \u201cCrossing the Lines,\u201d group show. \u201cSuspended Carbon,\u201d Keiko Sono. Through May 3. Tuesdays through Sundays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Garrison Art Center, 23 Garrison\u2019s Landing. garrisonartcenter.org; 845-424-3960. HASTINGS-ON-HUDSON Upstream Gallery Works by Jerry Vis and Arline Simon. Through April 19. Thursdays through Sundays, 12:30 to 5:30 p.m.; and by appointment. Upstream Gallery, 8 Main Street. upstreamgallery.com; 914-674-8548. HUDSON 510 Warren Street Gallery \u201cDiana Felber: Our Woods in Oil and Water.\u201d Through April 26. Fridays and Saturdays, noon to 6 p.m.; Sundays, noon to 5 p.m. 510 Warren Street Gallery, 510 Warren Street. 510warrenstgallery.com; 518-822-0510. HUDSON Carrie Haddad Gallery \u201cRichard Merkin: Some of His Favorite Things,\u201d paintings. Through April 19. Mondays through Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sundays, noon to 5 p.m. Carrie Haddad Gallery, 622 Warren Street. 518-828-1915; carriehaddadgallery.com. HUDSON Curatorium \u201cVeiled Actions,\u201d George Hildrew. \u201cEveryday Places,\u201d Cathryn Griffin. Through May 7. Thursdays through Sundays, noon to 5 p.m.; and by appointment. Curatorium, 60 South Front Street. 212-537-6029; curatoriumhudson.org. HUDSON Davis Orton Gallery \u201cNight Photography: From Cities to Towns to Way, Way Beyond.\u201d Through May 10. Fridays through Sundays, noon to 6 p.m.; and by appointment. Davis Orton Gallery, 114 Warren Street. davisortongallery.com; 518-697-0266.", "paragraph_answer": "BRONX Lehman College Art Gallery \u201cThe Gee\u2019s Bend Tradition,\u201d group show. Through April 24. Tuesdays through Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Lehman College Art Gallery, 250 Bedford Park Boulevard West. 718-960-8731; lehman.edu/gallery. BRONX The New York Botanical Garden \u201cThe Orchid Show: Chandeliers,\u201d in the Enid A. Haupt Conservatory. Through April 19. $8 to $25; children under 2, free . Tuesdays through Sundays, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. The New York Botanical Garden, Southern Boulevard. 718-817-8700; nybg.org. DOBBS FERRY The Donald Gallery \u201cA Place to Remember,\u201d paintings by Emily Stedman. Through April 12. Tuesdays through Sundays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The Donald Gallery, 343 Broadway. southpres.org/thedonaldgallery.shtml; 914-693-0473. GARRISON Garrison Art Center \u201cCrossing the Lines,\u201d group show. \u201cSuspended Carbon,\u201d Keiko Sono. Through May 3. Tuesdays through Sundays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Garrison Art Center, 23 Garrison\u2019s Landing. garrisonartcenter.org; 845-424-3960. HASTINGS-ON-HUDSON Upstream Gallery Works by Jerry Vis and Arline Simon. Through April 19. Thursdays through Sundays, 12:30 to 5:30 p.m.; and by appointment. Upstream Gallery, 8 Main Street. upstreamgallery.com; 914-674-8548. HUDSON 510 Warren Street Gallery \u201cDiana Felber: Our Woods in Oil and Water.\u201d Through April 26. Fridays and Saturdays, noon to 6 p.m.; Sundays, noon to 5 p.m. 510 Warren Street Gallery, 510 Warren Street. 510warrenstgallery.com; 518-822-0510. HUDSON Carrie Haddad Gallery \u201cRichard Merkin: Some of His Favorite Things,\u201d paintings. Through April 19. Mondays through Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sundays, noon to 5 p.m. Carrie Haddad Gallery, 622 Warren Street. 518-828-1915; carriehaddadgallery.com. HUDSON Curatorium \u201cVeiled Actions,\u201d George Hildrew. \u201cEveryday Places,\u201d Cathryn Griffin. Through May 7. Thursdays through Sundays, noon to 5 p.m.; and by appointment. Curatorium, 60 South Front Street. 212-537-6029; curatoriumhudson.org. HUDSON Davis Orton Gallery \u201cNight Photography: From Cities to Towns to Way, Way Beyond.\u201d Through May 10. Fridays through Sundays, noon to 6 p.m.; and by appointment. Davis Orton Gallery, 114 Warren Street. davisortongallery.com; 518-697-0266.", "sentence_answer": " $8 to $25; children under 2, free .", "paragraph_id": "5d7066f2c8e4820a9b66f0c8"} +{"question": "Where is the director of Love from?", "paragraph": "\u2018Love\u2019 (No rating, 2:14) Telling the story of a romance entirely through explicit sex, the Argentine director Gaspar No\u00e9 creates a visual tranquillity and dreamy eroticism that strips the film of salaciousness and highlights the only conversation it cares about: The one that runs from between the legs to between the ears. (Catsoulis) \u2605 \u2018The Martian\u2019 (PG-13, 2:21) Matt Damon stars in Ridley Scott\u2019s space western and blissed-out cosmic high about an American astronaut who, like a latter-day Robinson Crusoe, learns to survive on his own island of despair. Funny, loose and optimistic. (Dargis) \u2018Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials\u2019 (PG-13, 2:11) The second in a series about a racially diverse but otherwise interchangeable set of teenagers adds nothing new to the unkillable dystopian genre, but it\u2019s at least less ponderous than its predecessor. The many chases and ludicrous narrow escapes offer respectable doses of adrenaline. (John Williams) \u2018Meet the Patels\u2019 (PG, 1:28) This tidy, easygoing documentary \u2014 about the efforts of Indian-born parents to marry off their prosperous son (the actor Ravi Patel) through assorted matchmaking means \u2014 is a fascinating, good-humored and sometimes dramatic examination of family dynamics. Though Mr. Patel is on camera most often (shot by his wry, understated foil, sister and co-director, Geeta), it\u2019s his parents and the barely seen Geeta who prove most compelling. (Webster)", "answer": "Argentine", "sentence": "\u2018Love\u2019 (No rating, 2:14) Telling the story of a romance entirely through explicit sex, the Argentine director Gaspar No\u00e9 creates a visual tranquillity and dreamy eroticism that strips the film of salaciousness and highlights the only conversation it cares about: The one that runs from between the legs to between the ears.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u2018Love\u2019 (No rating, 2:14) Telling the story of a romance entirely through explicit sex, the Argentine director Gaspar No\u00e9 creates a visual tranquillity and dreamy eroticism that strips the film of salaciousness and highlights the only conversation it cares about: The one that runs from between the legs to between the ears. (Catsoulis) \u2605 \u2018The Martian\u2019 (PG-13, 2:21) Matt Damon stars in Ridley Scott\u2019s space western and blissed-out cosmic high about an American astronaut who, like a latter-day Robinson Crusoe, learns to survive on his own island of despair. Funny, loose and optimistic. (Dargis) \u2018Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials\u2019 (PG-13, 2:11) The second in a series about a racially diverse but otherwise interchangeable set of teenagers adds nothing new to the unkillable dystopian genre, but it\u2019s at least less ponderous than its predecessor. The many chases and ludicrous narrow escapes offer respectable doses of adrenaline. (John Williams) \u2018Meet the Patels\u2019 (PG, 1:28) This tidy, easygoing documentary \u2014 about the efforts of Indian-born parents to marry off their prosperous son (the actor Ravi Patel) through assorted matchmaking means \u2014 is a fascinating, good-humored and sometimes dramatic examination of family dynamics. Though Mr. Patel is on camera most often (shot by his wry, understated foil, sister and co-director, Geeta), it\u2019s his parents and the barely seen Geeta who prove most compelling. (Webster)", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Love\u2019 (No rating, 2:14) Telling the story of a romance entirely through explicit sex, the Argentine director Gaspar No\u00e9 creates a visual tranquillity and dreamy eroticism that strips the film of salaciousness and highlights the only conversation it cares about: The one that runs from between the legs to between the ears. (Catsoulis) \u2605 \u2018The Martian\u2019 (PG-13, 2:21) Matt Damon stars in Ridley Scott\u2019s space western and blissed-out cosmic high about an American astronaut who, like a latter-day Robinson Crusoe, learns to survive on his own island of despair. Funny, loose and optimistic. (Dargis) \u2018Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials\u2019 (PG-13, 2:11) The second in a series about a racially diverse but otherwise interchangeable set of teenagers adds nothing new to the unkillable dystopian genre, but it\u2019s at least less ponderous than its predecessor. The many chases and ludicrous narrow escapes offer respectable doses of adrenaline. (John Williams) \u2018Meet the Patels\u2019 (PG, 1:28) This tidy, easygoing documentary \u2014 about the efforts of Indian-born parents to marry off their prosperous son (the actor Ravi Patel) through assorted matchmaking means \u2014 is a fascinating, good-humored and sometimes dramatic examination of family dynamics. Though Mr. Patel is on camera most often (shot by his wry, understated foil, sister and co-director, Geeta), it\u2019s his parents and the barely seen Geeta who prove most compelling. (Webster)", "sentence_answer": "\u2018Love\u2019 (No rating, 2:14) Telling the story of a romance entirely through explicit sex, the Argentine director Gaspar No\u00e9 creates a visual tranquillity and dreamy eroticism that strips the film of salaciousness and highlights the only conversation it cares about: The one that runs from between the legs to between the ears.", "paragraph_id": "5d701ff2c8e4820a9b66cba6"} +{"question": "Where does Davis believe has very good coaches?", "paragraph": "\u201cBut I wanted to play the really, really good teams so we could set ourselves apart from everybody else in the SWAC,\u201d Davis said. \u201cThere\u2019s some very good coaches in the SWAC, very good coaches. But unfortunately, financially, the resources are just not there. The talent level, our guards in our league can play with anybody. Anybody.\u201d Texas Southern has one starter taller than 6 feet 5 inches. Arizona, by comparison, has four starters taller than 6-7. But that victory at Michigan State? Arizona Coach Sean Miller saw it on television in December. His players know all about it. Davis revealed his scheduling strategy: Play the toughest games over the holidays in December \u2014 which is when Texas Southern beat Michigan State and Kansas State. The student sections are depleted, the crowds more sedate, the opposing players distracted. \u201cSome of them are missing their girlfriends,\u201d Davis said. \u201cThey want to go home for Christmas. We come in there, Texas Southern \u2014 they\u2019re not really respecting us. They\u2019re shooting around, talking, laughing, not really serious. So that\u2019s a good time to play them. In November, we\u2019re in trouble.\u201d", "answer": "SWAC", "sentence": "\u201cBut I wanted to play the really, really good teams so we could set ourselves apart from everybody else in the SWAC ,\u201d Davis said.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cBut I wanted to play the really, really good teams so we could set ourselves apart from everybody else in the SWAC ,\u201d Davis said. \u201cThere\u2019s some very good coaches in the SWAC, very good coaches. But unfortunately, financially, the resources are just not there. The talent level, our guards in our league can play with anybody. Anybody.\u201d Texas Southern has one starter taller than 6 feet 5 inches. Arizona, by comparison, has four starters taller than 6-7. But that victory at Michigan State? Arizona Coach Sean Miller saw it on television in December. His players know all about it. Davis revealed his scheduling strategy: Play the toughest games over the holidays in December \u2014 which is when Texas Southern beat Michigan State and Kansas State. The student sections are depleted, the crowds more sedate, the opposing players distracted. \u201cSome of them are missing their girlfriends,\u201d Davis said. \u201cThey want to go home for Christmas. We come in there, Texas Southern \u2014 they\u2019re not really respecting us. They\u2019re shooting around, talking, laughing, not really serious. So that\u2019s a good time to play them. In November, we\u2019re in trouble.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cBut I wanted to play the really, really good teams so we could set ourselves apart from everybody else in the SWAC ,\u201d Davis said. \u201cThere\u2019s some very good coaches in the SWAC, very good coaches. But unfortunately, financially, the resources are just not there. The talent level, our guards in our league can play with anybody. Anybody.\u201d Texas Southern has one starter taller than 6 feet 5 inches. Arizona, by comparison, has four starters taller than 6-7. But that victory at Michigan State? Arizona Coach Sean Miller saw it on television in December. His players know all about it. Davis revealed his scheduling strategy: Play the toughest games over the holidays in December \u2014 which is when Texas Southern beat Michigan State and Kansas State. The student sections are depleted, the crowds more sedate, the opposing players distracted. \u201cSome of them are missing their girlfriends,\u201d Davis said. \u201cThey want to go home for Christmas. We come in there, Texas Southern \u2014 they\u2019re not really respecting us. They\u2019re shooting around, talking, laughing, not really serious. So that\u2019s a good time to play them. In November, we\u2019re in trouble.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cBut I wanted to play the really, really good teams so we could set ourselves apart from everybody else in the SWAC ,\u201d Davis said.", "paragraph_id": "5d7024a6c8e4820a9b66d0fb"} +{"question": "Who is the Attorney General?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe city is a lot more vibrant, a lot more to do,\u201d said Dan Carter, 39, a court investigator checking out preparations at the square Thursday. \u201cIt\u2019ll be interesting to see what people think.\u201d Civic leaders acknowledge work is still needed, and a Fourth of July melee after a concert at the square is leading to a new assessment of procedures since, as Black said, \u201cdowntown is no longer trying to become a destination; it is a destination.\u201d PRAISE FOR THE POLICE Attorney General Loretta E. Lynch made Cincinnati her first stop in May on a national tour studying community policing. The city\u2019s reforms have included increased training and community engagement in the aftermath of the 2001 riots, which were sparked by the fatal police shooting of an unarmed black man. Cincinnati\u2019s police have been held up as a national model amid violent protests about the police in other cities in the past year.", "answer": "Loretta E. Lynch", "sentence": "PRAISE FOR THE POLICE Attorney General Loretta E. Lynch made Cincinnati her first stop in May on a national tour studying community policing.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe city is a lot more vibrant, a lot more to do,\u201d said Dan Carter, 39, a court investigator checking out preparations at the square Thursday. \u201cIt\u2019ll be interesting to see what people think.\u201d Civic leaders acknowledge work is still needed, and a Fourth of July melee after a concert at the square is leading to a new assessment of procedures since, as Black said, \u201cdowntown is no longer trying to become a destination; it is a destination.\u201d PRAISE FOR THE POLICE Attorney General Loretta E. Lynch made Cincinnati her first stop in May on a national tour studying community policing. The city\u2019s reforms have included increased training and community engagement in the aftermath of the 2001 riots, which were sparked by the fatal police shooting of an unarmed black man. Cincinnati\u2019s police have been held up as a national model amid violent protests about the police in other cities in the past year.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe city is a lot more vibrant, a lot more to do,\u201d said Dan Carter, 39, a court investigator checking out preparations at the square Thursday. \u201cIt\u2019ll be interesting to see what people think.\u201d Civic leaders acknowledge work is still needed, and a Fourth of July melee after a concert at the square is leading to a new assessment of procedures since, as Black said, \u201cdowntown is no longer trying to become a destination; it is a destination.\u201d PRAISE FOR THE POLICE Attorney General Loretta E. Lynch made Cincinnati her first stop in May on a national tour studying community policing. The city\u2019s reforms have included increased training and community engagement in the aftermath of the 2001 riots, which were sparked by the fatal police shooting of an unarmed black man. Cincinnati\u2019s police have been held up as a national model amid violent protests about the police in other cities in the past year.", "sentence_answer": "PRAISE FOR THE POLICE Attorney General Loretta E. Lynch made Cincinnati her first stop in May on a national tour studying community policing.", "paragraph_id": "5d70236dc8e4820a9b66cf91"} +{"question": "What is the name of Aaron Hicklin's new bookstore?", "paragraph": "On a recent Sunday afternoon, the journalist and editor Aaron Hicklin was standing among some still-empty shelves in his newly completed bookstore, One Grand, in a former mercantile building in the town of Narrowsburg, New York. In less than one week, he would open the doors to the shop, but at the moment he was still fretfully awaiting the final shipments of his stock. \u201cI\u2019ll be honest, I am really surprised by how many books you need to fill a space,\u201d Hicklin said. \u201cI have about a thousand in here, but you\u2019d never know it. I\u2019ve got to fill these damn shelves!\u201d", "answer": "One Grand", "sentence": "On a recent Sunday afternoon, the journalist and editor Aaron Hicklin was standing among some still-empty shelves in his newly completed bookstore, One Grand , in a former mercantile building in the town of Narrowsburg, New York.", "paragraph_sentence": " On a recent Sunday afternoon, the journalist and editor Aaron Hicklin was standing among some still-empty shelves in his newly completed bookstore, One Grand , in a former mercantile building in the town of Narrowsburg, New York. In less than one week, he would open the doors to the shop, but at the moment he was still fretfully awaiting the final shipments of his stock. \u201cI\u2019ll be honest, I am really surprised by how many books you need to fill a space,\u201d Hicklin said. \u201cI have about a thousand in here, but you\u2019d never know it. I\u2019ve got to fill these damn shelves!\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "On a recent Sunday afternoon, the journalist and editor Aaron Hicklin was standing among some still-empty shelves in his newly completed bookstore, One Grand , in a former mercantile building in the town of Narrowsburg, New York. In less than one week, he would open the doors to the shop, but at the moment he was still fretfully awaiting the final shipments of his stock. \u201cI\u2019ll be honest, I am really surprised by how many books you need to fill a space,\u201d Hicklin said. \u201cI have about a thousand in here, but you\u2019d never know it. I\u2019ve got to fill these damn shelves!\u201d", "sentence_answer": "On a recent Sunday afternoon, the journalist and editor Aaron Hicklin was standing among some still-empty shelves in his newly completed bookstore, One Grand , in a former mercantile building in the town of Narrowsburg, New York.", "paragraph_id": "5d70196ec8e4820a9b66c565"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d70090cc8e4820a9b66b172"} +{"question": "What group of people with this likely raise alarms to?", "paragraph": "On paper, \u201cMe and Earl and the Dying Girl\u201d should be dreadful. That\u2019s not quite fair. On paper, Mr. Andrews\u2019s book is lovely: sensitive and rueful and attuned to both the solipsism and the ethical seriousness of adolescence. But it\u2019s also full of the sort of themes, emotions and situations that can turn maudlin and embarrassing on the way from page to screen. The self-conscious narrator, the kooky parents and above all the dying girl \u2014 these elements are likely to raise alarms among grown-up admirers of the auteurs whom Earl and Greg mock and revere.", "answer": "grown-up admirers of the auteurs whom Earl and Greg mock and revere", "sentence": "The self-conscious narrator, the kooky parents and above all the dying girl \u2014 these elements are likely to raise alarms among grown-up admirers of the auteurs whom Earl and Greg mock and revere .", "paragraph_sentence": "On paper, \u201cMe and Earl and the Dying Girl\u201d should be dreadful. That\u2019s not quite fair. On paper, Mr. Andrews\u2019s book is lovely: sensitive and rueful and attuned to both the solipsism and the ethical seriousness of adolescence. But it\u2019s also full of the sort of themes, emotions and situations that can turn maudlin and embarrassing on the way from page to screen. The self-conscious narrator, the kooky parents and above all the dying girl \u2014 these elements are likely to raise alarms among grown-up admirers of the auteurs whom Earl and Greg mock and revere . ", "paragraph_answer": "On paper, \u201cMe and Earl and the Dying Girl\u201d should be dreadful. That\u2019s not quite fair. On paper, Mr. Andrews\u2019s book is lovely: sensitive and rueful and attuned to both the solipsism and the ethical seriousness of adolescence. But it\u2019s also full of the sort of themes, emotions and situations that can turn maudlin and embarrassing on the way from page to screen. The self-conscious narrator, the kooky parents and above all the dying girl \u2014 these elements are likely to raise alarms among grown-up admirers of the auteurs whom Earl and Greg mock and revere .", "sentence_answer": "The self-conscious narrator, the kooky parents and above all the dying girl \u2014 these elements are likely to raise alarms among grown-up admirers of the auteurs whom Earl and Greg mock and revere .", "paragraph_id": "5d703c00c8e4820a9b66e2db"} +{"question": "How much was Song Tairan's initial investment in dollars?", "paragraph": "Yet there are those who still see the stock market as the best investment, given low interest rates at banks and the huge amount of capital needed to buy property in many cities. Song Tairan, 25, an employee at an Internet company in Beijing who lost 20 percent of a first-time $16,000 investment he made in March, said he was still in. \u201cI\u2019m not anxious anymore because I\u2019m used to the tumbling now,\u201d he said. \u201cI plan to invest again. The whole situation seems to be improving. I\u2019m bullish on the stock market.\u201d", "answer": "$16,000", "sentence": "Song Tairan, 25, an employee at an Internet company in Beijing who lost 20 percent of a first-time $16,000 investment he made in March, said he was still in.", "paragraph_sentence": "Yet there are those who still see the stock market as the best investment, given low interest rates at banks and the huge amount of capital needed to buy property in many cities. Song Tairan, 25, an employee at an Internet company in Beijing who lost 20 percent of a first-time $16,000 investment he made in March, said he was still in. \u201cI\u2019m not anxious anymore because I\u2019m used to the tumbling now,\u201d he said. \u201cI plan to invest again. The whole situation seems to be improving. I\u2019m bullish on the stock market.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Yet there are those who still see the stock market as the best investment, given low interest rates at banks and the huge amount of capital needed to buy property in many cities. Song Tairan, 25, an employee at an Internet company in Beijing who lost 20 percent of a first-time $16,000 investment he made in March, said he was still in. \u201cI\u2019m not anxious anymore because I\u2019m used to the tumbling now,\u201d he said. \u201cI plan to invest again. The whole situation seems to be improving. I\u2019m bullish on the stock market.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Song Tairan, 25, an employee at an Internet company in Beijing who lost 20 percent of a first-time $16,000 investment he made in March, said he was still in.", "paragraph_id": "5d701766c8e4820a9b66c355"} +{"question": "What is changing the world quickly?", "paragraph": "In the recent interview, Mr. Singhal illustrated the evolution of Google\u2019s search business by taking out his phone and asking questions about things like music and trivia. At one point he asked the phone about Rihanna to show off the company\u2019s voice technology and demonstrate how mobile search results come with tappable actions such as the ability to play Rihanna music. A moment later, in what appeared to be a well-practiced demonstration, he asked the phone, \u201cWhich person was struck by lightning seven times and survived?\u201d A robotic voice answered, \u201cRoy Sullivan.\u201d \u201cKids love questions like this,\u201d he said. Mr. Singhal said that while mobile phones are changing the world quickly, people still want and need many of the same things, whether they are in apps or on the web. A good deal of time is still spent shopping for jeans or looking for a new place to eat lunch.", "answer": "mobile phones", "sentence": "Mr. Singhal said that while mobile phones are changing the world quickly, people still want and need many of the same things, whether they are in apps or on the web.", "paragraph_sentence": "In the recent interview, Mr. Singhal illustrated the evolution of Google\u2019s search business by taking out his phone and asking questions about things like music and trivia. At one point he asked the phone about Rihanna to show off the company\u2019s voice technology and demonstrate how mobile search results come with tappable actions such as the ability to play Rihanna music. A moment later, in what appeared to be a well-practiced demonstration, he asked the phone, \u201cWhich person was struck by lightning seven times and survived?\u201d A robotic voice answered, \u201cRoy Sullivan.\u201d \u201cKids love questions like this,\u201d he said. Mr. Singhal said that while mobile phones are changing the world quickly, people still want and need many of the same things, whether they are in apps or on the web. A good deal of time is still spent shopping for jeans or looking for a new place to eat lunch.", "paragraph_answer": "In the recent interview, Mr. Singhal illustrated the evolution of Google\u2019s search business by taking out his phone and asking questions about things like music and trivia. At one point he asked the phone about Rihanna to show off the company\u2019s voice technology and demonstrate how mobile search results come with tappable actions such as the ability to play Rihanna music. A moment later, in what appeared to be a well-practiced demonstration, he asked the phone, \u201cWhich person was struck by lightning seven times and survived?\u201d A robotic voice answered, \u201cRoy Sullivan.\u201d \u201cKids love questions like this,\u201d he said. Mr. Singhal said that while mobile phones are changing the world quickly, people still want and need many of the same things, whether they are in apps or on the web. A good deal of time is still spent shopping for jeans or looking for a new place to eat lunch.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Singhal said that while mobile phones are changing the world quickly, people still want and need many of the same things, whether they are in apps or on the web.", "paragraph_id": "5d703512c8e4820a9b66df3d"} +{"question": "Who is the director of the Critical Gaming Lab at Eastern Kentucky University?", "paragraph": "Some in the gaming community have proposed a shift in the meaning of gamer to be akin to cinephile, a person with a deep knowledge and appreciation of the whole medium. Others have argued that the definition should be broad and, in particular, reflect the wide array of people who play. \u201cMarginalized groups have always engaged in gaming,\u201d Kishonna Gray, director of the Critical Gaming Lab at Eastern Kentucky University, said in an email. \u201cThey just haven\u2019t been acknowledged by gaming culture yet and they really aren\u2019t catered to.\u201d The Pew survey, which was conducted this summer among a sample of about 2,000 adults, found that young men play games far more than other groups, with 77 percent of 18- to 29-year-old men saying they play, and 57 percent of young women.", "answer": "Kishonna Gray", "sentence": "\u201cMarginalized groups have always engaged in gaming,\u201d Kishonna Gray , director of the Critical Gaming Lab at Eastern Kentucky University, said in an email.", "paragraph_sentence": "Some in the gaming community have proposed a shift in the meaning of gamer to be akin to cinephile, a person with a deep knowledge and appreciation of the whole medium. Others have argued that the definition should be broad and, in particular, reflect the wide array of people who play. \u201cMarginalized groups have always engaged in gaming,\u201d Kishonna Gray , director of the Critical Gaming Lab at Eastern Kentucky University, said in an email. \u201cThey just haven\u2019t been acknowledged by gaming culture yet and they really aren\u2019t catered to.\u201d The Pew survey, which was conducted this summer among a sample of about 2,000 adults, found that young men play games far more than other groups, with 77 percent of 18- to 29-year-old men saying they play, and 57 percent of young women.", "paragraph_answer": "Some in the gaming community have proposed a shift in the meaning of gamer to be akin to cinephile, a person with a deep knowledge and appreciation of the whole medium. Others have argued that the definition should be broad and, in particular, reflect the wide array of people who play. \u201cMarginalized groups have always engaged in gaming,\u201d Kishonna Gray , director of the Critical Gaming Lab at Eastern Kentucky University, said in an email. \u201cThey just haven\u2019t been acknowledged by gaming culture yet and they really aren\u2019t catered to.\u201d The Pew survey, which was conducted this summer among a sample of about 2,000 adults, found that young men play games far more than other groups, with 77 percent of 18- to 29-year-old men saying they play, and 57 percent of young women.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cMarginalized groups have always engaged in gaming,\u201d Kishonna Gray , director of the Critical Gaming Lab at Eastern Kentucky University, said in an email.", "paragraph_id": "5d702e72c8e4820a9b66dbac"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700979c8e4820a9b66b219"} +{"question": "What does Englehardt?", "paragraph": "If, while sprawled in a deck chair or on the beach this summer, you crave a book whose tone and emotional landscape mirror your own state of torpor and cosseted relaxation, such a book would not be \u201cImperium.\u201d Although this very amusing and bracingly oddball novel by the Swiss writer Christian Kracht does feature several palm-covered islands \u2014 not to mention many gallons of coconut oil and copious amounts of undress \u2014 calling it a beach read is like calling \u201cPsycho\u201d maternal. Based on a true story, \u201cImperium,\u201d which was a best seller in Europe, is the fablelike account of a scrawny, nervous vegetarian and nudist from Nuremberg named August Engelhardt. It is the early 1900s \u2014 in a century that \u201cuntil just before the midpoint of its duration looked as if .\u2008.\u2008. Germany would take its rightful place of honor and precedence at the table of nations\u201d \u2014 and our bony, bearded idealist has set off for the German protectorates in the South Pacific to found a colony devoted to growing and eating only \u201cthe vegetal likeness of God.\u201d By which is meant: coconuts. This cocovorism does not go well. As with the trajectory of that more infamous Reich spearheaded by a deluded \u00adsometime-vegetarian utopianist German, the South Pacific commune hits bumpy patches. Engelhardt is duped and robbed by a fellow pilgrim; the first of his very few colonists has his way with a local boy who lives at the colony; and his business correspondence is quickly skimmed before being repurposed as toilet paper \u201cin the staff privy of the accountant\u2019s office at a copper and bauxite mine.\u201d Oh, and Engelhardt not only contracts leprosy, but his overly targeted diet begets a \u201cfurious, paralyzed, inflamed derangement.\u201d At which point he severs one of his thumbs and puts it in a salt-filled coconut shell, like Jeffrey Dahmer at a tiki bar.", "answer": "leprosy", "sentence": "Oh, and Engelhardt not only contracts leprosy , but his overly targeted diet begets a \u201cfurious, paralyzed, inflamed derangement.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "If, while sprawled in a deck chair or on the beach this summer, you crave a book whose tone and emotional landscape mirror your own state of torpor and cosseted relaxation, such a book would not be \u201cImperium.\u201d Although this very amusing and bracingly oddball novel by the Swiss writer Christian Kracht does feature several palm-covered islands \u2014 not to mention many gallons of coconut oil and copious amounts of undress \u2014 calling it a beach read is like calling \u201cPsycho\u201d maternal. Based on a true story, \u201cImperium,\u201d which was a best seller in Europe, is the fablelike account of a scrawny, nervous vegetarian and nudist from Nuremberg named August Engelhardt. It is the early 1900s \u2014 in a century that \u201cuntil just before the midpoint of its duration looked as if . . . Germany would take its rightful place of honor and precedence at the table of nations\u201d \u2014 and our bony, bearded idealist has set off for the German protectorates in the South Pacific to found a colony devoted to growing and eating only \u201cthe vegetal likeness of God.\u201d By which is meant: coconuts. This cocovorism does not go well. As with the trajectory of that more infamous Reich spearheaded by a deluded \u00adsometime-vegetarian utopianist German, the South Pacific commune hits bumpy patches. Engelhardt is duped and robbed by a fellow pilgrim; the first of his very few colonists has his way with a local boy who lives at the colony; and his business correspondence is quickly skimmed before being repurposed as toilet paper \u201cin the staff privy of the accountant\u2019s office at a copper and bauxite mine.\u201d Oh, and Engelhardt not only contracts leprosy , but his overly targeted diet begets a \u201cfurious, paralyzed, inflamed derangement.\u201d At which point he severs one of his thumbs and puts it in a salt-filled coconut shell, like Jeffrey Dahmer at a tiki bar.", "paragraph_answer": "If, while sprawled in a deck chair or on the beach this summer, you crave a book whose tone and emotional landscape mirror your own state of torpor and cosseted relaxation, such a book would not be \u201cImperium.\u201d Although this very amusing and bracingly oddball novel by the Swiss writer Christian Kracht does feature several palm-covered islands \u2014 not to mention many gallons of coconut oil and copious amounts of undress \u2014 calling it a beach read is like calling \u201cPsycho\u201d maternal. Based on a true story, \u201cImperium,\u201d which was a best seller in Europe, is the fablelike account of a scrawny, nervous vegetarian and nudist from Nuremberg named August Engelhardt. It is the early 1900s \u2014 in a century that \u201cuntil just before the midpoint of its duration looked as if . . . Germany would take its rightful place of honor and precedence at the table of nations\u201d \u2014 and our bony, bearded idealist has set off for the German protectorates in the South Pacific to found a colony devoted to growing and eating only \u201cthe vegetal likeness of God.\u201d By which is meant: coconuts. This cocovorism does not go well. As with the trajectory of that more infamous Reich spearheaded by a deluded \u00adsometime-vegetarian utopianist German, the South Pacific commune hits bumpy patches. Engelhardt is duped and robbed by a fellow pilgrim; the first of his very few colonists has his way with a local boy who lives at the colony; and his business correspondence is quickly skimmed before being repurposed as toilet paper \u201cin the staff privy of the accountant\u2019s office at a copper and bauxite mine.\u201d Oh, and Engelhardt not only contracts leprosy , but his overly targeted diet begets a \u201cfurious, paralyzed, inflamed derangement.\u201d At which point he severs one of his thumbs and puts it in a salt-filled coconut shell, like Jeffrey Dahmer at a tiki bar.", "sentence_answer": "Oh, and Engelhardt not only contracts leprosy , but his overly targeted diet begets a \u201cfurious, paralyzed, inflamed derangement.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d701335c8e4820a9b66bfcb"} +{"question": "What does Leive say you can aim for?", "paragraph": "I think everybody does better if they really like some aspect of what they\u2019re doing, but work is work. We can\u2019t all work in jobs where we feel like our heart is singing every day. There\u2019s that old expression, \u201cIf work was that great, the rich would keep it for themselves.\u201d The idea that your job is going to make your heart sing on a daily basis is just not true. If that\u2019s the expectation of a 25-year-old today, they\u2019re going to be sorely disappointed. But you can aim for a pretty good heart-singing-to-bummed-out ratio.", "answer": "you can aim for a pretty good heart-singing-to-bummed-out ratio", "sentence": "But you can aim for a pretty good heart-singing-to-bummed-out ratio .", "paragraph_sentence": "I think everybody does better if they really like some aspect of what they\u2019re doing, but work is work. We can\u2019t all work in jobs where we feel like our heart is singing every day. There\u2019s that old expression, \u201cIf work was that great, the rich would keep it for themselves.\u201d The idea that your job is going to make your heart sing on a daily basis is just not true. If that\u2019s the expectation of a 25-year-old today, they\u2019re going to be sorely disappointed. But you can aim for a pretty good heart-singing-to-bummed-out ratio . ", "paragraph_answer": "I think everybody does better if they really like some aspect of what they\u2019re doing, but work is work. We can\u2019t all work in jobs where we feel like our heart is singing every day. There\u2019s that old expression, \u201cIf work was that great, the rich would keep it for themselves.\u201d The idea that your job is going to make your heart sing on a daily basis is just not true. If that\u2019s the expectation of a 25-year-old today, they\u2019re going to be sorely disappointed. But you can aim for a pretty good heart-singing-to-bummed-out ratio .", "sentence_answer": "But you can aim for a pretty good heart-singing-to-bummed-out ratio .", "paragraph_id": "5d701841c8e4820a9b66c44a"} +{"question": "What is the name of the person who saw officiers kicking and jumping?", "paragraph": "\u201cI saw the officers kicking him, jumping on his head multiple times and screaming, \u2018Stop resisting,\u2019 even though I didn\u2019t see him moving,\u201d wrote Mr. Pearson, who has since been released after serving two years on a weapons charge. None of the affidavits or letters mentioned Mr. Harrell\u2019s fighting back or speaking during the encounter. Several said that once he was on the floor, handcuffed, he stopped moving, and a few of the inmates speculated he may have already been dead by then. Indeed, Mr. Camara said inmates were surprised that Mr. Harrell, who was over six feet tall and weighed 235 pounds, did not try to defend himself. \u201cPeople was even mad, I was mad,\u201d he said. \u201cYou\u2019re a big guy and you let these people literally kill you.\u201d The inmates said that during the encounter, an officer they identified as Robert Michels appeared to have a medical emergency. Mr. Pearson, who later identified Officer Michels through a Facebook photo, said he saw the officer \u201crip open his shirt and he was gasping for air and grabbing his chest.\u201d Officers went to attend to Officer Michels, who was soon carried out on a stretcher, inmates said. Identifying the Guards While Mr. Harrell lay still on the floor, officers periodically walked by, kicking him and hitting him, Mr. Camara said.", "answer": "Mr. Pearson", "sentence": "\u201cI saw the officers kicking him, jumping on his head multiple times and screaming, \u2018Stop resisting,\u2019 even though I didn\u2019t see him moving,\u201d wrote Mr. Pearson , who has since been released after serving two years on a weapons charge.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cI saw the officers kicking him, jumping on his head multiple times and screaming, \u2018Stop resisting,\u2019 even though I didn\u2019t see him moving,\u201d wrote Mr. Pearson , who has since been released after serving two years on a weapons charge. None of the affidavits or letters mentioned Mr. Harrell\u2019s fighting back or speaking during the encounter. Several said that once he was on the floor, handcuffed, he stopped moving, and a few of the inmates speculated he may have already been dead by then. Indeed, Mr. Camara said inmates were surprised that Mr. Harrell, who was over six feet tall and weighed 235 pounds, did not try to defend himself. \u201cPeople was even mad, I was mad,\u201d he said. \u201cYou\u2019re a big guy and you let these people literally kill you.\u201d The inmates said that during the encounter, an officer they identified as Robert Michels appeared to have a medical emergency. Mr. Pearson, who later identified Officer Michels through a Facebook photo, said he saw the officer \u201crip open his shirt and he was gasping for air and grabbing his chest.\u201d Officers went to attend to Officer Michels, who was soon carried out on a stretcher, inmates said. Identifying the Guards While Mr. Harrell lay still on the floor, officers periodically walked by, kicking him and hitting him, Mr. Camara said.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI saw the officers kicking him, jumping on his head multiple times and screaming, \u2018Stop resisting,\u2019 even though I didn\u2019t see him moving,\u201d wrote Mr. Pearson , who has since been released after serving two years on a weapons charge. None of the affidavits or letters mentioned Mr. Harrell\u2019s fighting back or speaking during the encounter. Several said that once he was on the floor, handcuffed, he stopped moving, and a few of the inmates speculated he may have already been dead by then. Indeed, Mr. Camara said inmates were surprised that Mr. Harrell, who was over six feet tall and weighed 235 pounds, did not try to defend himself. \u201cPeople was even mad, I was mad,\u201d he said. \u201cYou\u2019re a big guy and you let these people literally kill you.\u201d The inmates said that during the encounter, an officer they identified as Robert Michels appeared to have a medical emergency. Mr. Pearson, who later identified Officer Michels through a Facebook photo, said he saw the officer \u201crip open his shirt and he was gasping for air and grabbing his chest.\u201d Officers went to attend to Officer Michels, who was soon carried out on a stretcher, inmates said. Identifying the Guards While Mr. Harrell lay still on the floor, officers periodically walked by, kicking him and hitting him, Mr. Camara said.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI saw the officers kicking him, jumping on his head multiple times and screaming, \u2018Stop resisting,\u2019 even though I didn\u2019t see him moving,\u201d wrote Mr. Pearson , who has since been released after serving two years on a weapons charge.", "paragraph_id": "5d7020b2c8e4820a9b66cca5"} +{"question": "Who went to Kidville?", "paragraph": "Ms. Andino, a medical assistant, guessed that the video games might come sooner than she had planned. \u201cMaybe later we\u2019ll try playing Monopoly,\u201d she said. \u201cIt eats up a lot of time.\u201d In Midtown Manhattan, Jeremy Brisiel began the morning with no illusions. \u201cWe braved the weather yesterday,\u201d he said, describing an outing to Kidville, a children\u2019s gym and play station, with his daughter, Tallulah, 3. \u201cToday, \u2018Frozen\u2019 will probably handle it,\u201d he said, citing the sisters who are the film\u2019s heroines. \u201cAnna and Elsa all day.\u201d But Tallulah and her mother, Melle Powers, an actress and teacher, had a better idea: taking an imaginary trip back to the Caribbean resort where they vacationed last week, making pretend sand castles on their small living room floor.", "answer": "Jeremy Brisiel", "sentence": "In Midtown Manhattan, Jeremy Brisiel began the morning with no illusions.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Andino, a medical assistant, guessed that the video games might come sooner than she had planned. \u201cMaybe later we\u2019ll try playing Monopoly,\u201d she said. \u201cIt eats up a lot of time.\u201d In Midtown Manhattan, Jeremy Brisiel began the morning with no illusions. \u201cWe braved the weather yesterday,\u201d he said, describing an outing to Kidville, a children\u2019s gym and play station, with his daughter, Tallulah, 3. \u201cToday, \u2018Frozen\u2019 will probably handle it,\u201d he said, citing the sisters who are the film\u2019s heroines. \u201cAnna and Elsa all day.\u201d But Tallulah and her mother, Melle Powers, an actress and teacher, had a better idea: taking an imaginary trip back to the Caribbean resort where they vacationed last week, making pretend sand castles on their small living room floor.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Andino, a medical assistant, guessed that the video games might come sooner than she had planned. \u201cMaybe later we\u2019ll try playing Monopoly,\u201d she said. \u201cIt eats up a lot of time.\u201d In Midtown Manhattan, Jeremy Brisiel began the morning with no illusions. \u201cWe braved the weather yesterday,\u201d he said, describing an outing to Kidville, a children\u2019s gym and play station, with his daughter, Tallulah, 3. \u201cToday, \u2018Frozen\u2019 will probably handle it,\u201d he said, citing the sisters who are the film\u2019s heroines. \u201cAnna and Elsa all day.\u201d But Tallulah and her mother, Melle Powers, an actress and teacher, had a better idea: taking an imaginary trip back to the Caribbean resort where they vacationed last week, making pretend sand castles on their small living room floor.", "sentence_answer": "In Midtown Manhattan, Jeremy Brisiel began the morning with no illusions.", "paragraph_id": "5d708ab5c8e4820a9b66f4de"} +{"question": "Who seized two television stations?", "paragraph": "Reporters in Istanbul covered a police raid on their own offices on Wednesday, as the Turkish government seized control of two television stations and a newspaper group critical of the governing party just four days before national elections. Scuffles between officers and reporters unfolded on live television as the police broke into the shared headquarters of the two channels, KanalTurk and Bugun TV, and ushered in court-appointed trustees who were placed in charge of the company that owns the media group, Koza Ipek Holding.", "answer": "Turkish government", "sentence": "Reporters in Istanbul covered a police raid on their own offices on Wednesday, as the Turkish government seized control of two television stations and a newspaper group critical of the governing party just four days before national elections.", "paragraph_sentence": " Reporters in Istanbul covered a police raid on their own offices on Wednesday, as the Turkish government seized control of two television stations and a newspaper group critical of the governing party just four days before national elections. Scuffles between officers and reporters unfolded on live television as the police broke into the shared headquarters of the two channels, KanalTurk and Bugun TV, and ushered in court-appointed trustees who were placed in charge of the company that owns the media group, Koza Ipek Holding.", "paragraph_answer": "Reporters in Istanbul covered a police raid on their own offices on Wednesday, as the Turkish government seized control of two television stations and a newspaper group critical of the governing party just four days before national elections. Scuffles between officers and reporters unfolded on live television as the police broke into the shared headquarters of the two channels, KanalTurk and Bugun TV, and ushered in court-appointed trustees who were placed in charge of the company that owns the media group, Koza Ipek Holding.", "sentence_answer": "Reporters in Istanbul covered a police raid on their own offices on Wednesday, as the Turkish government seized control of two television stations and a newspaper group critical of the governing party just four days before national elections.", "paragraph_id": "5d700b6cc8e4820a9b66b624"} +{"question": "Who showed up at Daru's schoolhouse on horseback with an Arab prisoner on foot?", "paragraph": "One day, a gendarme, Balducci (Vincent Martin), rides up on horseback to Daru\u2019s schoolhouse with an Arab prisoner, Mohamed (Reda Kateb), on foot. Balducci explains that the prisoner, who\u2019s never named in the Camus story, has cut the throat of a cousin (\u201clike a sheep\u201d) and now Daru needs to take Mohamed to another town for some French justice and certain death. Daru refuses, but when Balducci rides off, the teacher is left with Mohamed and a quandary. After giving Mohamed dinner and a bed, and after a restive night with a gun by his side, Daru wakes to tell Mohamed that he can leave of his own accord. This seems as if it should be an easy call, but Daru\u2019s assumptions about free will don\u2019t pan out. Mohamed refuses to flee.", "answer": "Balducci (Vincent Martin)", "sentence": "One day, a gendarme, Balducci (Vincent Martin) , rides up on horseback to Daru\u2019s schoolhouse with an Arab prisoner, Mohamed (Reda Kateb), on foot.", "paragraph_sentence": " One day, a gendarme, Balducci (Vincent Martin) , rides up on horseback to Daru\u2019s schoolhouse with an Arab prisoner, Mohamed (Reda Kateb), on foot. Balducci explains that the prisoner, who\u2019s never named in the Camus story, has cut the throat of a cousin (\u201clike a sheep\u201d) and now Daru needs to take Mohamed to another town for some French justice and certain death. Daru refuses, but when Balducci rides off, the teacher is left with Mohamed and a quandary. After giving Mohamed dinner and a bed, and after a restive night with a gun by his side, Daru wakes to tell Mohamed that he can leave of his own accord. This seems as if it should be an easy call, but Daru\u2019s assumptions about free will don\u2019t pan out. Mohamed refuses to flee.", "paragraph_answer": "One day, a gendarme, Balducci (Vincent Martin) , rides up on horseback to Daru\u2019s schoolhouse with an Arab prisoner, Mohamed (Reda Kateb), on foot. Balducci explains that the prisoner, who\u2019s never named in the Camus story, has cut the throat of a cousin (\u201clike a sheep\u201d) and now Daru needs to take Mohamed to another town for some French justice and certain death. Daru refuses, but when Balducci rides off, the teacher is left with Mohamed and a quandary. After giving Mohamed dinner and a bed, and after a restive night with a gun by his side, Daru wakes to tell Mohamed that he can leave of his own accord. This seems as if it should be an easy call, but Daru\u2019s assumptions about free will don\u2019t pan out. Mohamed refuses to flee.", "sentence_answer": "One day, a gendarme, Balducci (Vincent Martin) , rides up on horseback to Daru\u2019s schoolhouse with an Arab prisoner, Mohamed (Reda Kateb), on foot.", "paragraph_id": "5d7042fec8e4820a9b66e677"} +{"question": "How much does an upgrade cost?", "paragraph": "FYI Decision, which is free for iOS, is a great alternative to ChoiceMap and Decision Buddy. The app works in similar ways, using a slider system for rating how much each of the influencing factors should weigh into the decision. But this app\u2019s strength is that it displays the results more visually, with charts that show how your ratings affected the recommended outcome. If you\u2019re choosing a car to buy, for example, you can see how your concern about price would affect the available models. I love this app\u2019s simplicity, but it\u2019s worth pointing out that it is supported by advertising, and the pop-up ads can be annoying. It costs $3 to upgrade to remove the ads. The upgrade also allows it to output results as a PDF.", "answer": "$3", "sentence": "It costs $3 to upgrade to remove the ads.", "paragraph_sentence": "FYI Decision, which is free for iOS, is a great alternative to ChoiceMap and Decision Buddy. The app works in similar ways, using a slider system for rating how much each of the influencing factors should weigh into the decision. But this app\u2019s strength is that it displays the results more visually, with charts that show how your ratings affected the recommended outcome. If you\u2019re choosing a car to buy, for example, you can see how your concern about price would affect the available models. I love this app\u2019s simplicity, but it\u2019s worth pointing out that it is supported by advertising, and the pop-up ads can be annoying. It costs $3 to upgrade to remove the ads. The upgrade also allows it to output results as a PDF.", "paragraph_answer": "FYI Decision, which is free for iOS, is a great alternative to ChoiceMap and Decision Buddy. The app works in similar ways, using a slider system for rating how much each of the influencing factors should weigh into the decision. But this app\u2019s strength is that it displays the results more visually, with charts that show how your ratings affected the recommended outcome. If you\u2019re choosing a car to buy, for example, you can see how your concern about price would affect the available models. I love this app\u2019s simplicity, but it\u2019s worth pointing out that it is supported by advertising, and the pop-up ads can be annoying. It costs $3 to upgrade to remove the ads. The upgrade also allows it to output results as a PDF.", "sentence_answer": "It costs $3 to upgrade to remove the ads.", "paragraph_id": "5d705b10c8e4820a9b66eea3"} +{"question": "What is the name of Gina Rinehart's daughter?", "paragraph": "\u2022 Google is set to unveil at its annual developer conference today an overhaul of its mobile payment products, including a service called Android Pay, according to a news report. \u2022 Broadcom, the wireless chip maker, is being acquired by a rival, Avago, for $37 billion, the companies said today. \u2022 Australia\u2019s richest person, the mining magnate Gina Rinehart, 61, today lost control of the $4 billion family trust to her 38-year-old daughter, Bianca, after a long legal battle.", "answer": "Bianca", "sentence": "\u2022 Australia\u2019s richest person, the mining magnate Gina Rinehart, 61, today lost control of the $4 billion family trust to her 38-year-old daughter, Bianca , after a long legal battle.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2022 Google is set to unveil at its annual developer conference today an overhaul of its mobile payment products, including a service called Android Pay, according to a news report. \u2022 Broadcom, the wireless chip maker, is being acquired by a rival, Avago, for $37 billion, the companies said today. \u2022 Australia\u2019s richest person, the mining magnate Gina Rinehart, 61, today lost control of the $4 billion family trust to her 38-year-old daughter, Bianca , after a long legal battle. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u2022 Google is set to unveil at its annual developer conference today an overhaul of its mobile payment products, including a service called Android Pay, according to a news report. \u2022 Broadcom, the wireless chip maker, is being acquired by a rival, Avago, for $37 billion, the companies said today. \u2022 Australia\u2019s richest person, the mining magnate Gina Rinehart, 61, today lost control of the $4 billion family trust to her 38-year-old daughter, Bianca , after a long legal battle.", "sentence_answer": "\u2022 Australia\u2019s richest person, the mining magnate Gina Rinehart, 61, today lost control of the $4 billion family trust to her 38-year-old daughter, Bianca , after a long legal battle.", "paragraph_id": "5d7028f5c8e4820a9b66d6c6"} +{"question": "What team Gallardo is in currently?", "paragraph": "The active leader among pitchers is Yovani Gallardo, with 12. Gallardo, 29, was traded before the season from the Brewers to the Rangers in the American League, so his opportunities to add to that total will be limited. Bumgarner was lauded for his astonishing postseason pitching performance last year, but he has some pop in his bat, too.", "answer": "Rangers", "sentence": "Gallardo, 29, was traded before the season from the Brewers to the Rangers in the American League, so his opportunities to add to that total will be limited.", "paragraph_sentence": "The active leader among pitchers is Yovani Gallardo, with 12. Gallardo, 29, was traded before the season from the Brewers to the Rangers in the American League, so his opportunities to add to that total will be limited. Bumgarner was lauded for his astonishing postseason pitching performance last year, but he has some pop in his bat, too.", "paragraph_answer": "The active leader among pitchers is Yovani Gallardo, with 12. Gallardo, 29, was traded before the season from the Brewers to the Rangers in the American League, so his opportunities to add to that total will be limited. Bumgarner was lauded for his astonishing postseason pitching performance last year, but he has some pop in his bat, too.", "sentence_answer": "Gallardo, 29, was traded before the season from the Brewers to the Rangers in the American League, so his opportunities to add to that total will be limited.", "paragraph_id": "5d7028e7c8e4820a9b66d6ad"} +{"question": "Is Zion Amir's client an legal adult?", "paragraph": "Hussein Dawabsheh, a grandfather of the children who were burned in Duma, expressed hope that the perpetrators would be severely punished. \u201cIt won\u2019t bring my family back,\u201d he told Ynet, a Hebrew-language news site, \u201cbut I want the murderers to look little Ahmad in the eye and see what they have done to him, how they have killed his family.\u201d A prominent Israeli lawyer, Zion Amir, said Thursday that he was representing one of the youths arrested this week. Mr. Amir said on Israel Radio that his client was a minor and had been in custody for two or three days, and that he had not had any access to his client.", "answer": "his client was a minor", "sentence": "that his client was a minor and had been in custody for two or three days, and that he had not had any access to his client.", "paragraph_sentence": "Hussein Dawabsheh, a grandfather of the children who were burned in Duma, expressed hope that the perpetrators would be severely punished. \u201cIt won\u2019t bring my family back,\u201d he told Ynet, a Hebrew-language news site, \u201cbut I want the murderers to look little Ahmad in the eye and see what they have done to him, how they have killed his family.\u201d A prominent Israeli lawyer, Zion Amir, said Thursday that he was representing one of the youths arrested this week. Mr. Amir said on Israel Radio that his client was a minor and had been in custody for two or three days, and that he had not had any access to his client. ", "paragraph_answer": "Hussein Dawabsheh, a grandfather of the children who were burned in Duma, expressed hope that the perpetrators would be severely punished. \u201cIt won\u2019t bring my family back,\u201d he told Ynet, a Hebrew-language news site, \u201cbut I want the murderers to look little Ahmad in the eye and see what they have done to him, how they have killed his family.\u201d A prominent Israeli lawyer, Zion Amir, said Thursday that he was representing one of the youths arrested this week. Mr. Amir said on Israel Radio that his client was a minor and had been in custody for two or three days, and that he had not had any access to his client.", "sentence_answer": "that his client was a minor and had been in custody for two or three days, and that he had not had any access to his client.", "paragraph_id": "5d701dd2c8e4820a9b66c943"} +{"question": "For decades drowning has been?", "paragraph": "The Global Burden of Disease study does not answer these questions directly, but it makes clear where to start looking for best practices. Individual countries can see in what areas they\u2019re leading or lagging, often for the first time, then look to peers for advice or vice versa. Injury prevention may get one of the biggest boosts because global public health leaders have often ignored injuries as health risks, focusing instead on major diseases. Take drowning. For decades, it has been one of the 20 biggest killers worldwide, but the World Health Organization issued its first report dedicated to drowning only in November 2014. Effective prevention strategies include teaching swimming, providing life jackets, fencing off open water and training emergency medical responders. Drowning deaths also tend to decline as countries urbanize and when income and education increase. China, which both urbanized and started prevention programs, saw drowning deaths plunge from 190,000 in 1990 to 64,000 in 2013, Global Burden found. In India, drowning deaths barely budged, falling from an estimated 91,000 to 88,000 in the same period. David Meddings, an epidemiologist who was executive editor of the W.H.O. report, noted that China\u2019s gains may partly reflect changes in the way deaths are reported, but that the improvement was still powerful.", "answer": "one of the 20 biggest killers worldwide", "sentence": "For decades, it has been one of the 20 biggest killers worldwide , but the World Health Organization issued its first report dedicated to drowning only in November 2014.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Global Burden of Disease study does not answer these questions directly, but it makes clear where to start looking for best practices. Individual countries can see in what areas they\u2019re leading or lagging, often for the first time, then look to peers for advice or vice versa. Injury prevention may get one of the biggest boosts because global public health leaders have often ignored injuries as health risks, focusing instead on major diseases. Take drowning. For decades, it has been one of the 20 biggest killers worldwide , but the World Health Organization issued its first report dedicated to drowning only in November 2014. Effective prevention strategies include teaching swimming, providing life jackets, fencing off open water and training emergency medical responders. Drowning deaths also tend to decline as countries urbanize and when income and education increase. China, which both urbanized and started prevention programs, saw drowning deaths plunge from 190,000 in 1990 to 64,000 in 2013, Global Burden found. In India, drowning deaths barely budged, falling from an estimated 91,000 to 88,000 in the same period. David Meddings, an epidemiologist who was executive editor of the W.H.O. report, noted that China\u2019s gains may partly reflect changes in the way deaths are reported, but that the improvement was still powerful.", "paragraph_answer": "The Global Burden of Disease study does not answer these questions directly, but it makes clear where to start looking for best practices. Individual countries can see in what areas they\u2019re leading or lagging, often for the first time, then look to peers for advice or vice versa. Injury prevention may get one of the biggest boosts because global public health leaders have often ignored injuries as health risks, focusing instead on major diseases. Take drowning. For decades, it has been one of the 20 biggest killers worldwide , but the World Health Organization issued its first report dedicated to drowning only in November 2014. Effective prevention strategies include teaching swimming, providing life jackets, fencing off open water and training emergency medical responders. Drowning deaths also tend to decline as countries urbanize and when income and education increase. China, which both urbanized and started prevention programs, saw drowning deaths plunge from 190,000 in 1990 to 64,000 in 2013, Global Burden found. In India, drowning deaths barely budged, falling from an estimated 91,000 to 88,000 in the same period. David Meddings, an epidemiologist who was executive editor of the W.H.O. report, noted that China\u2019s gains may partly reflect changes in the way deaths are reported, but that the improvement was still powerful.", "sentence_answer": "For decades, it has been one of the 20 biggest killers worldwide , but the World Health Organization issued its first report dedicated to drowning only in November 2014.", "paragraph_id": "5d7012e1c8e4820a9b66bf1d"} +{"question": "what did Judge Walls opinion of political donations?", "paragraph": "Judge Walls rejected each of those arguments. He said there was no indication that the grand jury had been handled improperly, and concluded that political contributions can be considered \u201cthings of value to influence official acts.\u201d \u201cThe Constitution does not protect an attempt to influence a public official\u2019s acts through improper means, such as the bribery scheme that has been alleged in this case,\u201d he wrote in his decision. Mr. Menendez, a Democrat, was indicted in April on charges that he accepted personal gifts, including private plane trips and luxury accommodations in the Dominican Republic, from Dr. Melgen, and lobbied in return for Dr. Melgen\u2019s interests in Washington. A wealthy Florida eye surgeon, Dr. Melgen was a major contributor to Mr. Menendez\u2019s political campaigns, and to a \u201csuper PAC\u201d supporting his last re-election bid in 2012.", "answer": "contributions can be considered \u201cthings of value to influence official acts.\u201d", "sentence": "He said there was no indication that the grand jury had been handled improperly, and concluded that political contributions can be considered \u201cthings of value to influence official acts.\u201d \u201cThe Constitution does not protect an attempt to influence a public official\u2019s acts through improper means, such as the bribery scheme that has been alleged in this case,\u201d he wrote in his decision.", "paragraph_sentence": "Judge Walls rejected each of those arguments. He said there was no indication that the grand jury had been handled improperly, and concluded that political contributions can be considered \u201cthings of value to influence official acts.\u201d \u201cThe Constitution does not protect an attempt to influence a public official\u2019s acts through improper means, such as the bribery scheme that has been alleged in this case,\u201d he wrote in his decision. Mr. Menendez, a Democrat, was indicted in April on charges that he accepted personal gifts, including private plane trips and luxury accommodations in the Dominican Republic, from Dr. Melgen, and lobbied in return for Dr. Melgen\u2019s interests in Washington. A wealthy Florida eye surgeon, Dr. Melgen was a major contributor to Mr. Menendez\u2019s political campaigns, and to a \u201csuper PAC\u201d supporting his last re-election bid in 2012.", "paragraph_answer": "Judge Walls rejected each of those arguments. He said there was no indication that the grand jury had been handled improperly, and concluded that political contributions can be considered \u201cthings of value to influence official acts.\u201d \u201cThe Constitution does not protect an attempt to influence a public official\u2019s acts through improper means, such as the bribery scheme that has been alleged in this case,\u201d he wrote in his decision. Mr. Menendez, a Democrat, was indicted in April on charges that he accepted personal gifts, including private plane trips and luxury accommodations in the Dominican Republic, from Dr. Melgen, and lobbied in return for Dr. Melgen\u2019s interests in Washington. A wealthy Florida eye surgeon, Dr. Melgen was a major contributor to Mr. Menendez\u2019s political campaigns, and to a \u201csuper PAC\u201d supporting his last re-election bid in 2012.", "sentence_answer": "He said there was no indication that the grand jury had been handled improperly, and concluded that political contributions can be considered \u201cthings of value to influence official acts.\u201d \u201cThe Constitution does not protect an attempt to influence a public official\u2019s acts through improper means, such as the bribery scheme that has been alleged in this case,\u201d he wrote in his decision.", "paragraph_id": "5d701d9bc8e4820a9b66c90a"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700884c8e4820a9b66b033"} +{"question": "What kind of diets might not be healthy?", "paragraph": "I wrote here at The Upshot not long ago about how a growing body of epidemiologic data was pointing out that low-salt diets might actually be unhealthy. But randomized controlled trials exist there, too. A 2008 study randomly assigned patients with congestive heart failure to either normal or low-sodium diets. Those on the low-sodium diet had significantly more hospital admissions. The \u201cnumber needed to treat\u201d for a normal-sodium diet above a low-sodium diet to prevent a hospital admission in this population was six \u2014 meaning that for every six people who are moved from a low-sodium diet to a normal diet, one hospital admission would be prevented. That\u2019s a very strong finding.", "answer": "low-salt diets", "sentence": "I wrote here at The Upshot not long ago about how a growing body of epidemiologic data was pointing out that low-salt diets might actually be unhealthy.", "paragraph_sentence": " I wrote here at The Upshot not long ago about how a growing body of epidemiologic data was pointing out that low-salt diets might actually be unhealthy. But randomized controlled trials exist there, too. A 2008 study randomly assigned patients with congestive heart failure to either normal or low-sodium diets. Those on the low-sodium diet had significantly more hospital admissions. The \u201cnumber needed to treat\u201d for a normal-sodium diet above a low-sodium diet to prevent a hospital admission in this population was six \u2014 meaning that for every six people who are moved from a low-sodium diet to a normal diet, one hospital admission would be prevented. That\u2019s a very strong finding.", "paragraph_answer": "I wrote here at The Upshot not long ago about how a growing body of epidemiologic data was pointing out that low-salt diets might actually be unhealthy. But randomized controlled trials exist there, too. A 2008 study randomly assigned patients with congestive heart failure to either normal or low-sodium diets. Those on the low-sodium diet had significantly more hospital admissions. The \u201cnumber needed to treat\u201d for a normal-sodium diet above a low-sodium diet to prevent a hospital admission in this population was six \u2014 meaning that for every six people who are moved from a low-sodium diet to a normal diet, one hospital admission would be prevented. That\u2019s a very strong finding.", "sentence_answer": "I wrote here at The Upshot not long ago about how a growing body of epidemiologic data was pointing out that low-salt diets might actually be unhealthy.", "paragraph_id": "5d701a6cc8e4820a9b66c625"} +{"question": "What would mild cognitive impairment eventually lead to?", "paragraph": "The next month, Sandy\u2019s husband, Daryl, from whom she had been amicably separated for 15 years, drove her from Ithaca to the University of Rochester Medical Center for cognitive testing by a neuropsychologist named Mark Mapstone. Mapstone showed Sandy a line drawing and asked her to copy it, and then to draw it from memory 10 minutes later. He read her a list of words and had her recall as many as she could. He gave her two numbers and two letters and asked her to rearrange them in a particular order: low letter, high letter, low number, high number. Thank goodness that last one wasn\u2019t timed, she thought to herself, as she focused all her mental energy on the task. She felt as gleeful as a kid who had earned a gold star when Mapstone said, \u201cYes, that\u2019s right.\u201d After three hours, Mapstone gave a preliminary diagnosis: amnestic mild cognitive impairment. At first Sandy was relieved \u2014 he had said mild, hadn\u2019t he? \u2014 but then she caught the look on his face. This is not a good thing, Mapstone told her gently; most cases of amnestic M.C.I. progress to full-\u00adblown Alzheimer\u2019s disease within 10 years. When Sandy went back to the waiting room to meet Daryl, she was weeping uncontrollably. Between sobs, she explained the diagnosis and the inevitable decline on the horizon. She felt terror at the prospect of becoming a hollowed-\u00adout person with no memory, mind or sense of identity, as well as fury that she was powerless to do anything but endure it. With Alzheimer\u2019s disease, she would write, it is \u201cextraordinarily difficult for one\u2019s body to die in tandem with the death of one\u2019s self.\u201d That day at Mapstone\u2019s office, she vowed that she would figure out a way to take her own life before the disease took it from her. Later that month, Sandy sat down in her upstairs study \u2014 painted a rich burgundy, as the rest of the house was, to make the sprawling old place feel cozy \u2014 and looked at her Mac desktop computer screen. She had some trepidation about her plan to keep a journal of her own deterioration. But she opened a new document, gave it a file name \u2014 \u201cMemoir\u201d \u2014 and began to type. She tried to describe the maddening capriciousness of \u201ca mind that could be so alive one moment with thought and feeling building toward a next step and then someone erases the blackboard. It\u2019s all gone and I can\u2019t even reconstruct what the topic was. It\u2019s just gone. And I sit with the dark, the blank.\u201d", "answer": "full-\u00adblown Alzheimer\u2019s disease", "sentence": "This is not a good thing, Mapstone told her gently; most cases of amnestic M.C.I. progress to full-\u00adblown Alzheimer\u2019s disease within 10 years.", "paragraph_sentence": "The next month, Sandy\u2019s husband, Daryl, from whom she had been amicably separated for 15 years, drove her from Ithaca to the University of Rochester Medical Center for cognitive testing by a neuropsychologist named Mark Mapstone. Mapstone showed Sandy a line drawing and asked her to copy it, and then to draw it from memory 10 minutes later. He read her a list of words and had her recall as many as she could. He gave her two numbers and two letters and asked her to rearrange them in a particular order: low letter, high letter, low number, high number. Thank goodness that last one wasn\u2019t timed, she thought to herself, as she focused all her mental energy on the task. She felt as gleeful as a kid who had earned a gold star when Mapstone said, \u201cYes, that\u2019s right.\u201d After three hours, Mapstone gave a preliminary diagnosis: amnestic mild cognitive impairment. At first Sandy was relieved \u2014 he had said mild, hadn\u2019t he? \u2014 but then she caught the look on his face. This is not a good thing, Mapstone told her gently; most cases of amnestic M.C.I. progress to full-\u00adblown Alzheimer\u2019s disease within 10 years. When Sandy went back to the waiting room to meet Daryl, she was weeping uncontrollably. Between sobs, she explained the diagnosis and the inevitable decline on the horizon. She felt terror at the prospect of becoming a hollowed-\u00adout person with no memory, mind or sense of identity, as well as fury that she was powerless to do anything but endure it. With Alzheimer\u2019s disease, she would write, it is \u201cextraordinarily difficult for one\u2019s body to die in tandem with the death of one\u2019s self.\u201d That day at Mapstone\u2019s office, she vowed that she would figure out a way to take her own life before the disease took it from her. Later that month, Sandy sat down in her upstairs study \u2014 painted a rich burgundy, as the rest of the house was, to make the sprawling old place feel cozy \u2014 and looked at her Mac desktop computer screen. She had some trepidation about her plan to keep a journal of her own deterioration. But she opened a new document, gave it a file name \u2014 \u201cMemoir\u201d \u2014 and began to type. She tried to describe the maddening capriciousness of \u201ca mind that could be so alive one moment with thought and feeling building toward a next step and then someone erases the blackboard. It\u2019s all gone and I can\u2019t even reconstruct what the topic was. It\u2019s just gone. And I sit with the dark, the blank.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The next month, Sandy\u2019s husband, Daryl, from whom she had been amicably separated for 15 years, drove her from Ithaca to the University of Rochester Medical Center for cognitive testing by a neuropsychologist named Mark Mapstone. Mapstone showed Sandy a line drawing and asked her to copy it, and then to draw it from memory 10 minutes later. He read her a list of words and had her recall as many as she could. He gave her two numbers and two letters and asked her to rearrange them in a particular order: low letter, high letter, low number, high number. Thank goodness that last one wasn\u2019t timed, she thought to herself, as she focused all her mental energy on the task. She felt as gleeful as a kid who had earned a gold star when Mapstone said, \u201cYes, that\u2019s right.\u201d After three hours, Mapstone gave a preliminary diagnosis: amnestic mild cognitive impairment. At first Sandy was relieved \u2014 he had said mild, hadn\u2019t he? \u2014 but then she caught the look on his face. This is not a good thing, Mapstone told her gently; most cases of amnestic M.C.I. progress to full-\u00adblown Alzheimer\u2019s disease within 10 years. When Sandy went back to the waiting room to meet Daryl, she was weeping uncontrollably. Between sobs, she explained the diagnosis and the inevitable decline on the horizon. She felt terror at the prospect of becoming a hollowed-\u00adout person with no memory, mind or sense of identity, as well as fury that she was powerless to do anything but endure it. With Alzheimer\u2019s disease, she would write, it is \u201cextraordinarily difficult for one\u2019s body to die in tandem with the death of one\u2019s self.\u201d That day at Mapstone\u2019s office, she vowed that she would figure out a way to take her own life before the disease took it from her. Later that month, Sandy sat down in her upstairs study \u2014 painted a rich burgundy, as the rest of the house was, to make the sprawling old place feel cozy \u2014 and looked at her Mac desktop computer screen. She had some trepidation about her plan to keep a journal of her own deterioration. But she opened a new document, gave it a file name \u2014 \u201cMemoir\u201d \u2014 and began to type. She tried to describe the maddening capriciousness of \u201ca mind that could be so alive one moment with thought and feeling building toward a next step and then someone erases the blackboard. It\u2019s all gone and I can\u2019t even reconstruct what the topic was. It\u2019s just gone. And I sit with the dark, the blank.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "This is not a good thing, Mapstone told her gently; most cases of amnestic M.C.I. progress to full-\u00adblown Alzheimer\u2019s disease within 10 years.", "paragraph_id": "5d703ecdc8e4820a9b66e425"} +{"question": "When does Mitchell say is the best time for development?", "paragraph": "If Karl-Anthony Towns has enormous potential, at least one person has no interest in discussing it. On Thursday, ahead of the team\u2019s loss to the Denver Nuggets on Friday, Mitchell was asked what was next for Towns in his development. Mitchell did not appreciate the question. \u201cGuys,\u201d he said, \u201cthe next thing in his development is Denver. I mean, he\u2019s played 20 games, guys, and you want to \u2014 his next development? You think he\u2019s learned how to play in the N.B.A. after 20 games? It\u2019s 20 games into his first year.\u201d Mitchell added: \u201cYou get better during the off-season. You don\u2019t get better during the season. So there is no next development.\u201d", "answer": "the off-season", "sentence": "Mitchell added: \u201cYou get better during the off-season .", "paragraph_sentence": "If Karl-Anthony Towns has enormous potential, at least one person has no interest in discussing it. On Thursday, ahead of the team\u2019s loss to the Denver Nuggets on Friday, Mitchell was asked what was next for Towns in his development. Mitchell did not appreciate the question. \u201cGuys,\u201d he said, \u201cthe next thing in his development is Denver. I mean, he\u2019s played 20 games, guys, and you want to \u2014 his next development? You think he\u2019s learned how to play in the N.B.A. after 20 games? It\u2019s 20 games into his first year.\u201d Mitchell added: \u201cYou get better during the off-season . You don\u2019t get better during the season. So there is no next development.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "If Karl-Anthony Towns has enormous potential, at least one person has no interest in discussing it. On Thursday, ahead of the team\u2019s loss to the Denver Nuggets on Friday, Mitchell was asked what was next for Towns in his development. Mitchell did not appreciate the question. \u201cGuys,\u201d he said, \u201cthe next thing in his development is Denver. I mean, he\u2019s played 20 games, guys, and you want to \u2014 his next development? You think he\u2019s learned how to play in the N.B.A. after 20 games? It\u2019s 20 games into his first year.\u201d Mitchell added: \u201cYou get better during the off-season . You don\u2019t get better during the season. So there is no next development.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mitchell added: \u201cYou get better during the off-season .", "paragraph_id": "5d700a33c8e4820a9b66b3c0"} +{"question": "what team's story was told in Friday Night Lights?", "paragraph": "\u201cI don\u2019t know of other incidents like this, which is why it\u2019s so shocking,\u201d said H. G. Bissinger, the author of \u201cFriday Night Lights,\u201d which chronicled the Permian Panthers in Odessa, Tex. \u201cI think it\u2019s part and parcel of the intensity, the fanaticism and the craziness of what sports has become in this country.\u201d The incident resurrected memories of a 2008 playoff game in which a linebacker for Trinity High School in Euless, in the Dallas-Fort Worth region, ran over a referee on the second-to-last play of the game. The linebacker, Elikena Fieilo, who is now a Euless police officer, told The Fort Worth Star-Telegram last week that his intentional hit had resulted in disciplinary action and the loss of several Division I scholarship offers. \u201cIt was a terrible, horrible decision I made,\u201d Mr. Fieilo, who went on to become a scholarship player for Sam Houston State University, told the newspaper.", "answer": "the Permian Panthers", "sentence": "\u201cI don\u2019t know of other incidents like this, which is why it\u2019s so shocking,\u201d said H. G. Bissinger, the author of \u201cFriday Night Lights,\u201d which chronicled the Permian Panthers in Odessa, Tex.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cI don\u2019t know of other incidents like this, which is why it\u2019s so shocking,\u201d said H. G. Bissinger, the author of \u201cFriday Night Lights,\u201d which chronicled the Permian Panthers in Odessa, Tex. \u201cI think it\u2019s part and parcel of the intensity, the fanaticism and the craziness of what sports has become in this country.\u201d The incident resurrected memories of a 2008 playoff game in which a linebacker for Trinity High School in Euless, in the Dallas-Fort Worth region, ran over a referee on the second-to-last play of the game. The linebacker, Elikena Fieilo, who is now a Euless police officer, told The Fort Worth Star-Telegram last week that his intentional hit had resulted in disciplinary action and the loss of several Division I scholarship offers. \u201cIt was a terrible, horrible decision I made,\u201d Mr. Fieilo, who went on to become a scholarship player for Sam Houston State University, told the newspaper.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI don\u2019t know of other incidents like this, which is why it\u2019s so shocking,\u201d said H. G. Bissinger, the author of \u201cFriday Night Lights,\u201d which chronicled the Permian Panthers in Odessa, Tex. \u201cI think it\u2019s part and parcel of the intensity, the fanaticism and the craziness of what sports has become in this country.\u201d The incident resurrected memories of a 2008 playoff game in which a linebacker for Trinity High School in Euless, in the Dallas-Fort Worth region, ran over a referee on the second-to-last play of the game. The linebacker, Elikena Fieilo, who is now a Euless police officer, told The Fort Worth Star-Telegram last week that his intentional hit had resulted in disciplinary action and the loss of several Division I scholarship offers. \u201cIt was a terrible, horrible decision I made,\u201d Mr. Fieilo, who went on to become a scholarship player for Sam Houston State University, told the newspaper.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI don\u2019t know of other incidents like this, which is why it\u2019s so shocking,\u201d said H. G. Bissinger, the author of \u201cFriday Night Lights,\u201d which chronicled the Permian Panthers in Odessa, Tex.", "paragraph_id": "5d70169fc8e4820a9b66c2ae"} +{"question": "The son of the Republican State Senator was hired where?", "paragraph": "Updated 8:27 a.m. Good morning on this bright Tuesday. As Election Days in New York go, this year\u2019s is pretty quiet: nothing statewide, no federal elections and several uncontested seats. But there are a few interesting races, and three seats in the State Legislature are open because their prior occupants left under a criminal cloud. \u2022 Thomas W. Libous, a Republican state senator, was convicted of lying to F.B.I. agents about his son\u2019s hiring at a law firm. In today\u2019s race for his Binghamton seat, the Republican candidate, Fred Ashkar, an undersheriff, leads the Democrat, Barbara Fiala, a former county executive, by 52 points. \u2022 State Senator John L. Sampson, Democrat of Brooklyn, was convicted of trying to thwart a federal investigation. Roxanne Persaud, a Democratic assemblywoman, and Jeffrey Ferretti, a Republican real estate executive, are vying to replace him.", "answer": "law firm", "sentence": "Thomas W. Libous, a Republican state senator, was convicted of lying to F.B.I. agents about his son\u2019s hiring at a law firm .", "paragraph_sentence": "Updated 8:27 a.m. Good morning on this bright Tuesday. As Election Days in New York go, this year\u2019s is pretty quiet: nothing statewide, no federal elections and several uncontested seats. But there are a few interesting races, and three seats in the State Legislature are open because their prior occupants left under a criminal cloud. \u2022 Thomas W. Libous, a Republican state senator, was convicted of lying to F.B.I. agents about his son\u2019s hiring at a law firm . In today\u2019s race for his Binghamton seat, the Republican candidate, Fred Ashkar, an undersheriff, leads the Democrat, Barbara Fiala, a former county executive, by 52 points. \u2022 State Senator John L. Sampson, Democrat of Brooklyn, was convicted of trying to thwart a federal investigation. Roxanne Persaud, a Democratic assemblywoman, and Jeffrey Ferretti, a Republican real estate executive, are vying to replace him.", "paragraph_answer": "Updated 8:27 a.m. Good morning on this bright Tuesday. As Election Days in New York go, this year\u2019s is pretty quiet: nothing statewide, no federal elections and several uncontested seats. But there are a few interesting races, and three seats in the State Legislature are open because their prior occupants left under a criminal cloud. \u2022 Thomas W. Libous, a Republican state senator, was convicted of lying to F.B.I. agents about his son\u2019s hiring at a law firm . In today\u2019s race for his Binghamton seat, the Republican candidate, Fred Ashkar, an undersheriff, leads the Democrat, Barbara Fiala, a former county executive, by 52 points. \u2022 State Senator John L. Sampson, Democrat of Brooklyn, was convicted of trying to thwart a federal investigation. Roxanne Persaud, a Democratic assemblywoman, and Jeffrey Ferretti, a Republican real estate executive, are vying to replace him.", "sentence_answer": "Thomas W. Libous, a Republican state senator, was convicted of lying to F.B.I. agents about his son\u2019s hiring at a law firm .", "paragraph_id": "5d700ba8c8e4820a9b66b677"} +{"question": "What group did Emmanuel Nahshon speak out against?", "paragraph": "The Israeli government, which has become increasingly concerned by the Boycott, Divest and Sanction movement, reacted swiftly, describing the church\u2019s positions on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as distorted and historically biased against Israel. \u201cThe U.C.C. resolutions on the Middle East conflict have reflected the most radical politics for more than a decade, and in no way reflect a moral stance or reality-based position,\u201d said Emmanuel Nahshon, spokesman for the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs. \u201cPeople of faith ought to be acting to help Israel and the Palestinians to renew efforts to achieve peace, rather than endlessly demonizing one party in the conflict \u2014 in our view, the aggrieved party.\u201d StandWithUs, a pro-Israeli advocacy group based in Los Angeles, condemned what it called \u201canti-Israel extremists within the U.C.C.\u201d for promoting both resolutions debated on Tuesday. \u201cIn doing so, they severely damaged the U.C.C.\u2019s relationship with the vast majority of the Jewish community, promoted hatred and discrimination against Israelis, and undermined efforts to achieve a just peace between Israelis and Palestinians,\u201d the group said in a statement on its website.", "answer": "U.C.C.", "sentence": "\u201cThe U.C.C. resolutions on the Middle East conflict have reflected the most radical politics for more than a decade, and in no way reflect a moral stance or reality-based position,\u201d said Emmanuel Nahshon, spokesman for the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Israeli government, which has become increasingly concerned by the Boycott, Divest and Sanction movement, reacted swiftly, describing the church\u2019s positions on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as distorted and historically biased against Israel. \u201cThe U.C.C. resolutions on the Middle East conflict have reflected the most radical politics for more than a decade, and in no way reflect a moral stance or reality-based position,\u201d said Emmanuel Nahshon, spokesman for the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs. \u201cPeople of faith ought to be acting to help Israel and the Palestinians to renew efforts to achieve peace, rather than endlessly demonizing one party in the conflict \u2014 in our view, the aggrieved party.\u201d StandWithUs, a pro-Israeli advocacy group based in Los Angeles, condemned what it called \u201canti-Israel extremists within the U.C.C.\u201d for promoting both resolutions debated on Tuesday. \u201cIn doing so, they severely damaged the U.C.C.\u2019s relationship with the vast majority of the Jewish community, promoted hatred and discrimination against Israelis, and undermined efforts to achieve a just peace between Israelis and Palestinians,\u201d the group said in a statement on its website.", "paragraph_answer": "The Israeli government, which has become increasingly concerned by the Boycott, Divest and Sanction movement, reacted swiftly, describing the church\u2019s positions on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as distorted and historically biased against Israel. \u201cThe U.C.C. resolutions on the Middle East conflict have reflected the most radical politics for more than a decade, and in no way reflect a moral stance or reality-based position,\u201d said Emmanuel Nahshon, spokesman for the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs. \u201cPeople of faith ought to be acting to help Israel and the Palestinians to renew efforts to achieve peace, rather than endlessly demonizing one party in the conflict \u2014 in our view, the aggrieved party.\u201d StandWithUs, a pro-Israeli advocacy group based in Los Angeles, condemned what it called \u201canti-Israel extremists within the U.C.C.\u201d for promoting both resolutions debated on Tuesday. \u201cIn doing so, they severely damaged the U.C.C.\u2019s relationship with the vast majority of the Jewish community, promoted hatred and discrimination against Israelis, and undermined efforts to achieve a just peace between Israelis and Palestinians,\u201d the group said in a statement on its website.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe U.C.C. resolutions on the Middle East conflict have reflected the most radical politics for more than a decade, and in no way reflect a moral stance or reality-based position,\u201d said Emmanuel Nahshon, spokesman for the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs.", "paragraph_id": "5d700accc8e4820a9b66b4fd"} +{"question": "Funding from two big companies financed what initiative in the schools?", "paragraph": "More than equality is at stake when Ms. Copeland \u2014 the first African-American principal female dancer in the company\u2019s 75-year history \u2014 dances. When a company is diverse, the audience becomes more diverse, too, and for those faced with aging, dwindling audiences, that is priceless. Money is another incentive to change: The Rockefeller Brothers Fund, the Ford Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation have financed recent diversity initiatives. The two major New York companies have realized that change starts with the schools. If it takes 10 years to make a dancer \u2014 and you can\u2019t waste a minute \u2014 diversifying ballet must begin with children. Both Ballet Theater\u2019s Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis School and the School of American Ballet, the training ground for City Ballet, have initiated programs to spot and recruit young minority dancers.", "answer": "diversity", "sentence": "Money is another incentive to change: The Rockefeller Brothers Fund, the Ford Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation have financed recent diversity initiatives.", "paragraph_sentence": "More than equality is at stake when Ms. Copeland \u2014 the first African-American principal female dancer in the company\u2019s 75-year history \u2014 dances. When a company is diverse, the audience becomes more diverse, too, and for those faced with aging, dwindling audiences, that is priceless. Money is another incentive to change: The Rockefeller Brothers Fund, the Ford Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation have financed recent diversity initiatives. The two major New York companies have realized that change starts with the schools. If it takes 10 years to make a dancer \u2014 and you can\u2019t waste a minute \u2014 diversifying ballet must begin with children. Both Ballet Theater\u2019s Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis School and the School of American Ballet, the training ground for City Ballet, have initiated programs to spot and recruit young minority dancers.", "paragraph_answer": "More than equality is at stake when Ms. Copeland \u2014 the first African-American principal female dancer in the company\u2019s 75-year history \u2014 dances. When a company is diverse, the audience becomes more diverse, too, and for those faced with aging, dwindling audiences, that is priceless. Money is another incentive to change: The Rockefeller Brothers Fund, the Ford Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation have financed recent diversity initiatives. The two major New York companies have realized that change starts with the schools. If it takes 10 years to make a dancer \u2014 and you can\u2019t waste a minute \u2014 diversifying ballet must begin with children. Both Ballet Theater\u2019s Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis School and the School of American Ballet, the training ground for City Ballet, have initiated programs to spot and recruit young minority dancers.", "sentence_answer": "Money is another incentive to change: The Rockefeller Brothers Fund, the Ford Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation have financed recent diversity initiatives.", "paragraph_id": "5d70a3d0c8e4820a9b66f696"} +{"question": "What organization does not track spice use?", "paragraph": "Although the use of spice has decreased in recent years, according to some surveys, the drug continues to be sold by street dealers, as well as openly on the Internet and at smoke shops and other retailers, as potpourri or incense with brand names like Scooby Snax and Black Diamond. Spice\u2019s health effects have been underscored in recent months by a surge in emergency room visits and calls to poison centers, for symptoms that can include extreme anxiety, violent behavior and delusions. Intermittent reports from several states suggest that at least 1,000 Americans have died since 2009 after smoking spice. However, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention does not track national data for spice or other synthetic drugs, including those popularly known as bath salts or flakka.", "answer": "Centers for Disease Control and Prevention", "sentence": "However, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention does not track national data for spice or other synthetic drugs, including those popularly known as bath salts or flakka.", "paragraph_sentence": "Although the use of spice has decreased in recent years, according to some surveys, the drug continues to be sold by street dealers, as well as openly on the Internet and at smoke shops and other retailers, as potpourri or incense with brand names like Scooby Snax and Black Diamond. Spice\u2019s health effects have been underscored in recent months by a surge in emergency room visits and calls to poison centers, for symptoms that can include extreme anxiety, violent behavior and delusions. Intermittent reports from several states suggest that at least 1,000 Americans have died since 2009 after smoking spice. However, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention does not track national data for spice or other synthetic drugs, including those popularly known as bath salts or flakka. ", "paragraph_answer": "Although the use of spice has decreased in recent years, according to some surveys, the drug continues to be sold by street dealers, as well as openly on the Internet and at smoke shops and other retailers, as potpourri or incense with brand names like Scooby Snax and Black Diamond. Spice\u2019s health effects have been underscored in recent months by a surge in emergency room visits and calls to poison centers, for symptoms that can include extreme anxiety, violent behavior and delusions. Intermittent reports from several states suggest that at least 1,000 Americans have died since 2009 after smoking spice. However, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention does not track national data for spice or other synthetic drugs, including those popularly known as bath salts or flakka.", "sentence_answer": "However, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention does not track national data for spice or other synthetic drugs, including those popularly known as bath salts or flakka.", "paragraph_id": "5d700b61c8e4820a9b66b61d"} +{"question": "What did Johannsson think of the Bundesliga?", "paragraph": "Johannsson has played with the Dutch club AZ Alkmaar since 2013, scoring 38 goals in 84 games across all competitions. He will depart after having led the club to three important wins to end last season and propelling AZ into a surprising third-place finish that earned the team a place in the Europa League this season. On Tuesday, AZ announced that it had agreed to sell Johannsson\u2019s rights to Werder Bremen. Johannsson still needed to agree to a contract and pass a physical; those could be completed as soon as Wednesday. \u201cOnce they came and were interested, it was a pretty easy choice, because obviously I want to play for a better team in a better league, and the Bundesliga is one of the best leagues in the world,\u201d Johannsson said in a farewell interview posted online by AZ. \u201cIt\u2019s a step in the right direction for me, and hopefully it will go well.\u201d The move now makes Johannsson the only American forward likely to see regular minutes in one of Europe\u2019s top leagues. Clint Dempsey was the last American to establish himself in an elite league; his best season was in 2011-12 with Fulham, when he scored 17 goals in the Premier League and 23 over all.", "answer": "is one of the best leagues in the world", "sentence": "\u201cOnce they came and were interested, it was a pretty easy choice, because obviously I want to play for a better team in a better league, and the Bundesliga is one of the best leagues in the world ,\u201d Johannsson said in a farewell interview posted online by AZ.", "paragraph_sentence": "Johannsson has played with the Dutch club AZ Alkmaar since 2013, scoring 38 goals in 84 games across all competitions. He will depart after having led the club to three important wins to end last season and propelling AZ into a surprising third-place finish that earned the team a place in the Europa League this season. On Tuesday, AZ announced that it had agreed to sell Johannsson\u2019s rights to Werder Bremen. Johannsson still needed to agree to a contract and pass a physical; those could be completed as soon as Wednesday. \u201cOnce they came and were interested, it was a pretty easy choice, because obviously I want to play for a better team in a better league, and the Bundesliga is one of the best leagues in the world ,\u201d Johannsson said in a farewell interview posted online by AZ. \u201cIt\u2019s a step in the right direction for me, and hopefully it will go well.\u201d The move now makes Johannsson the only American forward likely to see regular minutes in one of Europe\u2019s top leagues. Clint Dempsey was the last American to establish himself in an elite league; his best season was in 2011-12 with Fulham, when he scored 17 goals in the Premier League and 23 over all.", "paragraph_answer": "Johannsson has played with the Dutch club AZ Alkmaar since 2013, scoring 38 goals in 84 games across all competitions. He will depart after having led the club to three important wins to end last season and propelling AZ into a surprising third-place finish that earned the team a place in the Europa League this season. On Tuesday, AZ announced that it had agreed to sell Johannsson\u2019s rights to Werder Bremen. Johannsson still needed to agree to a contract and pass a physical; those could be completed as soon as Wednesday. \u201cOnce they came and were interested, it was a pretty easy choice, because obviously I want to play for a better team in a better league, and the Bundesliga is one of the best leagues in the world ,\u201d Johannsson said in a farewell interview posted online by AZ. \u201cIt\u2019s a step in the right direction for me, and hopefully it will go well.\u201d The move now makes Johannsson the only American forward likely to see regular minutes in one of Europe\u2019s top leagues. Clint Dempsey was the last American to establish himself in an elite league; his best season was in 2011-12 with Fulham, when he scored 17 goals in the Premier League and 23 over all.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cOnce they came and were interested, it was a pretty easy choice, because obviously I want to play for a better team in a better league, and the Bundesliga is one of the best leagues in the world ,\u201d Johannsson said in a farewell interview posted online by AZ.", "paragraph_id": "5d702cf2c8e4820a9b66da7f"} +{"question": "What given to the tenants to create value?", "paragraph": "A. They are easier to buy. We did start our business in the B office building, and we found ourselves in that niche and felt very, very comfortable there. B buildings are very management-intensive, because there are many, many tenants involved. But we find that we do that very well and we can create value. We like to give our tenants a high-quality office environment. We don\u2019t want them to think that they\u2019re in a low-quality, traditional, old-fashioned B building, where they feel like they\u2019re giving something up. Q. Would you ever consider investing in Class A buildings? A. Absolutely, but right now it would not be possible given the competition.", "answer": "high-quality office environment", "sentence": "a high-quality office environment .", "paragraph_sentence": "A. They are easier to buy. We did start our business in the B office building, and we found ourselves in that niche and felt very, very comfortable there. B buildings are very management-intensive, because there are many, many tenants involved. But we find that we do that very well and we can create value. We like to give our tenants a high-quality office environment . We don\u2019t want them to think that they\u2019re in a low-quality, traditional, old-fashioned B building, where they feel like they\u2019re giving something up. Q. Would you ever consider investing in Class A buildings? A. Absolutely, but right now it would not be possible given the competition.", "paragraph_answer": "A. They are easier to buy. We did start our business in the B office building, and we found ourselves in that niche and felt very, very comfortable there. B buildings are very management-intensive, because there are many, many tenants involved. But we find that we do that very well and we can create value. We like to give our tenants a high-quality office environment . We don\u2019t want them to think that they\u2019re in a low-quality, traditional, old-fashioned B building, where they feel like they\u2019re giving something up. Q. Would you ever consider investing in Class A buildings? A. Absolutely, but right now it would not be possible given the competition.", "sentence_answer": "a high-quality office environment .", "paragraph_id": "5d703b2bc8e4820a9b66e285"} +{"question": "what broadcaster was the boss of an American reporter?", "paragraph": "A court in China\u2019s western region of Xinjiang tried two brothers of an American reporter on charges of endangering state security and leaking secrets, according to a spokesman for Radio Free Asia, the journalist\u2019s employer. No verdict has yet been announced in the trials of Shawket Hoshur on Tuesday and his younger brother Rexim Hoshur, which took place on Aug. 19, Rohit Mahajan, a spokesman for the United States government-funded R.F.A., said in an interview. Their brother, Shohret Hoshur, is a United States citizen whose reports on the Chinese government\u2019s crackdown on Xinjiang\u2019s Uighur ethnic group have been criticized by Beijing. The plight of Shohret Hoshur\u2019s brothers \u2014 a third brother, Tudaxun, was convicted of endangering state security last year and sentenced to five years in prison \u2014 has become an issue between the two countries before President Xi Jinping\u2019s summit meeting with President Obama in Washington next month.", "answer": "Radio Free Asia", "sentence": "A court in China\u2019s western region of Xinjiang tried two brothers of an American reporter on charges of endangering state security and leaking secrets, according to a spokesman for Radio Free Asia , the journalist\u2019s employer.", "paragraph_sentence": " A court in China\u2019s western region of Xinjiang tried two brothers of an American reporter on charges of endangering state security and leaking secrets, according to a spokesman for Radio Free Asia , the journalist\u2019s employer. No verdict has yet been announced in the trials of Shawket Hoshur on Tuesday and his younger brother Rexim Hoshur, which took place on Aug. 19, Rohit Mahajan, a spokesman for the United States government-funded R.F.A., said in an interview. Their brother, Shohret Hoshur, is a United States citizen whose reports on the Chinese government\u2019s crackdown on Xinjiang\u2019s Uighur ethnic group have been criticized by Beijing. The plight of Shohret Hoshur\u2019s brothers \u2014 a third brother, Tudaxun, was convicted of endangering state security last year and sentenced to five years in prison \u2014 has become an issue between the two countries before President Xi Jinping\u2019s summit meeting with President Obama in Washington next month.", "paragraph_answer": "A court in China\u2019s western region of Xinjiang tried two brothers of an American reporter on charges of endangering state security and leaking secrets, according to a spokesman for Radio Free Asia , the journalist\u2019s employer. No verdict has yet been announced in the trials of Shawket Hoshur on Tuesday and his younger brother Rexim Hoshur, which took place on Aug. 19, Rohit Mahajan, a spokesman for the United States government-funded R.F.A., said in an interview. Their brother, Shohret Hoshur, is a United States citizen whose reports on the Chinese government\u2019s crackdown on Xinjiang\u2019s Uighur ethnic group have been criticized by Beijing. The plight of Shohret Hoshur\u2019s brothers \u2014 a third brother, Tudaxun, was convicted of endangering state security last year and sentenced to five years in prison \u2014 has become an issue between the two countries before President Xi Jinping\u2019s summit meeting with President Obama in Washington next month.", "sentence_answer": "A court in China\u2019s western region of Xinjiang tried two brothers of an American reporter on charges of endangering state security and leaking secrets, according to a spokesman for Radio Free Asia , the journalist\u2019s employer.", "paragraph_id": "5d702c91c8e4820a9b66da23"} +{"question": "Who was the students at Cardiff try to keep from speaking at the University?", "paragraph": "LONDON \u2014 Students at Cardiff University have begun an online petition trying to bar Germaine Greer, the Australian feminist author, from speaking there next month because of her views on transgender women. Ms. Greer\u2019s views are well known, but the campaign to bar her from giving a lecture has raised the issue of academic censorship, and the university swiftly rejected the petition in the name of free speech. Ms. Greer, 76, who is best known for her best seller, \u201cThe Female Eunuch,\u201d has prompted outrage and protests in the past because of her comments. In a column in 2009 she wrote that transgender women seem like ghastly parodies and that a transgender woman was essentially \u201ca man\u2019s delusion that he is female.\u201d According to Varsity, Cambridge University\u2019s student newspaper, she suggested in January that transgender women do not know what it is like to have a vagina.", "answer": "Germaine Greer", "sentence": "LONDON \u2014 Students at Cardiff University have begun an online petition trying to bar Germaine Greer , the Australian feminist author, from speaking there next month because of her views on transgender women.", "paragraph_sentence": " LONDON \u2014 Students at Cardiff University have begun an online petition trying to bar Germaine Greer , the Australian feminist author, from speaking there next month because of her views on transgender women. Ms. Greer\u2019s views are well known, but the campaign to bar her from giving a lecture has raised the issue of academic censorship, and the university swiftly rejected the petition in the name of free speech. Ms. Greer, 76, who is best known for her best seller, \u201cThe Female Eunuch,\u201d has prompted outrage and protests in the past because of her comments. In a column in 2009 she wrote that transgender women seem like ghastly parodies and that a transgender woman was essentially \u201ca man\u2019s delusion that he is female.\u201d According to Varsity, Cambridge University\u2019s student newspaper, she suggested in January that transgender women do not know what it is like to have a vagina.", "paragraph_answer": "LONDON \u2014 Students at Cardiff University have begun an online petition trying to bar Germaine Greer , the Australian feminist author, from speaking there next month because of her views on transgender women. Ms. Greer\u2019s views are well known, but the campaign to bar her from giving a lecture has raised the issue of academic censorship, and the university swiftly rejected the petition in the name of free speech. Ms. Greer, 76, who is best known for her best seller, \u201cThe Female Eunuch,\u201d has prompted outrage and protests in the past because of her comments. In a column in 2009 she wrote that transgender women seem like ghastly parodies and that a transgender woman was essentially \u201ca man\u2019s delusion that he is female.\u201d According to Varsity, Cambridge University\u2019s student newspaper, she suggested in January that transgender women do not know what it is like to have a vagina.", "sentence_answer": "LONDON \u2014 Students at Cardiff University have begun an online petition trying to bar Germaine Greer , the Australian feminist author, from speaking there next month because of her views on transgender women.", "paragraph_id": "5d70231cc8e4820a9b66cf43"} +{"question": "What would Sandy add to some of the drawings in books?", "paragraph": "Emily was surprised to see her mother so at ease in the traditional role of Felix\u2019s bubbe (Yiddish for \u201cgrandmother\u201d). As a parent in the 1970s, Sandy turned every interaction with her children into a political act. During story time, she would go through their picture books with a bottle of Wite-\u00adOut and a Magic Marker, changing a hero\u2019s name from male to female, revising plot lines, adding long hair or breasts to some of the drawings. Story time was a different experience with Felix. Sandy would cuddle with the baby and turn pages. If she couldn\u2019t remember the word for \u201czebra\u201d or \u201clion,\u201d she wouldn\u2019t fuss about it. \u201cOh, it\u2019s some animal,\u201d she would say.", "answer": "adding long hair or breasts", "sentence": "During story time, she would go through their picture books with a bottle of Wite-\u00adOut and a Magic Marker, changing a hero\u2019s name from male to female, revising plot lines, adding long hair or breasts to some of the drawings.", "paragraph_sentence": "Emily was surprised to see her mother so at ease in the traditional role of Felix\u2019s bubbe (Yiddish for \u201cgrandmother\u201d). As a parent in the 1970s, Sandy turned every interaction with her children into a political act. During story time, she would go through their picture books with a bottle of Wite-\u00adOut and a Magic Marker, changing a hero\u2019s name from male to female, revising plot lines, adding long hair or breasts to some of the drawings. Story time was a different experience with Felix. Sandy would cuddle with the baby and turn pages. If she couldn\u2019t remember the word for \u201czebra\u201d or \u201clion,\u201d she wouldn\u2019t fuss about it. \u201cOh, it\u2019s some animal,\u201d she would say.", "paragraph_answer": "Emily was surprised to see her mother so at ease in the traditional role of Felix\u2019s bubbe (Yiddish for \u201cgrandmother\u201d). As a parent in the 1970s, Sandy turned every interaction with her children into a political act. During story time, she would go through their picture books with a bottle of Wite-\u00adOut and a Magic Marker, changing a hero\u2019s name from male to female, revising plot lines, adding long hair or breasts to some of the drawings. Story time was a different experience with Felix. Sandy would cuddle with the baby and turn pages. If she couldn\u2019t remember the word for \u201czebra\u201d or \u201clion,\u201d she wouldn\u2019t fuss about it. \u201cOh, it\u2019s some animal,\u201d she would say.", "sentence_answer": "During story time, she would go through their picture books with a bottle of Wite-\u00adOut and a Magic Marker, changing a hero\u2019s name from male to female, revising plot lines, adding long hair or breasts to some of the drawings.", "paragraph_id": "5d70416cc8e4820a9b66e59a"} +{"question": "In what month of 2014 did Clarkson make another controversial remark?", "paragraph": "Last year, the crew fled Argentina after being attacked by local residents during the filming of an episode in which Mr. Clarkson drove a Porsche sports car with the license plate H982 FKL, which some took as a reference to the British victory over Argentina in the 1982 Falklands War. Mr. Clarkson and his team insisted \u2014 with a wink \u2014 that they had no idea what the license plate meant. But most observers saw it as a typical Clarkson ploy to seem both naughty and patriotic. In May 2014, in film not intended for broadcast, Mr. Clarkson seemed to use a racist term while reciting the \u201ceeny, meeny, miney, moe\u201d rhyme. He denied uttering an offensive word but acknowledged \u201cthat it sounds like I did.\u201d He has also been accused of racist comments aimed at Indians, Mexicans and Asians.", "answer": "May", "sentence": "In May 2014, in film not intended for broadcast, Mr. Clarkson seemed to use a racist term while reciting the \u201ceeny, meeny, miney, moe\u201d rhyme.", "paragraph_sentence": "Last year, the crew fled Argentina after being attacked by local residents during the filming of an episode in which Mr. Clarkson drove a Porsche sports car with the license plate H982 FKL, which some took as a reference to the British victory over Argentina in the 1982 Falklands War. Mr. Clarkson and his team insisted \u2014 with a wink \u2014 that they had no idea what the license plate meant. But most observers saw it as a typical Clarkson ploy to seem both naughty and patriotic. In May 2014, in film not intended for broadcast, Mr. Clarkson seemed to use a racist term while reciting the \u201ceeny, meeny, miney, moe\u201d rhyme. He denied uttering an offensive word but acknowledged \u201cthat it sounds like I did.\u201d He has also been accused of racist comments aimed at Indians, Mexicans and Asians.", "paragraph_answer": "Last year, the crew fled Argentina after being attacked by local residents during the filming of an episode in which Mr. Clarkson drove a Porsche sports car with the license plate H982 FKL, which some took as a reference to the British victory over Argentina in the 1982 Falklands War. Mr. Clarkson and his team insisted \u2014 with a wink \u2014 that they had no idea what the license plate meant. But most observers saw it as a typical Clarkson ploy to seem both naughty and patriotic. In May 2014, in film not intended for broadcast, Mr. Clarkson seemed to use a racist term while reciting the \u201ceeny, meeny, miney, moe\u201d rhyme. He denied uttering an offensive word but acknowledged \u201cthat it sounds like I did.\u201d He has also been accused of racist comments aimed at Indians, Mexicans and Asians.", "sentence_answer": "In May 2014, in film not intended for broadcast, Mr. Clarkson seemed to use a racist term while reciting the \u201ceeny, meeny, miney, moe\u201d rhyme.", "paragraph_id": "5d70061dc8e4820a9b66aa8b"} +{"question": "Who is Marcelo Aguirre?", "paragraph": "The #nightshift hashtag is especially well populated by the armed professions and the healing ones. Sometimes they are almost one and the same, as in the case of @armedmedic3153, a.k.a. Marcelo Aguirre, a paramedic in Newark and suburban New Jersey. He owns an AR-15, a \u00ad9-millimeter\u00ad and a shotgun, but the only thing he shoots on the night shift is his camera. He works nights so he can study days; he wants to be a doctor. Nights are good preparation for that: You get more serious cases. You learn on the job. A 12-hour course each night you\u2019re on. Twenty-four hours if you take a double. After a while, the adrenaline that juices you when you\u2019re new \u2014 when you\u2019re still keeping a tally of the lives you\u2019ve saved \u2014 disappears. You just do the job. \u201cHigh speed and low drag,\u201d Aguirre told me when I called. \u201cPlease ignore the siren,\u201d he said. \u201cWe\u2019re going to a call.\u201d A stroke. Nothing to get excited about. Coffee sustains him. He stays clean. Some guys, he said, use Provigil, but that\u2019s prescribed. \u201cFor shift-work disorder,\u201d he said.", "answer": "a paramedic", "sentence": "Marcelo Aguirre, a paramedic in Newark and suburban New Jersey.", "paragraph_sentence": "The #nightshift hashtag is especially well populated by the armed professions and the healing ones. Sometimes they are almost one and the same, as in the case of @armedmedic3153, a.k.a. Marcelo Aguirre, a paramedic in Newark and suburban New Jersey. He owns an AR-15, a \u00ad9-millimeter\u00ad and a shotgun, but the only thing he shoots on the night shift is his camera. He works nights so he can study days; he wants to be a doctor. Nights are good preparation for that: You get more serious cases. You learn on the job. A 12-hour course each night you\u2019re on. Twenty-four hours if you take a double. After a while, the adrenaline that juices you when you\u2019re new \u2014 when you\u2019re still keeping a tally of the lives you\u2019ve saved \u2014 disappears. You just do the job. \u201cHigh speed and low drag,\u201d Aguirre told me when I called. \u201cPlease ignore the siren,\u201d he said. \u201cWe\u2019re going to a call.\u201d A stroke. Nothing to get excited about. Coffee sustains him. He stays clean. Some guys, he said, use Provigil, but that\u2019s prescribed. \u201cFor shift-work disorder,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "The #nightshift hashtag is especially well populated by the armed professions and the healing ones. Sometimes they are almost one and the same, as in the case of @armedmedic3153, a.k.a. Marcelo Aguirre, a paramedic in Newark and suburban New Jersey. He owns an AR-15, a \u00ad9-millimeter\u00ad and a shotgun, but the only thing he shoots on the night shift is his camera. He works nights so he can study days; he wants to be a doctor. Nights are good preparation for that: You get more serious cases. You learn on the job. A 12-hour course each night you\u2019re on. Twenty-four hours if you take a double. After a while, the adrenaline that juices you when you\u2019re new \u2014 when you\u2019re still keeping a tally of the lives you\u2019ve saved \u2014 disappears. You just do the job. \u201cHigh speed and low drag,\u201d Aguirre told me when I called. \u201cPlease ignore the siren,\u201d he said. \u201cWe\u2019re going to a call.\u201d A stroke. Nothing to get excited about. Coffee sustains him. He stays clean. Some guys, he said, use Provigil, but that\u2019s prescribed. \u201cFor shift-work disorder,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "Marcelo Aguirre, a paramedic in Newark and suburban New Jersey.", "paragraph_id": "5d703385c8e4820a9b66dea9"} +{"question": "What baseball park was the Mets game played in?", "paragraph": "Harvey has been described as a good-luck charm. After throwing a gem on May 1 against the Nationals, the next afternoon he was at the Rangers\u2019 game, sitting near center ice at the Garden, about eight rows up. He was one of the first celebrities saluted on the video board. Then he appeared to leave after the second period, presumably so he could get to Citi Field in time for the Mets\u2019 game that night. The Rangers eventually won that game, 3-2, and on Friday, after the Mets had finished, they pulled out a 2-1 overtime victory. On Friday night, the lowly Phillies kept Harvey busy. His start was another test in his comeback from Tommy John surgery, to see how he would perform if his routine kept getting tweaked. In the Mets\u2019 ongoing quest to keep him healthy, they had started manipulating the rotation, taking advantage of quirks in the schedule to give Harvey extra days off.", "answer": "Citi Field", "sentence": "Then he appeared to leave after the second period, presumably so he could get to Citi Field in time for the Mets\u2019 game that night.", "paragraph_sentence": "Harvey has been described as a good-luck charm. After throwing a gem on May 1 against the Nationals, the next afternoon he was at the Rangers\u2019 game, sitting near center ice at the Garden, about eight rows up. He was one of the first celebrities saluted on the video board. Then he appeared to leave after the second period, presumably so he could get to Citi Field in time for the Mets\u2019 game that night. The Rangers eventually won that game, 3-2, and on Friday, after the Mets had finished, they pulled out a 2-1 overtime victory. On Friday night, the lowly Phillies kept Harvey busy. His start was another test in his comeback from Tommy John surgery, to see how he would perform if his routine kept getting tweaked. In the Mets\u2019 ongoing quest to keep him healthy, they had started manipulating the rotation, taking advantage of quirks in the schedule to give Harvey extra days off.", "paragraph_answer": "Harvey has been described as a good-luck charm. After throwing a gem on May 1 against the Nationals, the next afternoon he was at the Rangers\u2019 game, sitting near center ice at the Garden, about eight rows up. He was one of the first celebrities saluted on the video board. Then he appeared to leave after the second period, presumably so he could get to Citi Field in time for the Mets\u2019 game that night. The Rangers eventually won that game, 3-2, and on Friday, after the Mets had finished, they pulled out a 2-1 overtime victory. On Friday night, the lowly Phillies kept Harvey busy. His start was another test in his comeback from Tommy John surgery, to see how he would perform if his routine kept getting tweaked. In the Mets\u2019 ongoing quest to keep him healthy, they had started manipulating the rotation, taking advantage of quirks in the schedule to give Harvey extra days off.", "sentence_answer": "Then he appeared to leave after the second period, presumably so he could get to Citi Field in time for the Mets\u2019 game that night.", "paragraph_id": "5d70280ac8e4820a9b66d5b6"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700df8c8e4820a9b66b9b5"} +{"question": "Which international team did Towns play for at the age of 16?", "paragraph": "\u201cI always want to be working on the tricks in my bag,\u201d Towns said. \u201cI just wait to develop the trick fully and make sure it\u2019s the best trick I can possibly use.\u201d In other words, his 3-point shot is one such trick. He promised more to come. Towns has always been on an advanced curriculum. At 16, he joined the Dominican Republic\u2019s national team for a summer of exhibitions. Towns said he tried to learn as much as possible from teammates like Al Horford \u2014 lessons about the importance of repetition, about the complexities of defending the pick-and-roll. \u201cIt put me light-years ahead in terms of my knowledge for the game,\u201d Towns said. \u201cNot so much physically \u2014 physically, I couldn\u2019t do anything at that age.\u201d", "answer": "Dominican Republic", "sentence": "At 16, he joined the Dominican Republic \u2019s national team for a summer of exhibitions.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI always want to be working on the tricks in my bag,\u201d Towns said. \u201cI just wait to develop the trick fully and make sure it\u2019s the best trick I can possibly use.\u201d In other words, his 3-point shot is one such trick. He promised more to come. Towns has always been on an advanced curriculum. At 16, he joined the Dominican Republic \u2019s national team for a summer of exhibitions. Towns said he tried to learn as much as possible from teammates like Al Horford \u2014 lessons about the importance of repetition, about the complexities of defending the pick-and-roll. \u201cIt put me light-years ahead in terms of my knowledge for the game,\u201d Towns said. \u201cNot so much physically \u2014 physically, I couldn\u2019t do anything at that age.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI always want to be working on the tricks in my bag,\u201d Towns said. \u201cI just wait to develop the trick fully and make sure it\u2019s the best trick I can possibly use.\u201d In other words, his 3-point shot is one such trick. He promised more to come. Towns has always been on an advanced curriculum. At 16, he joined the Dominican Republic \u2019s national team for a summer of exhibitions. Towns said he tried to learn as much as possible from teammates like Al Horford \u2014 lessons about the importance of repetition, about the complexities of defending the pick-and-roll. \u201cIt put me light-years ahead in terms of my knowledge for the game,\u201d Towns said. \u201cNot so much physically \u2014 physically, I couldn\u2019t do anything at that age.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "At 16, he joined the Dominican Republic \u2019s national team for a summer of exhibitions.", "paragraph_id": "5d700853c8e4820a9b66afd2"} +{"question": "How long did the relay swim take?", "paragraph": "But the shark disappeared, the current turned at midmorning Tuesday, and for the final five hours of the swim, the athletes swam with the current, their every stroke infused with the momentum of the ocean. Warmuth took the final shift as the Deep Enders closed in on the Palos Verdes Peninsula. \u201cI was just gliding across the water,\u201d Warmuth said. \u201cIt was very fluid; the water was warm and glassy. It was an amazing feeling.\u201d With the Palos Verdes bluffs looming larger with every stroke, the sea became murky as four-foot waves swelled and thrashed the rocky shore. Behind Warmuth, her teammates dived into the water and swam to shore in a V formation, symbolizing victory. Warmuth checked the waves, timed it right and let the tide push her onto the rocks, crusted with razor-sharp barnacles. At 4:52 p.m. Tuesday \u2014 33 hours 37 minutes 26 seconds after the relay began \u2014 Warmuth took the required three steps clear of the tide line, not far from the Terranea Resort, in Rancho Palos Verdes. Soon her friends joined her on shore. Having navigated swirling seas, thick with jellyfish and as deep as 1,000 feet in some places, they hugged and celebrated, elated and exhausted.", "answer": "33 hours 37 minutes 26 seconds", "sentence": "At 4:52 p.m. Tuesday \u2014 33 hours 37 minutes 26 seconds after the relay began \u2014 Warmuth took the required three steps clear of the tide line, not far from the Terranea Resort, in Rancho Palos Verdes.", "paragraph_sentence": "But the shark disappeared, the current turned at midmorning Tuesday, and for the final five hours of the swim, the athletes swam with the current, their every stroke infused with the momentum of the ocean. Warmuth took the final shift as the Deep Enders closed in on the Palos Verdes Peninsula. \u201cI was just gliding across the water,\u201d Warmuth said. \u201cIt was very fluid; the water was warm and glassy. It was an amazing feeling.\u201d With the Palos Verdes bluffs looming larger with every stroke, the sea became murky as four-foot waves swelled and thrashed the rocky shore. Behind Warmuth, her teammates dived into the water and swam to shore in a V formation, symbolizing victory. Warmuth checked the waves, timed it right and let the tide push her onto the rocks, crusted with razor-sharp barnacles. At 4:52 p.m. Tuesday \u2014 33 hours 37 minutes 26 seconds after the relay began \u2014 Warmuth took the required three steps clear of the tide line, not far from the Terranea Resort, in Rancho Palos Verdes. Soon her friends joined her on shore. Having navigated swirling seas, thick with jellyfish and as deep as 1,000 feet in some places, they hugged and celebrated, elated and exhausted.", "paragraph_answer": "But the shark disappeared, the current turned at midmorning Tuesday, and for the final five hours of the swim, the athletes swam with the current, their every stroke infused with the momentum of the ocean. Warmuth took the final shift as the Deep Enders closed in on the Palos Verdes Peninsula. \u201cI was just gliding across the water,\u201d Warmuth said. \u201cIt was very fluid; the water was warm and glassy. It was an amazing feeling.\u201d With the Palos Verdes bluffs looming larger with every stroke, the sea became murky as four-foot waves swelled and thrashed the rocky shore. Behind Warmuth, her teammates dived into the water and swam to shore in a V formation, symbolizing victory. Warmuth checked the waves, timed it right and let the tide push her onto the rocks, crusted with razor-sharp barnacles. At 4:52 p.m. Tuesday \u2014 33 hours 37 minutes 26 seconds after the relay began \u2014 Warmuth took the required three steps clear of the tide line, not far from the Terranea Resort, in Rancho Palos Verdes. Soon her friends joined her on shore. Having navigated swirling seas, thick with jellyfish and as deep as 1,000 feet in some places, they hugged and celebrated, elated and exhausted.", "sentence_answer": "At 4:52 p.m. Tuesday \u2014 33 hours 37 minutes 26 seconds after the relay began \u2014 Warmuth took the required three steps clear of the tide line, not far from the Terranea Resort, in Rancho Palos Verdes.", "paragraph_id": "5d70103bc8e4820a9b66bc62"} +{"question": "What is needed in order to pursue clinical trials?", "paragraph": "Mr. Roin, the M.I.T. professor, describes another approach: to provide a period of market exclusivity \u2014 long enough to motivate investment in clinical trials \u2014 to any organization addressing an unmet medical need with a drug that isn\u2019t patentable. If it invested in securing F.D.A. approval for a drug based on active ingredients not found in existing drugs, an organization would be granted such a period of market exclusivity and the stream of profits that usually accompanies it, even if the drug was considered obvious and not novel. That idea has been included in congressional legislation, but has not made it into law.", "answer": "investment", "sentence": "Mr. Roin, the M.I.T. professor, describes another approach: to provide a period of market exclusivity \u2014 long enough to motivate investment in clinical trials \u2014 to any organization addressing an unmet medical need with a drug that isn\u2019t patentable.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Roin, the M.I.T. professor, describes another approach: to provide a period of market exclusivity \u2014 long enough to motivate investment in clinical trials \u2014 to any organization addressing an unmet medical need with a drug that isn\u2019t patentable. If it invested in securing F.D.A. approval for a drug based on active ingredients not found in existing drugs, an organization would be granted such a period of market exclusivity and the stream of profits that usually accompanies it, even if the drug was considered obvious and not novel. That idea has been included in congressional legislation, but has not made it into law.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Roin, the M.I.T. professor, describes another approach: to provide a period of market exclusivity \u2014 long enough to motivate investment in clinical trials \u2014 to any organization addressing an unmet medical need with a drug that isn\u2019t patentable. If it invested in securing F.D.A. approval for a drug based on active ingredients not found in existing drugs, an organization would be granted such a period of market exclusivity and the stream of profits that usually accompanies it, even if the drug was considered obvious and not novel. That idea has been included in congressional legislation, but has not made it into law.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Roin, the M.I.T. professor, describes another approach: to provide a period of market exclusivity \u2014 long enough to motivate investment in clinical trials \u2014 to any organization addressing an unmet medical need with a drug that isn\u2019t patentable.", "paragraph_id": "5d70135ac8e4820a9b66bff8"} +{"question": "What has used a process called static scoring until now?", "paragraph": "We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s but we do know that he will face a big challenge. House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201cdynamic scoring\u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy. This is the can of worms that awaits Mr. Hall as he takes on his new job. Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending. This procedure has the virtues of simplicity and transparency.", "answer": "conventional budget analysis", "sentence": "Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending.", "paragraph_sentence": "We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s but we do know that he will face a big challenge. House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201cdynamic scoring\u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy. This is the can of worms that awaits Mr. Hall as he takes on his new job. Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending. This procedure has the virtues of simplicity and transparency.", "paragraph_answer": "We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s but we do know that he will face a big challenge. House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201cdynamic scoring\u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy. This is the can of worms that awaits Mr. Hall as he takes on his new job. Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending. This procedure has the virtues of simplicity and transparency.", "sentence_answer": "Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending.", "paragraph_id": "5d70590dc8e4820a9b66edf5"} +{"question": "What kind of group is the Backstreet Boys?", "paragraph": "\u201cOne of the things we tried to do here was make it fun to be here,\u201d Collins said. \u201cTherefore, we\u2019ve tried to create an atmosphere in the clubhouse that\u2019s fun.\u201d The culture shift was evident early in the afternoon. Several Mets, led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s. The mood was the epitome of relaxed. While the Mets were keeping things light, local television and radio broadcasts in Philadelphia were full of speculation about retaliation after tensions flared during the Mets\u2019 win on Tuesday, when Hansel Robles threw a pitch before a Phillies batter was ready. But the events from the night before were far from the thoughts of the Mets\u2019 players. \u201cWe talked with Hansel today; you can\u2019t react like he did,\u201d Collins said, referring to Robles\u2019s staring toward the Phillies\u2019 dugout after an inning-ending strikeout. \u201cThe other guys, they haven\u2019t even brought it up today.\u201d With clear minds, the Mets emerged to score three runs in the first inning off the Phillies\u2019 Jerad Eickhoff, a rookie.", "answer": "boy band", "sentence": "Several Mets, led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cOne of the things we tried to do here was make it fun to be here,\u201d Collins said. \u201cTherefore, we\u2019ve tried to create an atmosphere in the clubhouse that\u2019s fun.\u201d The culture shift was evident early in the afternoon. Several Mets, led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s. The mood was the epitome of relaxed. While the Mets were keeping things light, local television and radio broadcasts in Philadelphia were full of speculation about retaliation after tensions flared during the Mets\u2019 win on Tuesday, when Hansel Robles threw a pitch before a Phillies batter was ready. But the events from the night before were far from the thoughts of the Mets\u2019 players. \u201cWe talked with Hansel today; you can\u2019t react like he did,\u201d Collins said, referring to Robles\u2019s staring toward the Phillies\u2019 dugout after an inning-ending strikeout. \u201cThe other guys, they haven\u2019t even brought it up today.\u201d With clear minds, the Mets emerged to score three runs in the first inning off the Phillies\u2019 Jerad Eickhoff, a rookie.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cOne of the things we tried to do here was make it fun to be here,\u201d Collins said. \u201cTherefore, we\u2019ve tried to create an atmosphere in the clubhouse that\u2019s fun.\u201d The culture shift was evident early in the afternoon. Several Mets, led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s. The mood was the epitome of relaxed. While the Mets were keeping things light, local television and radio broadcasts in Philadelphia were full of speculation about retaliation after tensions flared during the Mets\u2019 win on Tuesday, when Hansel Robles threw a pitch before a Phillies batter was ready. But the events from the night before were far from the thoughts of the Mets\u2019 players. \u201cWe talked with Hansel today; you can\u2019t react like he did,\u201d Collins said, referring to Robles\u2019s staring toward the Phillies\u2019 dugout after an inning-ending strikeout. \u201cThe other guys, they haven\u2019t even brought it up today.\u201d With clear minds, the Mets emerged to score three runs in the first inning off the Phillies\u2019 Jerad Eickhoff, a rookie.", "sentence_answer": "Several Mets, led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s.", "paragraph_id": "5d701068c8e4820a9b66bca8"} +{"question": "In what year is the play from?", "paragraph": "But this 40-minute play from 1921, seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense. Its full title, \u201cReread Another A Play to Be Played Indoors or Out I Wish to Be a School,\u201d offers an accurate idea of what to expect. Staged by the Target Margin artistic director David Herskovits, a man celebrated for bringing cobwebbed theatrical arcana into the light, it is performed with tripping grace by Clare Barron, Purva Bedi and Ugo Chukwu (and a participatory sound man, Jesse Freedman), who wear kimonos and sailor stripes, suggesting extras from some hybrid Gilbert & Sullivan operetta. Using kitschy objects like white plastic globes and shiny party hats as visual aids, they speak in cryptic fragments of mountains and men and mothers and colorblind house painters.", "answer": "1921", "sentence": "But this 40-minute play from 1921 , seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense.", "paragraph_sentence": " But this 40-minute play from 1921 , seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense. Its full title, \u201cReread Another A Play to Be Played Indoors or Out I Wish to Be a School,\u201d offers an accurate idea of what to expect. Staged by the Target Margin artistic director David Herskovits, a man celebrated for bringing cobwebbed theatrical arcana into the light, it is performed with tripping grace by Clare Barron, Purva Bedi and Ugo Chukwu (and a participatory sound man, Jesse Freedman), who wear kimonos and sailor stripes, suggesting extras from some hybrid Gilbert & Sullivan operetta. Using kitschy objects like white plastic globes and shiny party hats as visual aids, they speak in cryptic fragments of mountains and men and mothers and colorblind house painters.", "paragraph_answer": "But this 40-minute play from 1921 , seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense. Its full title, \u201cReread Another A Play to Be Played Indoors or Out I Wish to Be a School,\u201d offers an accurate idea of what to expect. Staged by the Target Margin artistic director David Herskovits, a man celebrated for bringing cobwebbed theatrical arcana into the light, it is performed with tripping grace by Clare Barron, Purva Bedi and Ugo Chukwu (and a participatory sound man, Jesse Freedman), who wear kimonos and sailor stripes, suggesting extras from some hybrid Gilbert & Sullivan operetta. Using kitschy objects like white plastic globes and shiny party hats as visual aids, they speak in cryptic fragments of mountains and men and mothers and colorblind house painters.", "sentence_answer": "But this 40-minute play from 1921 , seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense.", "paragraph_id": "5d707f7bc8e4820a9b66f3b7"} +{"question": "What year did Mr. Shoemaker read \"Notes From a Beach Found at Carmel\"?", "paragraph": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "answer": "1962", "sentence": "So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962 .", "paragraph_sentence": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962 . Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962 . Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962 .", "paragraph_id": "5d701b9bc8e4820a9b66c70c"} +{"question": "Who provided Hicklin with a \"crazy\" list?", "paragraph": "Hicklin plans to man the store himself on weekends, offering up mince pies and cups of tea (including a rooibos blend called \u201cLittle Dickens\u201d from the Brooklyn-based purveyor Bellocq, as well as Yorkshire Gold from his native England). He admitted that the project has required him to play \u201cliterary investigator,\u201d doggedly tracking down a few quirky or elusive volumes. \u201cRaymond Pettibon, for example, his list is crazy,\u201d Hicklin noted with admiration. \u201cLike, seventeenth-century treatises on urn burial. Where else would you find this?\u201d The artist Ryan McGinley, for his part, included a beautiful 1960 illustrated children\u2019s book called \u201cAbout Caves,\u201d and the director John Waters named out-of-print treasures such as Philip Hoare\u2019s \u201cSerious Pleasures: The Life of Stephen Tennant.\u201d", "answer": "Raymond Pettibon", "sentence": "He admitted that the project has required him to play \u201cliterary investigator,\u201d doggedly tracking down a few quirky or elusive volumes. \u201c Raymond Pettibon , for example, his list is crazy,\u201d Hicklin noted with admiration.", "paragraph_sentence": "Hicklin plans to man the store himself on weekends, offering up mince pies and cups of tea (including a rooibos blend called \u201cLittle Dickens\u201d from the Brooklyn-based purveyor Bellocq, as well as Yorkshire Gold from his native England). He admitted that the project has required him to play \u201cliterary investigator,\u201d doggedly tracking down a few quirky or elusive volumes. \u201c Raymond Pettibon , for example, his list is crazy,\u201d Hicklin noted with admiration. \u201cLike, seventeenth-century treatises on urn burial. Where else would you find this?\u201d The artist Ryan McGinley, for his part, included a beautiful 1960 illustrated children\u2019s book called \u201cAbout Caves,\u201d and the director John Waters named out-of-print treasures such as Philip Hoare\u2019s \u201cSerious Pleasures: The Life of Stephen Tennant.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Hicklin plans to man the store himself on weekends, offering up mince pies and cups of tea (including a rooibos blend called \u201cLittle Dickens\u201d from the Brooklyn-based purveyor Bellocq, as well as Yorkshire Gold from his native England). He admitted that the project has required him to play \u201cliterary investigator,\u201d doggedly tracking down a few quirky or elusive volumes. \u201c Raymond Pettibon , for example, his list is crazy,\u201d Hicklin noted with admiration. \u201cLike, seventeenth-century treatises on urn burial. Where else would you find this?\u201d The artist Ryan McGinley, for his part, included a beautiful 1960 illustrated children\u2019s book called \u201cAbout Caves,\u201d and the director John Waters named out-of-print treasures such as Philip Hoare\u2019s \u201cSerious Pleasures: The Life of Stephen Tennant.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "He admitted that the project has required him to play \u201cliterary investigator,\u201d doggedly tracking down a few quirky or elusive volumes. \u201c Raymond Pettibon , for example, his list is crazy,\u201d Hicklin noted with admiration.", "paragraph_id": "5d701b67c8e4820a9b66c6d6"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700847c8e4820a9b66afcc"} +{"question": "Who is the youngest player to reach 1,000 career catches?", "paragraph": "Larry Fitzgerald topped 1,000 receiving yards in a season for the seventh time. Fitzgerald, who caught eight passes for 55 yards, also became the youngest player to reach 1,000 career catches. The Rams, who have lost five in a row, announced that 51,115 tickets had been distributed, a season low and about 15,000 shy of a sellout. BRONCOS 17, CHARGERS 3 Brock Osweiler hit Demaryius Thomas for a 3-yard score on the opening drive, and Danny Trevathan intercepted a Philip Rivers pass and returned it 25 yards for a touchdown as Denver won at San Diego. Osweiler moved to 3-0 since taking over for the injured Peyton Manning. San Diego has lost five straight at home and five straight against A.F.C. West foes. Running back Melvin Gordon, the Chargers\u2019 first-round draft pick this year, lost a fumble and was benched. CHIEFS 34, RAIDERS 20 Derek Carr passed for 283 yards and two touchdowns, but he also threw three fourth-quarter interceptions that sank Oakland against visiting Kansas City, which won its sixth straight. Two of Carr\u2019s interceptions led to Jeremy Maclin touchdown catches, and Tyvon Branch returned the third for a game-clinching score. The Raiders, who have lost four of five, were leading by 6 points and driving when Carr\u2019s mistakes changed the tide of the game. BILLS 30, TEXANS 21 Tyrod Taylor threw three scoring passes, including a 40-yarder to Charles Clay with 1:53 left, and he had a rushing score to help Buffalo secure a home win. Taylor passed for 211 yards, was sacked just once and added 28 rushing yards. He showed little fear in throwing into double coverage, completing two 53-yard passes to Sammy Watkins. And Taylor played with poise in finding Clay for the decisive touchdown after the Bills\u2019 offense had sputtered, with five punts and a missed field-goal attempt on the team\u2019s first six drives of the second half. BENGALS 37, BROWNS 3 Cincinnati\u2019s Andy Dalton threw two touchdown passes and ran for a score to notch his 50th career win, sending host Cleveland to its seventh straight loss.", "answer": "Larry Fitzgerald", "sentence": "Larry Fitzgerald topped 1,000 receiving yards in a season for the seventh time.", "paragraph_sentence": " Larry Fitzgerald topped 1,000 receiving yards in a season for the seventh time. Fitzgerald, who caught eight passes for 55 yards, also became the youngest player to reach 1,000 career catches. The Rams, who have lost five in a row, announced that 51,115 tickets had been distributed, a season low and about 15,000 shy of a sellout. BRONCOS 17, CHARGERS 3 Brock Osweiler hit Demaryius Thomas for a 3-yard score on the opening drive, and Danny Trevathan intercepted a Philip Rivers pass and returned it 25 yards for a touchdown as Denver won at San Diego. Osweiler moved to 3-0 since taking over for the injured Peyton Manning. San Diego has lost five straight at home and five straight against A.F.C. West foes. Running back Melvin Gordon, the Chargers\u2019 first-round draft pick this year, lost a fumble and was benched. CHIEFS 34, RAIDERS 20 Derek Carr passed for 283 yards and two touchdowns, but he also threw three fourth-quarter interceptions that sank Oakland against visiting Kansas City, which won its sixth straight. Two of Carr\u2019s interceptions led to Jeremy Maclin touchdown catches, and Tyvon Branch returned the third for a game-clinching score. The Raiders, who have lost four of five, were leading by 6 points and driving when Carr\u2019s mistakes changed the tide of the game. BILLS 30, TEXANS 21 Tyrod Taylor threw three scoring passes, including a 40-yarder to Charles Clay with 1:53 left, and he had a rushing score to help Buffalo secure a home win. Taylor passed for 211 yards, was sacked just once and added 28 rushing yards. He showed little fear in throwing into double coverage, completing two 53-yard passes to Sammy Watkins. And Taylor played with poise in finding Clay for the decisive touchdown after the Bills\u2019 offense had sputtered, with five punts and a missed field-goal attempt on the team\u2019s first six drives of the second half. BENGALS 37, BROWNS 3 Cincinnati\u2019s Andy Dalton threw two touchdown passes and ran for a score to notch his 50th career win, sending host Cleveland to its seventh straight loss.", "paragraph_answer": " Larry Fitzgerald topped 1,000 receiving yards in a season for the seventh time. Fitzgerald, who caught eight passes for 55 yards, also became the youngest player to reach 1,000 career catches. The Rams, who have lost five in a row, announced that 51,115 tickets had been distributed, a season low and about 15,000 shy of a sellout. BRONCOS 17, CHARGERS 3 Brock Osweiler hit Demaryius Thomas for a 3-yard score on the opening drive, and Danny Trevathan intercepted a Philip Rivers pass and returned it 25 yards for a touchdown as Denver won at San Diego. Osweiler moved to 3-0 since taking over for the injured Peyton Manning. San Diego has lost five straight at home and five straight against A.F.C. West foes. Running back Melvin Gordon, the Chargers\u2019 first-round draft pick this year, lost a fumble and was benched. CHIEFS 34, RAIDERS 20 Derek Carr passed for 283 yards and two touchdowns, but he also threw three fourth-quarter interceptions that sank Oakland against visiting Kansas City, which won its sixth straight. Two of Carr\u2019s interceptions led to Jeremy Maclin touchdown catches, and Tyvon Branch returned the third for a game-clinching score. The Raiders, who have lost four of five, were leading by 6 points and driving when Carr\u2019s mistakes changed the tide of the game. BILLS 30, TEXANS 21 Tyrod Taylor threw three scoring passes, including a 40-yarder to Charles Clay with 1:53 left, and he had a rushing score to help Buffalo secure a home win. Taylor passed for 211 yards, was sacked just once and added 28 rushing yards. He showed little fear in throwing into double coverage, completing two 53-yard passes to Sammy Watkins. And Taylor played with poise in finding Clay for the decisive touchdown after the Bills\u2019 offense had sputtered, with five punts and a missed field-goal attempt on the team\u2019s first six drives of the second half. BENGALS 37, BROWNS 3 Cincinnati\u2019s Andy Dalton threw two touchdown passes and ran for a score to notch his 50th career win, sending host Cleveland to its seventh straight loss.", "sentence_answer": " Larry Fitzgerald topped 1,000 receiving yards in a season for the seventh time.", "paragraph_id": "5d7030c6c8e4820a9b66dce8"} +{"question": "What occupation does Mr. Yu have?", "paragraph": "The lawyer, Yu Wensheng, 48, was taken away in handcuffs late Thursday night after more than a dozen police officers forced their way into the family\u2019s Beijing apartment, said his wife, Xu Yan. She said in an interview that the police had confiscated a computer and memory stick from the apartment and had said Mr. Yu would face criminal charges of \u201cpicking quarrels and provoking trouble,\u201d a nebulous, catchall accusation increasingly lodged against Chinese rights advocates. Mr. Yu\u2019s detention comes amid a concerted assault in China on so-called rights defense lawyers, a small but audacious band of legal defenders who have been willing to take on politically sensitive cases.", "answer": "lawyer", "sentence": "The lawyer , Yu Wensheng, 48, was taken away in handcuffs late Thursday night after more than a dozen police officers forced their way into the family\u2019s Beijing apartment, said his wife, Xu Yan.", "paragraph_sentence": " The lawyer , Yu Wensheng, 48, was taken away in handcuffs late Thursday night after more than a dozen police officers forced their way into the family\u2019s Beijing apartment, said his wife, Xu Yan. She said in an interview that the police had confiscated a computer and memory stick from the apartment and had said Mr. Yu would face criminal charges of \u201cpicking quarrels and provoking trouble,\u201d a nebulous, catchall accusation increasingly lodged against Chinese rights advocates. Mr. Yu\u2019s detention comes amid a concerted assault in China on so-called rights defense lawyers, a small but audacious band of legal defenders who have been willing to take on politically sensitive cases.", "paragraph_answer": "The lawyer , Yu Wensheng, 48, was taken away in handcuffs late Thursday night after more than a dozen police officers forced their way into the family\u2019s Beijing apartment, said his wife, Xu Yan. She said in an interview that the police had confiscated a computer and memory stick from the apartment and had said Mr. Yu would face criminal charges of \u201cpicking quarrels and provoking trouble,\u201d a nebulous, catchall accusation increasingly lodged against Chinese rights advocates. Mr. Yu\u2019s detention comes amid a concerted assault in China on so-called rights defense lawyers, a small but audacious band of legal defenders who have been willing to take on politically sensitive cases.", "sentence_answer": "The lawyer , Yu Wensheng, 48, was taken away in handcuffs late Thursday night after more than a dozen police officers forced their way into the family\u2019s Beijing apartment, said his wife, Xu Yan.", "paragraph_id": "5d707dd2c8e4820a9b66f38e"} +{"question": "Why did Siddhartha leave his home?", "paragraph": "In his life as Vessantara, the Buddha earned his karmic wings and was reborn just one last time as another prince, Siddhartha. For some years, Siddhartha lived a bubble-baby existence. But news of reality, cold and harsh, seeped in. He knew he had to face it, and one night he left home for good, his horse carried aloft by gods so its hoof beats wouldn\u2019t be heard. Then finally, after years of self-searching, he arrived at a letting-go enlightenment, though not before certain celestial no-goodniks tried to block his way. We see two of them, potbellied, green of skin, weapons drawn, clomping across a glazed 15th-century temple tile.", "answer": "news of reality, cold and harsh, seeped in. He knew he had to face it", "sentence": "But news of reality, cold and harsh, seeped in. He knew he had to face it , and one night he left home for good, his horse carried aloft by gods so its hoof beats wouldn\u2019t be heard.", "paragraph_sentence": "In his life as Vessantara, the Buddha earned his karmic wings and was reborn just one last time as another prince, Siddhartha. For some years, Siddhartha lived a bubble-baby existence. But news of reality, cold and harsh, seeped in. He knew he had to face it , and one night he left home for good, his horse carried aloft by gods so its hoof beats wouldn\u2019t be heard. Then finally, after years of self-searching, he arrived at a letting-go enlightenment, though not before certain celestial no-goodniks tried to block his way. We see two of them, potbellied, green of skin, weapons drawn, clomping across a glazed 15th-century temple tile.", "paragraph_answer": "In his life as Vessantara, the Buddha earned his karmic wings and was reborn just one last time as another prince, Siddhartha. For some years, Siddhartha lived a bubble-baby existence. But news of reality, cold and harsh, seeped in. He knew he had to face it , and one night he left home for good, his horse carried aloft by gods so its hoof beats wouldn\u2019t be heard. Then finally, after years of self-searching, he arrived at a letting-go enlightenment, though not before certain celestial no-goodniks tried to block his way. We see two of them, potbellied, green of skin, weapons drawn, clomping across a glazed 15th-century temple tile.", "sentence_answer": "But news of reality, cold and harsh, seeped in. He knew he had to face it , and one night he left home for good, his horse carried aloft by gods so its hoof beats wouldn\u2019t be heard.", "paragraph_id": "5d70290fc8e4820a9b66d6e0"} +{"question": "What did Walt Mossberg co-found?", "paragraph": "Walt Mossberg, who was a technology columnist for The Wall Street Journal for many years before co-founding ReCode, wrote a 1,400-word column on how Mr. Sorkin \u201cchose to cherry-pick and exaggerate some of the worst aspects of Jobs\u2019 character,\u201d proclaiming over and over that the Steve Jobs portrayed in the film \u201cisn\u2019t the man I knew.\u201d Steven Levy, who covered Apple for Newsweek and Rolling Stone, said that the Steve Jobs portrayed wasn\u2019t \u201cthe person I knew.\u201d And Larry Magid, who covered Apple as a syndicated technology columnist for The San Jose Mercury News, wrote in Forbes that the movie was \u201cnot about the man I knew.\u201d", "answer": "ReCode", "sentence": "Walt Mossberg, who was a technology columnist for The Wall Street Journal for many years before co-founding ReCode , wrote a 1,400-word column on how Mr. Sorkin \u201cchose to cherry-pick and exaggerate some of the worst aspects of Jobs\u2019 character,\u201d proclaiming over and over that the Steve Jobs portrayed in the film \u201cisn\u2019t the man I knew.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Walt Mossberg, who was a technology columnist for The Wall Street Journal for many years before co-founding ReCode , wrote a 1,400-word column on how Mr. Sorkin \u201cchose to cherry-pick and exaggerate some of the worst aspects of Jobs\u2019 character,\u201d proclaiming over and over that the Steve Jobs portrayed in the film \u201cisn\u2019t the man I knew.\u201d Steven Levy, who covered Apple for Newsweek and Rolling Stone, said that the Steve Jobs portrayed wasn\u2019t \u201cthe person I knew.\u201d And Larry Magid, who covered Apple as a syndicated technology columnist for The San Jose Mercury News, wrote in Forbes that the movie was \u201cnot about the man I knew.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Walt Mossberg, who was a technology columnist for The Wall Street Journal for many years before co-founding ReCode , wrote a 1,400-word column on how Mr. Sorkin \u201cchose to cherry-pick and exaggerate some of the worst aspects of Jobs\u2019 character,\u201d proclaiming over and over that the Steve Jobs portrayed in the film \u201cisn\u2019t the man I knew.\u201d Steven Levy, who covered Apple for Newsweek and Rolling Stone, said that the Steve Jobs portrayed wasn\u2019t \u201cthe person I knew.\u201d And Larry Magid, who covered Apple as a syndicated technology columnist for The San Jose Mercury News, wrote in Forbes that the movie was \u201cnot about the man I knew.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Walt Mossberg, who was a technology columnist for The Wall Street Journal for many years before co-founding ReCode , wrote a 1,400-word column on how Mr. Sorkin \u201cchose to cherry-pick and exaggerate some of the worst aspects of Jobs\u2019 character,\u201d proclaiming over and over that the Steve Jobs portrayed in the film \u201cisn\u2019t the man I knew.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d702919c8e4820a9b66d6e9"} +{"question": "The island village in \"Farewell to Matyora\" takes place on what river?", "paragraph": "But Khrushchev\u2019s agricultural and industrial policies were also a death knell for traditional village life. The fate of Mr. Rasputin\u2019s childhood villages became fodder for one of his most famous works, the 1976 novel \u201cFarewell to Matyora.\u201d The novel is about an island village on the Angara River that is about to be subsumed in the 1960s by construction of the Bratsk hydroelectric plant, and the elderly residents who try to resist resettlement and cannot adapt to city life. After a vivid description of the beginning of spring in the opening chapter, Mr. Rasputin \u2014 an ardent environmentalist who fought to protect Lake Baikal, the world\u2019s largest freshwater lake \u2014 continues, \u201cEverything was in place, but everything was wrong.\u201d", "answer": "Angara River", "sentence": "The novel is about an island village on the Angara River that is about to be subsumed in the 1960s by construction of the Bratsk hydroelectric plant, and the elderly residents who try to resist resettlement and cannot adapt to city life.", "paragraph_sentence": "But Khrushchev\u2019s agricultural and industrial policies were also a death knell for traditional village life. The fate of Mr. Rasputin\u2019s childhood villages became fodder for one of his most famous works, the 1976 novel \u201cFarewell to Matyora.\u201d The novel is about an island village on the Angara River that is about to be subsumed in the 1960s by construction of the Bratsk hydroelectric plant, and the elderly residents who try to resist resettlement and cannot adapt to city life. After a vivid description of the beginning of spring in the opening chapter, Mr. Rasputin \u2014 an ardent environmentalist who fought to protect Lake Baikal, the world\u2019s largest freshwater lake \u2014 continues, \u201cEverything was in place, but everything was wrong.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "But Khrushchev\u2019s agricultural and industrial policies were also a death knell for traditional village life. The fate of Mr. Rasputin\u2019s childhood villages became fodder for one of his most famous works, the 1976 novel \u201cFarewell to Matyora.\u201d The novel is about an island village on the Angara River that is about to be subsumed in the 1960s by construction of the Bratsk hydroelectric plant, and the elderly residents who try to resist resettlement and cannot adapt to city life. After a vivid description of the beginning of spring in the opening chapter, Mr. Rasputin \u2014 an ardent environmentalist who fought to protect Lake Baikal, the world\u2019s largest freshwater lake \u2014 continues, \u201cEverything was in place, but everything was wrong.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The novel is about an island village on the Angara River that is about to be subsumed in the 1960s by construction of the Bratsk hydroelectric plant, and the elderly residents who try to resist resettlement and cannot adapt to city life.", "paragraph_id": "5d701a5bc8e4820a9b66c61f"} +{"question": "When did the channels disappear from the airwaves?", "paragraph": "In the end, both channels disappeared from the airwaves during a shared live broadcast on Wednesday afternoon, which Bugun\u2019s Suna Vidinli reported on Twitter. By Wednesday night, reports from both Bugun and KanalTurk were blocked from viewers in the United States on YouTube. Mustafa Kilic, a journalist for one of the group\u2019s newspapers, Millet, shared an image of blood on his press card, an apparent result of resisting the police during the raid. As Cihan reported, Bugun TV had \u201cemerged as a main platform for opposition politicians over recent months.\u201d", "answer": "Wednesday afternoon", "sentence": "In the end, both channels disappeared from the airwaves during a shared live broadcast on Wednesday afternoon , which Bugun\u2019s Suna Vidinli reported on Twitter.", "paragraph_sentence": " In the end, both channels disappeared from the airwaves during a shared live broadcast on Wednesday afternoon , which Bugun\u2019s Suna Vidinli reported on Twitter. By Wednesday night, reports from both Bugun and KanalTurk were blocked from viewers in the United States on YouTube. Mustafa Kilic, a journalist for one of the group\u2019s newspapers, Millet, shared an image of blood on his press card, an apparent result of resisting the police during the raid. As Cihan reported, Bugun TV had \u201cemerged as a main platform for opposition politicians over recent months.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "In the end, both channels disappeared from the airwaves during a shared live broadcast on Wednesday afternoon , which Bugun\u2019s Suna Vidinli reported on Twitter. By Wednesday night, reports from both Bugun and KanalTurk were blocked from viewers in the United States on YouTube. Mustafa Kilic, a journalist for one of the group\u2019s newspapers, Millet, shared an image of blood on his press card, an apparent result of resisting the police during the raid. As Cihan reported, Bugun TV had \u201cemerged as a main platform for opposition politicians over recent months.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In the end, both channels disappeared from the airwaves during a shared live broadcast on Wednesday afternoon , which Bugun\u2019s Suna Vidinli reported on Twitter.", "paragraph_id": "5d700cc7c8e4820a9b66b817"} +{"question": "In what month does \"The Force Awakens\" come to theaters?", "paragraph": "To grasp the impact of \u201cStar Wars\u201d and the world it helped create \u2014 and to understand both contemporary fandom and the entertainment industry \u2014 you have to accept that when George Lucas likened himself to a toymaker in the 1970s, he wasn\u2019t kidding. Toys were always part of the \u201cStar Wars\u201d world; they still are. On Sept. 4, at precisely 12:01 a.m., the Walt Disney Company, which now owns Lucasfilm, kicked off a merchandising extravaganza with retailers like Walmart called \u201cForce Friday.\u201d It was a pseudo-event that was dutifully and excitedly covered by news media and infotainment outfits, despite being just another stop on the rollout for Disney\u2019s \u201cStar Wars: The Force Awakens,\u201d which, in case you\u2019ve been stuck in another galaxy, opens Dec. 18.", "answer": "Dec", "sentence": "It was a pseudo-event that was dutifully and excitedly covered by news media and infotainment outfits, despite being just another stop on the rollout for Disney\u2019s \u201cStar Wars: The Force Awakens,\u201d which, in case you\u2019ve been stuck in another galaxy, opens Dec .", "paragraph_sentence": "To grasp the impact of \u201cStar Wars\u201d and the world it helped create \u2014 and to understand both contemporary fandom and the entertainment industry \u2014 you have to accept that when George Lucas likened himself to a toymaker in the 1970s, he wasn\u2019t kidding. Toys were always part of the \u201cStar Wars\u201d world; they still are. On Sept. 4, at precisely 12:01 a.m., the Walt Disney Company, which now owns Lucasfilm, kicked off a merchandising extravaganza with retailers like Walmart called \u201cForce Friday.\u201d It was a pseudo-event that was dutifully and excitedly covered by news media and infotainment outfits, despite being just another stop on the rollout for Disney\u2019s \u201cStar Wars: The Force Awakens,\u201d which, in case you\u2019ve been stuck in another galaxy, opens Dec . 18.", "paragraph_answer": "To grasp the impact of \u201cStar Wars\u201d and the world it helped create \u2014 and to understand both contemporary fandom and the entertainment industry \u2014 you have to accept that when George Lucas likened himself to a toymaker in the 1970s, he wasn\u2019t kidding. Toys were always part of the \u201cStar Wars\u201d world; they still are. On Sept. 4, at precisely 12:01 a.m., the Walt Disney Company, which now owns Lucasfilm, kicked off a merchandising extravaganza with retailers like Walmart called \u201cForce Friday.\u201d It was a pseudo-event that was dutifully and excitedly covered by news media and infotainment outfits, despite being just another stop on the rollout for Disney\u2019s \u201cStar Wars: The Force Awakens,\u201d which, in case you\u2019ve been stuck in another galaxy, opens Dec . 18.", "sentence_answer": "It was a pseudo-event that was dutifully and excitedly covered by news media and infotainment outfits, despite being just another stop on the rollout for Disney\u2019s \u201cStar Wars: The Force Awakens,\u201d which, in case you\u2019ve been stuck in another galaxy, opens Dec .", "paragraph_id": "5d700f72c8e4820a9b66bb97"} +{"question": "The author would cut this vegetable into thin slices for her mother to nibble on.", "paragraph": "When she asked for some vegetables to nibble on, I fastidiously julienned a cucumber into thin slices, layering them atop one another in a semicircle on a florid porcelain plate. When she asked for a pita and hummus, I cut the bread into perfect little triangles, found elegant small bowls in her cupboards, and carefully quenelled three dipping options, as if Thomas Keller were watching over my shoulder. I proudly took every meal to her on her finest china, placed carefully on an ornate tray and finished off with a single English flower. I prepared every menu with meticulous detail, unsure if the meal I was taking to her bedside would be her last.", "answer": "cucumber", "sentence": "When she asked for some vegetables to nibble on, I fastidiously julienned a cucumber into thin slices, layering them atop one another in a semicircle on a florid porcelain plate.", "paragraph_sentence": " When she asked for some vegetables to nibble on, I fastidiously julienned a cucumber into thin slices, layering them atop one another in a semicircle on a florid porcelain plate. When she asked for a pita and hummus, I cut the bread into perfect little triangles, found elegant small bowls in her cupboards, and carefully quenelled three dipping options, as if Thomas Keller were watching over my shoulder. I proudly took every meal to her on her finest china, placed carefully on an ornate tray and finished off with a single English flower. I prepared every menu with meticulous detail, unsure if the meal I was taking to her bedside would be her last.", "paragraph_answer": "When she asked for some vegetables to nibble on, I fastidiously julienned a cucumber into thin slices, layering them atop one another in a semicircle on a florid porcelain plate. When she asked for a pita and hummus, I cut the bread into perfect little triangles, found elegant small bowls in her cupboards, and carefully quenelled three dipping options, as if Thomas Keller were watching over my shoulder. I proudly took every meal to her on her finest china, placed carefully on an ornate tray and finished off with a single English flower. I prepared every menu with meticulous detail, unsure if the meal I was taking to her bedside would be her last.", "sentence_answer": "When she asked for some vegetables to nibble on, I fastidiously julienned a cucumber into thin slices, layering them atop one another in a semicircle on a florid porcelain plate.", "paragraph_id": "5d7022dbc8e4820a9b66cedb"} +{"question": "Snyder's team is compared unfavorably to which other team?", "paragraph": "While the Giants are methodical, embracing change with the speed of a glacier, Snyder has presided over change after change in futile pursuit of buying, leasing or renting a championship. So far, that effort has seen him burn through eight head coaches and more than a dozen starting quarterbacks. The only thing Snyder has not changed \u2014 and the one thing he should \u2014 is his team\u2019s offensive nickname. \u201cRedskins\u201d has become a weight that hangs around the franchise\u2019s neck like a yoke. More critically, on Snyder\u2019s watch, Washington has seemingly ruined quarterback Robert Griffin III.", "answer": "Giants", "sentence": "While the Giants are methodical, embracing change with the speed of a glacier, Snyder has presided over change after change in futile pursuit of buying, leasing or renting a championship.", "paragraph_sentence": " While the Giants are methodical, embracing change with the speed of a glacier, Snyder has presided over change after change in futile pursuit of buying, leasing or renting a championship. So far, that effort has seen him burn through eight head coaches and more than a dozen starting quarterbacks. The only thing Snyder has not changed \u2014 and the one thing he should \u2014 is his team\u2019s offensive nickname. \u201cRedskins\u201d has become a weight that hangs around the franchise\u2019s neck like a yoke. More critically, on Snyder\u2019s watch, Washington has seemingly ruined quarterback Robert Griffin III.", "paragraph_answer": "While the Giants are methodical, embracing change with the speed of a glacier, Snyder has presided over change after change in futile pursuit of buying, leasing or renting a championship. So far, that effort has seen him burn through eight head coaches and more than a dozen starting quarterbacks. The only thing Snyder has not changed \u2014 and the one thing he should \u2014 is his team\u2019s offensive nickname. \u201cRedskins\u201d has become a weight that hangs around the franchise\u2019s neck like a yoke. More critically, on Snyder\u2019s watch, Washington has seemingly ruined quarterback Robert Griffin III.", "sentence_answer": "While the Giants are methodical, embracing change with the speed of a glacier, Snyder has presided over change after change in futile pursuit of buying, leasing or renting a championship.", "paragraph_id": "5d701067c8e4820a9b66bca1"} +{"question": "how are must russian goods transported", "paragraph": "Sergei Aksyonov, the prime minister of Crimea appointed by Russia, said Monday that the blockade would have little effect, as only about 5 percent of the goods consumed in Crimea came through Ukraine. \u201cThe trade blockade of Crimea begun by Ukrainian activists with the support of a number of Kiev politicians will not affect food supplies in the region,\u201d he told the Russian state-run Rossiya 24 satellite television channel. \u201cCrimea will not notice this.\u201d Most Russian goods are transported by large ferries across the Sea of Azov and through the Kerch Strait, but bad weather can halt service despite significant improvements during the last year. Russian television focused much of its attention on the fact that roadblocks were being manned with the help of members of Right Sector, a Ukrainian nationalist organization banned in Russia, where the news media frequently portray it as neo-fascist.", "answer": "by large ferries", "sentence": "Most Russian goods are transported by large ferries across the Sea of Azov and through the Kerch Strait, but bad weather can halt service despite significant improvements during the last year.", "paragraph_sentence": "Sergei Aksyonov, the prime minister of Crimea appointed by Russia, said Monday that the blockade would have little effect, as only about 5 percent of the goods consumed in Crimea came through Ukraine. \u201cThe trade blockade of Crimea begun by Ukrainian activists with the support of a number of Kiev politicians will not affect food supplies in the region,\u201d he told the Russian state-run Rossiya 24 satellite television channel. \u201cCrimea will not notice this.\u201d Most Russian goods are transported by large ferries across the Sea of Azov and through the Kerch Strait, but bad weather can halt service despite significant improvements during the last year. Russian television focused much of its attention on the fact that roadblocks were being manned with the help of members of Right Sector, a Ukrainian nationalist organization banned in Russia, where the news media frequently portray it as neo-fascist.", "paragraph_answer": "Sergei Aksyonov, the prime minister of Crimea appointed by Russia, said Monday that the blockade would have little effect, as only about 5 percent of the goods consumed in Crimea came through Ukraine. \u201cThe trade blockade of Crimea begun by Ukrainian activists with the support of a number of Kiev politicians will not affect food supplies in the region,\u201d he told the Russian state-run Rossiya 24 satellite television channel. \u201cCrimea will not notice this.\u201d Most Russian goods are transported by large ferries across the Sea of Azov and through the Kerch Strait, but bad weather can halt service despite significant improvements during the last year. Russian television focused much of its attention on the fact that roadblocks were being manned with the help of members of Right Sector, a Ukrainian nationalist organization banned in Russia, where the news media frequently portray it as neo-fascist.", "sentence_answer": "Most Russian goods are transported by large ferries across the Sea of Azov and through the Kerch Strait, but bad weather can halt service despite significant improvements during the last year.", "paragraph_id": "5d700525c8e4820a9b66a87d"} +{"question": "Do boys or girls have a harder time being respected within the gaming community?", "paragraph": "Ms. Wiseman, who studied gaming habits among middle- and high school-aged people, said girls face elevated scrutiny over their gaming skills. They describe harrowing experiences in web-based multiplayer games where participants talk through headsets. When a girl\u2019s voice chimes in, the reaction from other players often follows a certain script. \u201cIt\u2019s something about they\u2019re a slut, they\u2019re fat, they\u2019re ugly, or they are bad at the game,\u201d she said. As a result, girls will often mute their voices.", "answer": "girls face elevated scrutiny", "sentence": "Ms. Wiseman, who studied gaming habits among middle- and high school-aged people, said girls face elevated scrutiny over their gaming skills.", "paragraph_sentence": " Ms. Wiseman, who studied gaming habits among middle- and high school-aged people, said girls face elevated scrutiny over their gaming skills. They describe harrowing experiences in web-based multiplayer games where participants talk through headsets. When a girl\u2019s voice chimes in, the reaction from other players often follows a certain script. \u201cIt\u2019s something about they\u2019re a slut, they\u2019re fat, they\u2019re ugly, or they are bad at the game,\u201d she said. As a result, girls will often mute their voices.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Wiseman, who studied gaming habits among middle- and high school-aged people, said girls face elevated scrutiny over their gaming skills. They describe harrowing experiences in web-based multiplayer games where participants talk through headsets. When a girl\u2019s voice chimes in, the reaction from other players often follows a certain script. \u201cIt\u2019s something about they\u2019re a slut, they\u2019re fat, they\u2019re ugly, or they are bad at the game,\u201d she said. As a result, girls will often mute their voices.", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Wiseman, who studied gaming habits among middle- and high school-aged people, said girls face elevated scrutiny over their gaming skills.", "paragraph_id": "5d702e6cc8e4820a9b66dba3"} +{"question": "During the patent period, can non-patent-holding companies preemptively gain FDA approval for the drug?", "paragraph": "And that\u2019s why pharmaceutical innovators pursue leads that can be patented. A drug patent, along with subsequent F.D.A. approval and granting of market exclusivity, offers the patent holder a period of time during which it may market the drug without competition. Even though the information about the efficacy and safety of the drug is available after clinical trials have been run, no other organization may use it to secure F.D.A. approval during the patent protection period. Typically, a drug reaches the market with about 13 years left on its original patent, though in some cases it can be extended longer. During the granted period of market exclusivity, pharmaceutical manufacturers can price drugs higher than they could if there were competition from firms marketing the same molecule. By doing so, they recover their investment and make a profit. Though many people are shocked by the high prices of some prescription drugs \u2014 like Gilead Sciences\u2019 Sovaldi, a new and effective treatment for hepatitis C that can cost $84,000 per treatment \u2014 they\u2019re the inducement for innovation.", "answer": "no", "sentence": "And that\u2019s why pharmaceutical in no vators pursue leads that can be patented.", "paragraph_sentence": " And that\u2019s why pharmaceutical in no vators pursue leads that can be patented. A drug patent, along with subsequent F.D.A. approval and granting of market exclusivity, offers the patent holder a period of time during which it may market the drug without competition. Even though the information about the efficacy and safety of the drug is available after clinical trials have been run, no other organization may use it to secure F.D.A. approval during the patent protection period. Typically, a drug reaches the market with about 13 years left on its original patent, though in some cases it can be extended longer. During the granted period of market exclusivity, pharmaceutical manufacturers can price drugs higher than they could if there were competition from firms marketing the same molecule. By doing so, they recover their investment and make a profit. Though many people are shocked by the high prices of some prescription drugs \u2014 like Gilead Sciences\u2019 Sovaldi, a new and effective treatment for hepatitis C that can cost $84,000 per treatment \u2014 they\u2019re the inducement for innovation.", "paragraph_answer": "And that\u2019s why pharmaceutical in no vators pursue leads that can be patented. A drug patent, along with subsequent F.D.A. approval and granting of market exclusivity, offers the patent holder a period of time during which it may market the drug without competition. Even though the information about the efficacy and safety of the drug is available after clinical trials have been run, no other organization may use it to secure F.D.A. approval during the patent protection period. Typically, a drug reaches the market with about 13 years left on its original patent, though in some cases it can be extended longer. During the granted period of market exclusivity, pharmaceutical manufacturers can price drugs higher than they could if there were competition from firms marketing the same molecule. By doing so, they recover their investment and make a profit. Though many people are shocked by the high prices of some prescription drugs \u2014 like Gilead Sciences\u2019 Sovaldi, a new and effective treatment for hepatitis C that can cost $84,000 per treatment \u2014 they\u2019re the inducement for innovation.", "sentence_answer": "And that\u2019s why pharmaceutical in no vators pursue leads that can be patented.", "paragraph_id": "5d700e00c8e4820a9b66b9ca"} +{"question": "mayor bill de Blasio's housing plan faces opposition in what city?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe\u2019re going to support it, including the mansion tax,\u201d said Steven Spinola, president of the real estate board. \u201cWe\u2019re not happy about everything, but we think it will lead to building more affordable housing.\u201d Mr. de Blasio has also been outspoken on another contentious affordable-housing issue \u2014 the need to strengthen rent regulations to preserve the city\u2019s existing affordable-housing stock. His proposals still face a battle in Albany, which has been thrown into turmoil in recent months by the arrest on corruption-related charges of Sheldon Silver, a Democratic assemblyman and former speaker, and Dean G. Skelos, the Republican majority leader in the Senate. Both the 44-year-old 421-a housing program and the rent stabilization law, which governs rents for one million apartments in New York City, are set to expire on June 15.", "answer": "Albany", "sentence": "His proposals still face a battle in Albany , which has been thrown into turmoil in recent months by the arrest on corruption-related charges of Sheldon Silver, a Democratic assemblyman and former speaker, and Dean G. Skelos, the Republican majority leader in the Senate.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe\u2019re going to support it, including the mansion tax,\u201d said Steven Spinola, president of the real estate board. \u201cWe\u2019re not happy about everything, but we think it will lead to building more affordable housing.\u201d Mr. de Blasio has also been outspoken on another contentious affordable-housing issue \u2014 the need to strengthen rent regulations to preserve the city\u2019s existing affordable-housing stock. His proposals still face a battle in Albany , which has been thrown into turmoil in recent months by the arrest on corruption-related charges of Sheldon Silver, a Democratic assemblyman and former speaker, and Dean G. Skelos, the Republican majority leader in the Senate. Both the 44-year-old 421-a housing program and the rent stabilization law, which governs rents for one million apartments in New York City, are set to expire on June 15.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe\u2019re going to support it, including the mansion tax,\u201d said Steven Spinola, president of the real estate board. \u201cWe\u2019re not happy about everything, but we think it will lead to building more affordable housing.\u201d Mr. de Blasio has also been outspoken on another contentious affordable-housing issue \u2014 the need to strengthen rent regulations to preserve the city\u2019s existing affordable-housing stock. His proposals still face a battle in Albany , which has been thrown into turmoil in recent months by the arrest on corruption-related charges of Sheldon Silver, a Democratic assemblyman and former speaker, and Dean G. Skelos, the Republican majority leader in the Senate. Both the 44-year-old 421-a housing program and the rent stabilization law, which governs rents for one million apartments in New York City, are set to expire on June 15.", "sentence_answer": "His proposals still face a battle in Albany , which has been thrown into turmoil in recent months by the arrest on corruption-related charges of Sheldon Silver, a Democratic assemblyman and former speaker, and Dean G. Skelos, the Republican majority leader in the Senate.", "paragraph_id": "5d701fa2c8e4820a9b66cb2a"} +{"question": "Who said they would be able to bring their diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards?", "paragraph": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "answer": "Volkswagen", "sentence": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels.", "paragraph_sentence": " WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "paragraph_answer": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "sentence_answer": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels.", "paragraph_id": "5d704668c8e4820a9b66e847"} +{"question": "Who lost 9.4 percent in a year?", "paragraph": "The biggest names in the hedge fund industry have seen their gains for the year reversed. William A. Ackman\u2019s Pershing Square Capital Management has lost 9.4 percent so far this year, while Marcato International, a hedge fund run by Mick McGuire, a prot\u00e9g\u00e9 of Mr. Ackman, has lost 11.6 percent. Hedge fund managers who have gained sterling records in recent years are suffering, including Larry Robbins of Glenview Capital Management, who is down 13.5 percent. Among the worst-hit hedge fund managers are those who took large concentrated bets in the same stocks, so-called hedge fund hotels. Nine of the most popular stocks owned by hedge funds, including Valeant and Cheniere Energy, lost more than 20 percent over the quarter, according to research by Novus.", "answer": "William A. Ackman\u2019s Pershing Square Capital Management", "sentence": "William A. Ackman\u2019s Pershing Square Capital Management has lost 9.4 percent so far this year, while Marcato International, a hedge fund run by Mick McGuire, a prot\u00e9g\u00e9 of Mr. Ackman, has lost 11.6 percent.", "paragraph_sentence": "The biggest names in the hedge fund industry have seen their gains for the year reversed. William A. Ackman\u2019s Pershing Square Capital Management has lost 9.4 percent so far this year, while Marcato International, a hedge fund run by Mick McGuire, a prot\u00e9g\u00e9 of Mr. Ackman, has lost 11.6 percent. Hedge fund managers who have gained sterling records in recent years are suffering, including Larry Robbins of Glenview Capital Management, who is down 13.5 percent. Among the worst-hit hedge fund managers are those who took large concentrated bets in the same stocks, so-called hedge fund hotels. Nine of the most popular stocks owned by hedge funds, including Valeant and Cheniere Energy, lost more than 20 percent over the quarter, according to research by Novus.", "paragraph_answer": "The biggest names in the hedge fund industry have seen their gains for the year reversed. William A. Ackman\u2019s Pershing Square Capital Management has lost 9.4 percent so far this year, while Marcato International, a hedge fund run by Mick McGuire, a prot\u00e9g\u00e9 of Mr. Ackman, has lost 11.6 percent. Hedge fund managers who have gained sterling records in recent years are suffering, including Larry Robbins of Glenview Capital Management, who is down 13.5 percent. Among the worst-hit hedge fund managers are those who took large concentrated bets in the same stocks, so-called hedge fund hotels. Nine of the most popular stocks owned by hedge funds, including Valeant and Cheniere Energy, lost more than 20 percent over the quarter, according to research by Novus.", "sentence_answer": " William A. Ackman\u2019s Pershing Square Capital Management has lost 9.4 percent so far this year, while Marcato International, a hedge fund run by Mick McGuire, a prot\u00e9g\u00e9 of Mr. Ackman, has lost 11.6 percent.", "paragraph_id": "5d702273c8e4820a9b66ce8d"} +{"question": "What does Trump call climate change?", "paragraph": "Trump calls climate change \u201ca total hoax.\u201d He arrived at this position, judging by several tweets, after experiencing a couple of especially cold winter days in New York. This is a man who has bought into every nutty conspiracy theory, and stoked much of the same, about President Obama\u2019s birth \u2014 all without a shred of evidence. But he won\u2019t take the world\u2019s leading scientists at their peer-reviewed word. If this is the kind of judgment you want in the Oval Office, get thee to Trump Tower. And here\u2019s Carson: \u201cI\u2019ll tell you what I think about climate change,\u201d he said earlier this year. \u201cThe temperature is either going up or down at any point in time, so it really is not a big deal.\u201d Ah, well. He also believes the pyramids of Egypt were built to store grain rather than as tombs for kings and queens. Hey, it\u2019s all there in the Bible, Carson says, for you fact-obsessed archaeologists. How do you explain the boastful ignorance of other leading Republican candidates? It\u2019s a political variant of Upton Sinclair\u2019s line about how \u201cIt is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends upon his not understanding it.\u201d In trying to win the support of the Koch brothers, Senators Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio and Rand Paul have signed a pledge to do the bidding of the billionaire oil industrialists, promising to \u201coppose any legislation relating to climate change\u201d that would involve higher taxes or fees. Cruz has gone the extra step of denying the very existence of climate change, an assertion that puts him at odds with three-fourths of the American public. Just pause for a second to soak in the magnitude of this sellout by these candidates to a pair of men who\u2019ve vowed to spend $889 million influencing the 2016 election.", "answer": "a total hoax", "sentence": "Trump calls climate change \u201c a total hoax .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Trump calls climate change \u201c a total hoax .\u201d He arrived at this position, judging by several tweets, after experiencing a couple of especially cold winter days in New York. This is a man who has bought into every nutty conspiracy theory, and stoked much of the same, about President Obama\u2019s birth \u2014 all without a shred of evidence. But he won\u2019t take the world\u2019s leading scientists at their peer-reviewed word. If this is the kind of judgment you want in the Oval Office, get thee to Trump Tower. And here\u2019s Carson: \u201cI\u2019ll tell you what I think about climate change,\u201d he said earlier this year. \u201cThe temperature is either going up or down at any point in time, so it really is not a big deal.\u201d Ah, well. He also believes the pyramids of Egypt were built to store grain rather than as tombs for kings and queens. Hey, it\u2019s all there in the Bible, Carson says, for you fact-obsessed archaeologists. How do you explain the boastful ignorance of other leading Republican candidates? It\u2019s a political variant of Upton Sinclair\u2019s line about how \u201cIt is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends upon his not understanding it.\u201d In trying to win the support of the Koch brothers, Senators Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio and Rand Paul have signed a pledge to do the bidding of the billionaire oil industrialists, promising to \u201coppose any legislation relating to climate change\u201d that would involve higher taxes or fees. Cruz has gone the extra step of denying the very existence of climate change, an assertion that puts him at odds with three-fourths of the American public. Just pause for a second to soak in the magnitude of this sellout by these candidates to a pair of men who\u2019ve vowed to spend $889 million influencing the 2016 election.", "paragraph_answer": "Trump calls climate change \u201c a total hoax .\u201d He arrived at this position, judging by several tweets, after experiencing a couple of especially cold winter days in New York. This is a man who has bought into every nutty conspiracy theory, and stoked much of the same, about President Obama\u2019s birth \u2014 all without a shred of evidence. But he won\u2019t take the world\u2019s leading scientists at their peer-reviewed word. If this is the kind of judgment you want in the Oval Office, get thee to Trump Tower. And here\u2019s Carson: \u201cI\u2019ll tell you what I think about climate change,\u201d he said earlier this year. \u201cThe temperature is either going up or down at any point in time, so it really is not a big deal.\u201d Ah, well. He also believes the pyramids of Egypt were built to store grain rather than as tombs for kings and queens. Hey, it\u2019s all there in the Bible, Carson says, for you fact-obsessed archaeologists. How do you explain the boastful ignorance of other leading Republican candidates? It\u2019s a political variant of Upton Sinclair\u2019s line about how \u201cIt is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends upon his not understanding it.\u201d In trying to win the support of the Koch brothers, Senators Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio and Rand Paul have signed a pledge to do the bidding of the billionaire oil industrialists, promising to \u201coppose any legislation relating to climate change\u201d that would involve higher taxes or fees. Cruz has gone the extra step of denying the very existence of climate change, an assertion that puts him at odds with three-fourths of the American public. Just pause for a second to soak in the magnitude of this sellout by these candidates to a pair of men who\u2019ve vowed to spend $889 million influencing the 2016 election.", "sentence_answer": "Trump calls climate change \u201c a total hoax .\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d70240bc8e4820a9b66d047"} +{"question": "The Senate declined to ban the sale of what?", "paragraph": "Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list? Nah. Let\u2019s go for it.", "answer": "guns", "sentence": "Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list?", "paragraph_sentence": " Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list? Nah. Let\u2019s go for it.", "paragraph_answer": "Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list? Nah. Let\u2019s go for it.", "sentence_answer": "Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list?", "paragraph_id": "5d7017a4c8e4820a9b66c3a5"} +{"question": "Who do the tanker drivers face criticism from?", "paragraph": "Residents have objected and even staged a sit-in, but the tankers keep coming for the water, kicking up clouds of fine dust as they drive off. The drivers, often from the city, say they are scorned by their neighbors. \u201cWe need to feed our families too,\u201d one of them, Saaed Salimizadeh, said. \u201cWhen the water runs out, it will run out for all of us. We have to choose between jobs and drinking water.\u201d Sirjan is by no means alone in its water shortages. In surrounding Kerman Province, 1,455 of 2,064 village reservoirs have dropped below levels needed to sustain the population, according to the local water management agency. The semiofficial Mehr news agency reported in July, citing local statistics, that 541 villages were dependent on tanker deliveries for their water.", "answer": "their neighbors", "sentence": "The drivers, often from the city, say they are scorned by their neighbors .", "paragraph_sentence": "Residents have objected and even staged a sit-in, but the tankers keep coming for the water, kicking up clouds of fine dust as they drive off. The drivers, often from the city, say they are scorned by their neighbors . \u201cWe need to feed our families too,\u201d one of them, Saaed Salimizadeh, said. \u201cWhen the water runs out, it will run out for all of us. We have to choose between jobs and drinking water.\u201d Sirjan is by no means alone in its water shortages. In surrounding Kerman Province, 1,455 of 2,064 village reservoirs have dropped below levels needed to sustain the population, according to the local water management agency. The semiofficial Mehr news agency reported in July, citing local statistics, that 541 villages were dependent on tanker deliveries for their water.", "paragraph_answer": "Residents have objected and even staged a sit-in, but the tankers keep coming for the water, kicking up clouds of fine dust as they drive off. The drivers, often from the city, say they are scorned by their neighbors . \u201cWe need to feed our families too,\u201d one of them, Saaed Salimizadeh, said. \u201cWhen the water runs out, it will run out for all of us. We have to choose between jobs and drinking water.\u201d Sirjan is by no means alone in its water shortages. In surrounding Kerman Province, 1,455 of 2,064 village reservoirs have dropped below levels needed to sustain the population, according to the local water management agency. The semiofficial Mehr news agency reported in July, citing local statistics, that 541 villages were dependent on tanker deliveries for their water.", "sentence_answer": "The drivers, often from the city, say they are scorned by their neighbors .", "paragraph_id": "5d702178c8e4820a9b66cd6e"} +{"question": "Which rail tore through the first passenger car?", "paragraph": "Instead, investigators, commuters and even people close to her were left to try to make sense of her puzzling actions. Friends and family members of the passengers who died grappled on Thursday with the question of why her car never moved off the tracks, and why the third rail tore through the first passenger car. The crossing was reopened to cars and trains on Thursday, but people remained wary. Drivers paused after they ascended the slight hill toward the crossing, taking a second look down the tracks before they passed.", "answer": "the third rail", "sentence": "Friends and family members of the passengers who died grappled on Thursday with the question of why her car never moved off the tracks, and why the third rail tore through the first passenger car.", "paragraph_sentence": "Instead, investigators, commuters and even people close to her were left to try to make sense of her puzzling actions. Friends and family members of the passengers who died grappled on Thursday with the question of why her car never moved off the tracks, and why the third rail tore through the first passenger car. The crossing was reopened to cars and trains on Thursday, but people remained wary. Drivers paused after they ascended the slight hill toward the crossing, taking a second look down the tracks before they passed.", "paragraph_answer": "Instead, investigators, commuters and even people close to her were left to try to make sense of her puzzling actions. Friends and family members of the passengers who died grappled on Thursday with the question of why her car never moved off the tracks, and why the third rail tore through the first passenger car. The crossing was reopened to cars and trains on Thursday, but people remained wary. Drivers paused after they ascended the slight hill toward the crossing, taking a second look down the tracks before they passed.", "sentence_answer": "Friends and family members of the passengers who died grappled on Thursday with the question of why her car never moved off the tracks, and why the third rail tore through the first passenger car.", "paragraph_id": "5d706b9fc8e4820a9b66f160"} +{"question": "What is the name of Cate Blanchett's character?", "paragraph": "8 P.M. (FX Movie Channel) THE CURIOUS CASE OF BENJAMIN BUTTON (2008) Brad Pitt, left, received an Oscar nomination for his portrayal of Benjamin Button, a man born in his 80s in 1918 New Orleans, who ages in reverse into the 21st century, in this adaptation of a short story by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Cate Blanchett is Daisy, the dancer who loves Benjamin at whatever stage he is in. And Taraji P. Henson, who was also nominated, is the nursing home caretaker who raises him when his father abandons him. From Fitzgerald\u2019s \u201codd, somewhat unpromising kernel, the director David Fincher and the screenwriter Eric Roth have cultivated a lush, romantic hothouse bloom, a film that shares only a title and a basic premise with its literary source,\u201d A. O. Scott wrote in The New York Times.", "answer": "Daisy", "sentence": "Cate Blanchett is Daisy , the dancer who loves Benjamin at whatever stage he is in.", "paragraph_sentence": "8 P.M. (FX Movie Channel) THE CURIOUS CASE OF BENJAMIN BUTTON (2008) Brad Pitt, left, received an Oscar nomination for his portrayal of Benjamin Button, a man born in his 80s in 1918 New Orleans, who ages in reverse into the 21st century, in this adaptation of a short story by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Cate Blanchett is Daisy , the dancer who loves Benjamin at whatever stage he is in. And Taraji P. Henson, who was also nominated, is the nursing home caretaker who raises him when his father abandons him. From Fitzgerald\u2019s \u201codd, somewhat unpromising kernel, the director David Fincher and the screenwriter Eric Roth have cultivated a lush, romantic hothouse bloom, a film that shares only a title and a basic premise with its literary source,\u201d A. O. Scott wrote in The New York Times.", "paragraph_answer": "8 P.M. (FX Movie Channel) THE CURIOUS CASE OF BENJAMIN BUTTON (2008) Brad Pitt, left, received an Oscar nomination for his portrayal of Benjamin Button, a man born in his 80s in 1918 New Orleans, who ages in reverse into the 21st century, in this adaptation of a short story by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Cate Blanchett is Daisy , the dancer who loves Benjamin at whatever stage he is in. And Taraji P. Henson, who was also nominated, is the nursing home caretaker who raises him when his father abandons him. From Fitzgerald\u2019s \u201codd, somewhat unpromising kernel, the director David Fincher and the screenwriter Eric Roth have cultivated a lush, romantic hothouse bloom, a film that shares only a title and a basic premise with its literary source,\u201d A. O. Scott wrote in The New York Times.", "sentence_answer": "Cate Blanchett is Daisy , the dancer who loves Benjamin at whatever stage he is in.", "paragraph_id": "5d70065ec8e4820a9b66ab44"} +{"question": "where do smartphone users spend the bulk of their time?", "paragraph": "Amit Singhal, Google\u2019s search chief, oversees the 200 or so factors that determine where websites rank in the company\u2019s search engine, which means he decides if your website lives or dies. His current challenge: figuring out how to spread that same fear and influence to mobile phones. In a recent interview at Google\u2019s headquarters in Mountain View, Calif., Mr. Singhal laid out a widely held thesis for why smartphones are fundamentally changing how people are consuming information: Phones have small screens that are annoying to type on, and people have grown so addicted to their phones that they carry them everywhere and go to bed with them by their side. Also, in a shift with big implications for his company\u2019s sway over the Internet, smartphone users spend the bulk of their time in mobile apps instead of the open web on which Google built its business.", "answer": "mobile apps", "sentence": "Also, in a shift with big implications for his company\u2019s sway over the Internet, smartphone users spend the bulk of their time in mobile apps instead of the open web on which Google built its business.", "paragraph_sentence": "Amit Singhal, Google\u2019s search chief, oversees the 200 or so factors that determine where websites rank in the company\u2019s search engine, which means he decides if your website lives or dies. His current challenge: figuring out how to spread that same fear and influence to mobile phones. In a recent interview at Google\u2019s headquarters in Mountain View, Calif., Mr. Singhal laid out a widely held thesis for why smartphones are fundamentally changing how people are consuming information: Phones have small screens that are annoying to type on, and people have grown so addicted to their phones that they carry them everywhere and go to bed with them by their side. Also, in a shift with big implications for his company\u2019s sway over the Internet, smartphone users spend the bulk of their time in mobile apps instead of the open web on which Google built its business. ", "paragraph_answer": "Amit Singhal, Google\u2019s search chief, oversees the 200 or so factors that determine where websites rank in the company\u2019s search engine, which means he decides if your website lives or dies. His current challenge: figuring out how to spread that same fear and influence to mobile phones. In a recent interview at Google\u2019s headquarters in Mountain View, Calif., Mr. Singhal laid out a widely held thesis for why smartphones are fundamentally changing how people are consuming information: Phones have small screens that are annoying to type on, and people have grown so addicted to their phones that they carry them everywhere and go to bed with them by their side. Also, in a shift with big implications for his company\u2019s sway over the Internet, smartphone users spend the bulk of their time in mobile apps instead of the open web on which Google built its business.", "sentence_answer": "Also, in a shift with big implications for his company\u2019s sway over the Internet, smartphone users spend the bulk of their time in mobile apps instead of the open web on which Google built its business.", "paragraph_id": "5d703209c8e4820a9b66dda8"} +{"question": "What did Volkswagen say would repair a 2-liter diesel motor?", "paragraph": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple, deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes. Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software, the company said.", "answer": "simply updating the engine-control software", "sentence": "Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software , the company said.", "paragraph_sentence": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple, deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes. Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software , the company said. ", "paragraph_answer": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple, deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes. Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software , the company said.", "sentence_answer": "Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software , the company said.", "paragraph_id": "5d7048dbc8e4820a9b66e910"} +{"question": "What religious group is the terrorist group Boko Haram associated with?", "paragraph": "DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa.", "answer": "Islamist", "sentence": "DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa.", "paragraph_sentence": " DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa. ", "paragraph_answer": "DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa.", "sentence_answer": "DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa.", "paragraph_id": "5d704d1ac8e4820a9b66ea43"} +{"question": "Who is Watson?", "paragraph": "Watson, of the Pittsburgh Pirates, retired Abreu on a fly ball to left. But the move made little sense in baseball terms, if the goal of the All-Star Game is really to win and secure home-field advantage in the World Series for the victorious league. Matheny, the manager of the St. Louis Cardinals, had already used four right-handed relievers and went against the percentages to a dangerous hitter. He got away with it, but the move illustrated the real priorities for those who manage and play in the All-Star Game. They want as many players as possible to participate, and they want to have fun.", "answer": "the Pittsburgh Pirates", "sentence": "Watson, of the Pittsburgh Pirates , retired Abreu on a fly ball to left.", "paragraph_sentence": " Watson, of the Pittsburgh Pirates , retired Abreu on a fly ball to left. But the move made little sense in baseball terms, if the goal of the All-Star Game is really to win and secure home-field advantage in the World Series for the victorious league. Matheny, the manager of the St. Louis Cardinals, had already used four right-handed relievers and went against the percentages to a dangerous hitter. He got away with it, but the move illustrated the real priorities for those who manage and play in the All-Star Game. They want as many players as possible to participate, and they want to have fun.", "paragraph_answer": "Watson, of the Pittsburgh Pirates , retired Abreu on a fly ball to left. But the move made little sense in baseball terms, if the goal of the All-Star Game is really to win and secure home-field advantage in the World Series for the victorious league. Matheny, the manager of the St. Louis Cardinals, had already used four right-handed relievers and went against the percentages to a dangerous hitter. He got away with it, but the move illustrated the real priorities for those who manage and play in the All-Star Game. They want as many players as possible to participate, and they want to have fun.", "sentence_answer": "Watson, of the Pittsburgh Pirates , retired Abreu on a fly ball to left.", "paragraph_id": "5d704126c8e4820a9b66e57d"} +{"question": "What condition was the bedroom described as being?", "paragraph": "Dr. Garc\u00eda, 68, had immigrated to Miami at age 14 as part of Operation Pedro Pan, during which 14,000 unaccompanied minors were flown to the United States from Cuba. At Columbia, he teaches multiplatform design and storytelling, preparing his students for \u201cthe media quintet,\u201d which includes journalism delivered via smartwatch along with the existing quartet of phone, tablet, computer and print. As a runner, Dr. Garc\u00eda set his sights on his \u201cgeographic essential\u201d \u2014 a location on or near Central Park West. He wanted to buy a one-bedroom in good condition with a doorman to receive packages. His budget topped out in the high $600,000s.", "answer": "good condition", "sentence": "He wanted to buy a one-bedroom in good condition with a doorman to receive packages.", "paragraph_sentence": "Dr. Garc\u00eda, 68, had immigrated to Miami at age 14 as part of Operation Pedro Pan, during which 14,000 unaccompanied minors were flown to the United States from Cuba. At Columbia, he teaches multiplatform design and storytelling, preparing his students for \u201cthe media quintet,\u201d which includes journalism delivered via smartwatch along with the existing quartet of phone, tablet, computer and print. As a runner, Dr. Garc\u00eda set his sights on his \u201cgeographic essential\u201d \u2014 a location on or near Central Park West. He wanted to buy a one-bedroom in good condition with a doorman to receive packages. His budget topped out in the high $600,000s.", "paragraph_answer": "Dr. Garc\u00eda, 68, had immigrated to Miami at age 14 as part of Operation Pedro Pan, during which 14,000 unaccompanied minors were flown to the United States from Cuba. At Columbia, he teaches multiplatform design and storytelling, preparing his students for \u201cthe media quintet,\u201d which includes journalism delivered via smartwatch along with the existing quartet of phone, tablet, computer and print. As a runner, Dr. Garc\u00eda set his sights on his \u201cgeographic essential\u201d \u2014 a location on or near Central Park West. He wanted to buy a one-bedroom in good condition with a doorman to receive packages. His budget topped out in the high $600,000s.", "sentence_answer": "He wanted to buy a one-bedroom in good condition with a doorman to receive packages.", "paragraph_id": "5d700634c8e4820a9b66aad3"} +{"question": "On which team does Colin Kaepernick play?", "paragraph": "Buffalo has also received solid production from guard Richie Incognito and wide receiver Percy Harvin. Those two talented players had seen their public image tarnished over the last few seasons, but they appear to have found a home with Coach Rex Ryan and are playing a big part in the team\u2019s success. The Giants may have the more impressive trophy case, but for right now the Bills are New York\u2019s best (and, technically, only) team. PICK: BILLS Packers (3-0) at 49ers (1-2) 4.25 p.m. Line: Packers by 9 \u00bd Colin Kaepernick has always enjoyed playing the Packers. He may have grown up rooting for the team, but he has shown it no mercy, beating it once in the regular season and twice in the playoffs. He has done it with his arm (412 passing yards and three touchdowns in the 2013 season opener) and with his legs (a record 181 yards rushing in a 2012 playoff win).", "answer": "49ers", "sentence": "PICK: BILLS Packers (3-0) at 49ers (1-2) 4.25 p.m.", "paragraph_sentence": "Buffalo has also received solid production from guard Richie Incognito and wide receiver Percy Harvin. Those two talented players had seen their public image tarnished over the last few seasons, but they appear to have found a home with Coach Rex Ryan and are playing a big part in the team\u2019s success. The Giants may have the more impressive trophy case, but for right now the Bills are New York\u2019s best (and, technically, only) team. PICK: BILLS Packers (3-0) at 49ers (1-2) 4.25 p.m. Line: Packers by 9 \u00bd Colin Kaepernick has always enjoyed playing the Packers. He may have grown up rooting for the team, but he has shown it no mercy, beating it once in the regular season and twice in the playoffs. He has done it with his arm (412 passing yards and three touchdowns in the 2013 season opener) and with his legs (a record 181 yards rushing in a 2012 playoff win).", "paragraph_answer": "Buffalo has also received solid production from guard Richie Incognito and wide receiver Percy Harvin. Those two talented players had seen their public image tarnished over the last few seasons, but they appear to have found a home with Coach Rex Ryan and are playing a big part in the team\u2019s success. The Giants may have the more impressive trophy case, but for right now the Bills are New York\u2019s best (and, technically, only) team. PICK: BILLS Packers (3-0) at 49ers (1-2) 4.25 p.m. Line: Packers by 9 \u00bd Colin Kaepernick has always enjoyed playing the Packers. He may have grown up rooting for the team, but he has shown it no mercy, beating it once in the regular season and twice in the playoffs. He has done it with his arm (412 passing yards and three touchdowns in the 2013 season opener) and with his legs (a record 181 yards rushing in a 2012 playoff win).", "sentence_answer": "PICK: BILLS Packers (3-0) at 49ers (1-2) 4.25 p.m.", "paragraph_id": "5d70281dc8e4820a9b66d5d9"} +{"question": "Why should the bureau direct more water into rivers?", "paragraph": "The bureau is in the meantime coming under fire from lawmakers of both parties for failing to meet the challenges of today\u2019s searing drought. Representative Kevin McCarthy, the majority leader and a Republican from California\u2019s parched inland, has criticized the bureau\u2019s efforts in his state. Lawmakers like Mr. McCarthy are particularly furious that the bureau and the State of California continue to direct scarce water into rivers to support fish habitat, even as farms wither and families struggle to make do with less water.", "answer": "to support fish habitat", "sentence": "Lawmakers like Mr. McCarthy are particularly furious that the bureau and the State of California continue to direct scarce water into rivers to support fish habitat , even as farms wither and families struggle to make do with less water.", "paragraph_sentence": "The bureau is in the meantime coming under fire from lawmakers of both parties for failing to meet the challenges of today\u2019s searing drought. Representative Kevin McCarthy, the majority leader and a Republican from California\u2019s parched inland, has criticized the bureau\u2019s efforts in his state. Lawmakers like Mr. McCarthy are particularly furious that the bureau and the State of California continue to direct scarce water into rivers to support fish habitat , even as farms wither and families struggle to make do with less water. ", "paragraph_answer": "The bureau is in the meantime coming under fire from lawmakers of both parties for failing to meet the challenges of today\u2019s searing drought. Representative Kevin McCarthy, the majority leader and a Republican from California\u2019s parched inland, has criticized the bureau\u2019s efforts in his state. Lawmakers like Mr. McCarthy are particularly furious that the bureau and the State of California continue to direct scarce water into rivers to support fish habitat , even as farms wither and families struggle to make do with less water.", "sentence_answer": "Lawmakers like Mr. McCarthy are particularly furious that the bureau and the State of California continue to direct scarce water into rivers to support fish habitat , even as farms wither and families struggle to make do with less water.", "paragraph_id": "5d705d59c8e4820a9b66ef72"} +{"question": "Who where they playing in the series mentioned in the article?", "paragraph": "He went to the corner, along with Cam Talbot, his backup, and the two of them started shuffling, sliding in place, reacting to invisible pucks. Then he and Talbot took turns in net as a staff member fired shots from close range and different angles. Practice had not officially started, but Lundqvist was working up a sweat. This is the way he starts most every practice, though. The Rangers were preparing to play Game 7 of their second-round playoff series against the Washington Capitals, set for Wednesday night at Madison Square Garden, and Lundqvist was acting as if it were any other game. \u201cMy preparation has stayed the same for years,\u201d Lundqvist said afterward. \u201cI don\u2019t change anything when the games get more important. I like consistency. I try to stick with the same approach.\u201d It is hard to argue with him. Lundqvist has won 13 of his last 16 games in which the Rangers have faced elimination, posting a 1.42 goals-against average, a .955 save percentage and two shutouts. He is undefeated in his last nine elimination games at the Garden and owns a 5-1 career record in Game 7s.", "answer": "Washington Capitals", "sentence": "The Rangers were preparing to play Game 7 of their second-round playoff series against the Washington Capitals , set for Wednesday night at Madison Square Garden, and Lundqvist was acting as if it were any other game.", "paragraph_sentence": "He went to the corner, along with Cam Talbot, his backup, and the two of them started shuffling, sliding in place, reacting to invisible pucks. Then he and Talbot took turns in net as a staff member fired shots from close range and different angles. Practice had not officially started, but Lundqvist was working up a sweat. This is the way he starts most every practice, though. The Rangers were preparing to play Game 7 of their second-round playoff series against the Washington Capitals , set for Wednesday night at Madison Square Garden, and Lundqvist was acting as if it were any other game. \u201cMy preparation has stayed the same for years,\u201d Lundqvist said afterward. \u201cI don\u2019t change anything when the games get more important. I like consistency. I try to stick with the same approach.\u201d It is hard to argue with him. Lundqvist has won 13 of his last 16 games in which the Rangers have faced elimination, posting a 1.42 goals-against average, a .955 save percentage and two shutouts. He is undefeated in his last nine elimination games at the Garden and owns a 5-1 career record in Game 7s.", "paragraph_answer": "He went to the corner, along with Cam Talbot, his backup, and the two of them started shuffling, sliding in place, reacting to invisible pucks. Then he and Talbot took turns in net as a staff member fired shots from close range and different angles. Practice had not officially started, but Lundqvist was working up a sweat. This is the way he starts most every practice, though. The Rangers were preparing to play Game 7 of their second-round playoff series against the Washington Capitals , set for Wednesday night at Madison Square Garden, and Lundqvist was acting as if it were any other game. \u201cMy preparation has stayed the same for years,\u201d Lundqvist said afterward. \u201cI don\u2019t change anything when the games get more important. I like consistency. I try to stick with the same approach.\u201d It is hard to argue with him. Lundqvist has won 13 of his last 16 games in which the Rangers have faced elimination, posting a 1.42 goals-against average, a .955 save percentage and two shutouts. He is undefeated in his last nine elimination games at the Garden and owns a 5-1 career record in Game 7s.", "sentence_answer": "The Rangers were preparing to play Game 7 of their second-round playoff series against the Washington Capitals , set for Wednesday night at Madison Square Garden, and Lundqvist was acting as if it were any other game.", "paragraph_id": "5d707d9dc8e4820a9b66f37c"} +{"question": "Where is the Neue Galerie located?", "paragraph": "New York has just added another outstanding museum exhibition to its autumn roster, this one at the Neue Galerie. \u201cBerlin Metropolis: 1918-1933\u201d is an ambitious effort in a limited setting that successfully combines historical sweep, clockwork organization and an egalitarian approach to mediums. Its nearly 350 pieces \u2014 expertly shoehorned into six themed spaces \u2014 cover the cultural ferment of the fragile Weimar Republic, as it came to be known, which was sandwiched between the end of World War I and the onset of the Third Reich and was Germany\u2019s first attempt at full democracy. The show is hardly definitive, yet it can feel that way because it creates such a poignant, specific view of the devastation of Hitler\u2019s rise and rule: the array of potential cultural achievements destroyed by death, disruption and the shattering of a great city.", "answer": "New York", "sentence": "New York has just added another outstanding museum exhibition to its autumn roster, this one at the Neue Galerie.", "paragraph_sentence": " New York has just added another outstanding museum exhibition to its autumn roster, this one at the Neue Galerie. \u201cBerlin Metropolis: 1918-1933\u201d is an ambitious effort in a limited setting that successfully combines historical sweep, clockwork organization and an egalitarian approach to mediums. Its nearly 350 pieces \u2014 expertly shoehorned into six themed spaces \u2014 cover the cultural ferment of the fragile Weimar Republic, as it came to be known, which was sandwiched between the end of World War I and the onset of the Third Reich and was Germany\u2019s first attempt at full democracy. The show is hardly definitive, yet it can feel that way because it creates such a poignant, specific view of the devastation of Hitler\u2019s rise and rule: the array of potential cultural achievements destroyed by death, disruption and the shattering of a great city.", "paragraph_answer": " New York has just added another outstanding museum exhibition to its autumn roster, this one at the Neue Galerie. \u201cBerlin Metropolis: 1918-1933\u201d is an ambitious effort in a limited setting that successfully combines historical sweep, clockwork organization and an egalitarian approach to mediums. Its nearly 350 pieces \u2014 expertly shoehorned into six themed spaces \u2014 cover the cultural ferment of the fragile Weimar Republic, as it came to be known, which was sandwiched between the end of World War I and the onset of the Third Reich and was Germany\u2019s first attempt at full democracy. The show is hardly definitive, yet it can feel that way because it creates such a poignant, specific view of the devastation of Hitler\u2019s rise and rule: the array of potential cultural achievements destroyed by death, disruption and the shattering of a great city.", "sentence_answer": " New York has just added another outstanding museum exhibition to its autumn roster, this one at the Neue Galerie.", "paragraph_id": "5d700592c8e4820a9b66a939"} +{"question": "Who is the Vice Chancellor of Germany ?", "paragraph": "But the images of migrants chanting \u201cGermany, Germany\u201d as they weave their way across the Continent toward their new promised land have moved many in a country that has for decades been trying to atone for the genocide it committed in World War II. In the words of Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose apparent mercilessness during the Greek bailout talks prompted mocked-up photographs of her dressed in Nazi uniform: \u201cThe world sees Germany as a country of hope and opportunity, and that was certainly not always the case.\u201d", "answer": "Angela Merkel", "sentence": "In the words of Chancellor Angela Merkel , whose apparent mercilessness during the Greek bailout talks prompted mocked-up photographs of her dressed in Nazi uniform: \u201cThe world sees Germany as a country of hope and opportunity, and that was certainly not always the case.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "But the images of migrants chanting \u201cGermany, Germany\u201d as they weave their way across the Continent toward their new promised land have moved many in a country that has for decades been trying to atone for the genocide it committed in World War II. In the words of Chancellor Angela Merkel , whose apparent mercilessness during the Greek bailout talks prompted mocked-up photographs of her dressed in Nazi uniform: \u201cThe world sees Germany as a country of hope and opportunity, and that was certainly not always the case.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "But the images of migrants chanting \u201cGermany, Germany\u201d as they weave their way across the Continent toward their new promised land have moved many in a country that has for decades been trying to atone for the genocide it committed in World War II. In the words of Chancellor Angela Merkel , whose apparent mercilessness during the Greek bailout talks prompted mocked-up photographs of her dressed in Nazi uniform: \u201cThe world sees Germany as a country of hope and opportunity, and that was certainly not always the case.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In the words of Chancellor Angela Merkel , whose apparent mercilessness during the Greek bailout talks prompted mocked-up photographs of her dressed in Nazi uniform: \u201cThe world sees Germany as a country of hope and opportunity, and that was certainly not always the case.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d701088c8e4820a9b66bcee"} +{"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", "paragraph_id": "5d700a22c8e4820a9b66b3a1"} +{"question": "What country is providing training for the Ukrainian?", "paragraph": "The training aims to remold the Ukrainian units by increasing the responsibilities of noncommissioned officers, fixing a Soviet legacy of an officer-heavy infantry. Without sergeants paying attention, basic mistakes were being made, the trainers said. Capt. Nicholas Salimbene, an American trainer, noticed with alarm that the Ukrainians were carrying their rifles with the safeties off. \u201cIt\u2019s about the professionalism of the force,\u201d he said. \u201cWe want them to look like soldiers.\u201d \u201cYou see reports about the little green men,\u201d he said, referring to the Russian soldiers who invaded the Crimean Peninsula last year in unmarked uniforms, \u201cand they all walk around professionally, and carry their weapons professionally.\u201d The Ukrainians should, too, Captain Salimbene said. The United States is also providing advanced courses for military professionals known as forward observers \u2014 the ones who call in targets \u2014 to improve the accuracy of artillery fire, making it more lethal for the enemy and less so for civilians. Oleksandr I. Leshchenko, the deputy director for training in the National Guard, was somewhat skeptical about the value of the training, saying that \u201c99 percent\u201d of the men in the course had already been in combat.", "answer": "United States", "sentence": "The United States is also providing advanced courses for military professionals known as forward observers \u2014 the ones who call in targets \u2014 to improve the accuracy of artillery fire, making it more lethal for the enemy and less so for civilians.", "paragraph_sentence": "The training aims to remold the Ukrainian units by increasing the responsibilities of noncommissioned officers, fixing a Soviet legacy of an officer-heavy infantry. Without sergeants paying attention, basic mistakes were being made, the trainers said. Capt. Nicholas Salimbene, an American trainer, noticed with alarm that the Ukrainians were carrying their rifles with the safeties off. \u201cIt\u2019s about the professionalism of the force,\u201d he said. \u201cWe want them to look like soldiers.\u201d \u201cYou see reports about the little green men,\u201d he said, referring to the Russian soldiers who invaded the Crimean Peninsula last year in unmarked uniforms, \u201cand they all walk around professionally, and carry their weapons professionally.\u201d The Ukrainians should, too, Captain Salimbene said. The United States is also providing advanced courses for military professionals known as forward observers \u2014 the ones who call in targets \u2014 to improve the accuracy of artillery fire, making it more lethal for the enemy and less so for civilians. Oleksandr I. Leshchenko, the deputy director for training in the National Guard, was somewhat skeptical about the value of the training, saying that \u201c99 percent\u201d of the men in the course had already been in combat.", "paragraph_answer": "The training aims to remold the Ukrainian units by increasing the responsibilities of noncommissioned officers, fixing a Soviet legacy of an officer-heavy infantry. Without sergeants paying attention, basic mistakes were being made, the trainers said. Capt. Nicholas Salimbene, an American trainer, noticed with alarm that the Ukrainians were carrying their rifles with the safeties off. \u201cIt\u2019s about the professionalism of the force,\u201d he said. \u201cWe want them to look like soldiers.\u201d \u201cYou see reports about the little green men,\u201d he said, referring to the Russian soldiers who invaded the Crimean Peninsula last year in unmarked uniforms, \u201cand they all walk around professionally, and carry their weapons professionally.\u201d The Ukrainians should, too, Captain Salimbene said. The United States is also providing advanced courses for military professionals known as forward observers \u2014 the ones who call in targets \u2014 to improve the accuracy of artillery fire, making it more lethal for the enemy and less so for civilians. Oleksandr I. Leshchenko, the deputy director for training in the National Guard, was somewhat skeptical about the value of the training, saying that \u201c99 percent\u201d of the men in the course had already been in combat.", "sentence_answer": "The United States is also providing advanced courses for military professionals known as forward observers \u2014 the ones who call in targets \u2014 to improve the accuracy of artillery fire, making it more lethal for the enemy and less so for civilians.", "paragraph_id": "5d702701c8e4820a9b66d496"} +{"question": "Which structure was used as a clubhouse by the Brooklyn Dodgers in the 19th century?", "paragraph": "The North Slope is well served by subway lines, including the 2, 3, B and Q, which make stops on Flatbush and reach Midtown Manhattan in about a half-hour. Nine trains stop at Atlantic Avenue - Barclays Center, including the D, N, 4 and 5. The R train serves stations along Fourth Avenue. Center and South Slope residents can catch the F and G on Fourth Avenue, Seventh Avenue and 15th Street-Prospect Park. The History Washington Park was home to a forerunner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, which used the Old Stone House of Gowanus, a 17th-century structure, as their clubhouse in the late 19th century. A reconstruction of the house stands in the park today.", "answer": "Old Stone House of Gowanus", "sentence": "The History Washington Park was home to a forerunner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, which used the Old Stone House of Gowanus , a 17th-century structure, as their clubhouse in the late 19th century.", "paragraph_sentence": "The North Slope is well served by subway lines, including the 2, 3, B and Q, which make stops on Flatbush and reach Midtown Manhattan in about a half-hour. Nine trains stop at Atlantic Avenue - Barclays Center, including the D, N, 4 and 5. The R train serves stations along Fourth Avenue. Center and South Slope residents can catch the F and G on Fourth Avenue, Seventh Avenue and 15th Street-Prospect Park. The History Washington Park was home to a forerunner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, which used the Old Stone House of Gowanus , a 17th-century structure, as their clubhouse in the late 19th century. A reconstruction of the house stands in the park today.", "paragraph_answer": "The North Slope is well served by subway lines, including the 2, 3, B and Q, which make stops on Flatbush and reach Midtown Manhattan in about a half-hour. Nine trains stop at Atlantic Avenue - Barclays Center, including the D, N, 4 and 5. The R train serves stations along Fourth Avenue. Center and South Slope residents can catch the F and G on Fourth Avenue, Seventh Avenue and 15th Street-Prospect Park. The History Washington Park was home to a forerunner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, which used the Old Stone House of Gowanus , a 17th-century structure, as their clubhouse in the late 19th century. A reconstruction of the house stands in the park today.", "sentence_answer": "The History Washington Park was home to a forerunner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, which used the Old Stone House of Gowanus , a 17th-century structure, as their clubhouse in the late 19th century.", "paragraph_id": "5d709048c8e4820a9b66f593"} +{"question": "What city is the draft in?", "paragraph": "McDavid is the top-ranked player in the draft. It is thought that he and Eichel can contribute immediately in the N.H.L. next season. Edmonton is expected to select McDavid first at the draft on June 26 at BB&T Center in Sunrise, Fla. The Sabres are expected to take Eichel with the second pick. Last season McDavid, who is six feet and 188 pounds, finished third in the O.H.L. in scoring, with 120 points, despite having missed 21 games with an injury. Eichel led the N.C.A.A. with 71 points and won the Hobey Baker Award as the nation\u2019s top college player. He led the Terriers to the N.C.A.A. final, where they lost to Providence.", "answer": "Sunrise, Fla.", "sentence": "Edmonton is expected to select McDavid first at the draft on June 26 at BB&T Center in Sunrise, Fla. The Sabres are expected to take Eichel with the second pick.", "paragraph_sentence": "McDavid is the top-ranked player in the draft. It is thought that he and Eichel can contribute immediately in the N.H.L. next season. Edmonton is expected to select McDavid first at the draft on June 26 at BB&T Center in Sunrise, Fla. The Sabres are expected to take Eichel with the second pick. Last season McDavid, who is six feet and 188 pounds, finished third in the O.H.L. in scoring, with 120 points, despite having missed 21 games with an injury. Eichel led the N.C.A.A. with 71 points and won the Hobey Baker Award as the nation\u2019s top college player. He led the Terriers to the N.C.A.A. final, where they lost to Providence.", "paragraph_answer": "McDavid is the top-ranked player in the draft. It is thought that he and Eichel can contribute immediately in the N.H.L. next season. Edmonton is expected to select McDavid first at the draft on June 26 at BB&T Center in Sunrise, Fla. The Sabres are expected to take Eichel with the second pick. Last season McDavid, who is six feet and 188 pounds, finished third in the O.H.L. in scoring, with 120 points, despite having missed 21 games with an injury. Eichel led the N.C.A.A. with 71 points and won the Hobey Baker Award as the nation\u2019s top college player. He led the Terriers to the N.C.A.A. final, where they lost to Providence.", "sentence_answer": "Edmonton is expected to select McDavid first at the draft on June 26 at BB&T Center in Sunrise, Fla. The Sabres are expected to take Eichel with the second pick.", "paragraph_id": "5d700575c8e4820a9b66a90a"} +{"question": "What did Americans find out about Ukrainians during training?", "paragraph": "In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians\u2019 soldierly skills lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction. \u201cI came into it expecting them not to know much of the basics,\u201d said Sgt. Michael Faranda, who is teaching maneuvers. He was correct. Things \u201cevery soldier should know,\u201d he said, they did not. Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises. Still, Sergeant Faranda said, the Ukrainians\u2019 willingness to go into combat was all the more notable for their lack of preparation for it.", "answer": "Ukrainians\u2019 soldierly skills lacking", "sentence": "In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians\u2019 soldierly skills lacking , and the group generally in need of instruction.", "paragraph_sentence": " In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians\u2019 soldierly skills lacking , and the group generally in need of instruction. \u201cI came into it expecting them not to know much of the basics,\u201d said Sgt. Michael Faranda, who is teaching maneuvers. He was correct. Things \u201cevery soldier should know,\u201d he said, they did not. Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises. Still, Sergeant Faranda said, the Ukrainians\u2019 willingness to go into combat was all the more notable for their lack of preparation for it.", "paragraph_answer": "In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians\u2019 soldierly skills lacking , and the group generally in need of instruction. \u201cI came into it expecting them not to know much of the basics,\u201d said Sgt. Michael Faranda, who is teaching maneuvers. He was correct. Things \u201cevery soldier should know,\u201d he said, they did not. Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises. Still, Sergeant Faranda said, the Ukrainians\u2019 willingness to go into combat was all the more notable for their lack of preparation for it.", "sentence_answer": "In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians\u2019 soldierly skills lacking , and the group generally in need of instruction.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026e9c8e4820a9b66d42c"} +{"question": "Who will direct the Ensemble Signal's performance of Ms. Clyne's chamber opera?", "paragraph": "Ms. Clyne is at work on a chamber opera about the poet Emily Dickinson, parts of which will be performed at Miller by the Ensemble Signal under the direction of Brad Lubman. This time, Ms. Clyne used facsimiles of letters by Dickinson to jump-start the creative process, projecting her handwriting onto a wall and retracing the magnified letters with an indelible marker. The end product \u2014 fastidiously constructed compositions that typically carry a potent emotional charge \u2014 bears no traces of these playful beginnings, although Ms. Wolfe remembers Ms. Clyne turning in scores that were beautifully lettered and bound by hand. But there is a distinct sense of shape and momentum to her music that grows out of a creative process rooted in image and movement.", "answer": "Brad Lubman", "sentence": "Ms. Clyne is at work on a chamber opera about the poet Emily Dickinson, parts of which will be performed at Miller by the Ensemble Signal under the direction of Brad Lubman .", "paragraph_sentence": " Ms. Clyne is at work on a chamber opera about the poet Emily Dickinson, parts of which will be performed at Miller by the Ensemble Signal under the direction of Brad Lubman . This time, Ms. Clyne used facsimiles of letters by Dickinson to jump-start the creative process, projecting her handwriting onto a wall and retracing the magnified letters with an indelible marker. The end product \u2014 fastidiously constructed compositions that typically carry a potent emotional charge \u2014 bears no traces of these playful beginnings, although Ms. Wolfe remembers Ms. Clyne turning in scores that were beautifully lettered and bound by hand. But there is a distinct sense of shape and momentum to her music that grows out of a creative process rooted in image and movement.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Clyne is at work on a chamber opera about the poet Emily Dickinson, parts of which will be performed at Miller by the Ensemble Signal under the direction of Brad Lubman . This time, Ms. Clyne used facsimiles of letters by Dickinson to jump-start the creative process, projecting her handwriting onto a wall and retracing the magnified letters with an indelible marker. The end product \u2014 fastidiously constructed compositions that typically carry a potent emotional charge \u2014 bears no traces of these playful beginnings, although Ms. Wolfe remembers Ms. Clyne turning in scores that were beautifully lettered and bound by hand. But there is a distinct sense of shape and momentum to her music that grows out of a creative process rooted in image and movement.", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Clyne is at work on a chamber opera about the poet Emily Dickinson, parts of which will be performed at Miller by the Ensemble Signal under the direction of Brad Lubman .", "paragraph_id": "5d704c4ac8e4820a9b66e9f6"} +{"question": "Where is Infinity Hall located?", "paragraph": "FALLS VILLAGE Music Mountain Calidore String Quartet, classical. June 21 at 3 p.m. $30. Kim Kashkashian, viola. June 26 at 7:30 p.m. $30. Cantata Profana, classical. June 27 at 6:30 p.m. $27. Juilliard String Quartet, classical. June 28 at 3 p.m. $60. Music Mountain, 225 Music Mountain Road. 860-824-7126; musicmountain.org. HARTFORD Infinity Hall Hartford The Seldom Scene, bluegrass. June 25 at 8 p.m. $35 to $50. Jeff Pevar and Mo\u2019 Pleasure Allstars, blues and pop. June 27 at 8 p.m. $24 to $39. Tom Rush, folk. June 28 at 7:30 p.m. $39 to $59. Infinity Hall Hartford, 32 Front Street. infinityhall.com; 860-560-7757.", "answer": "32 Front Street", "sentence": "Infinity Hall Hartford, 32 Front Street .", "paragraph_sentence": "FALLS VILLAGE Music Mountain Calidore String Quartet, classical. June 21 at 3 p.m. $30. Kim Kashkashian, viola. June 26 at 7:30 p.m. $30. Cantata Profana, classical. June 27 at 6:30 p.m. $27. Juilliard String Quartet, classical. June 28 at 3 p.m. $60. Music Mountain, 225 Music Mountain Road. 860-824-7126; musicmountain.org. HARTFORD Infinity Hall Hartford The Seldom Scene, bluegrass. June 25 at 8 p.m. $35 to $50. Jeff Pevar and Mo\u2019 Pleasure Allstars, blues and pop. June 27 at 8 p.m. $24 to $39. Tom Rush, folk. June 28 at 7:30 p.m. $39 to $59. Infinity Hall Hartford, 32 Front Street . infinityhall.com; 860-560-7757.", "paragraph_answer": "FALLS VILLAGE Music Mountain Calidore String Quartet, classical. June 21 at 3 p.m. $30. Kim Kashkashian, viola. June 26 at 7:30 p.m. $30. Cantata Profana, classical. June 27 at 6:30 p.m. $27. Juilliard String Quartet, classical. June 28 at 3 p.m. $60. Music Mountain, 225 Music Mountain Road. 860-824-7126; musicmountain.org. HARTFORD Infinity Hall Hartford The Seldom Scene, bluegrass. June 25 at 8 p.m. $35 to $50. Jeff Pevar and Mo\u2019 Pleasure Allstars, blues and pop. June 27 at 8 p.m. $24 to $39. Tom Rush, folk. June 28 at 7:30 p.m. $39 to $59. Infinity Hall Hartford, 32 Front Street . infinityhall.com; 860-560-7757.", "sentence_answer": "Infinity Hall Hartford, 32 Front Street .", "paragraph_id": "5d700e23c8e4820a9b66b9fa"} +{"question": "How many people were needed to be moved from a low-sodium diet to a normal diet to prevent one hospital admission?", "paragraph": "I wrote here at The Upshot not long ago about how a growing body of epidemiologic data was pointing out that low-salt diets might actually be unhealthy. But randomized controlled trials exist there, too. A 2008 study randomly assigned patients with congestive heart failure to either normal or low-sodium diets. Those on the low-sodium diet had significantly more hospital admissions. The \u201cnumber needed to treat\u201d for a normal-sodium diet above a low-sodium diet to prevent a hospital admission in this population was six \u2014 meaning that for every six people who are moved from a low-sodium diet to a normal diet, one hospital admission would be prevented. That\u2019s a very strong finding.", "answer": "six", "sentence": "The \u201cnumber needed to treat\u201d for a normal-sodium diet above a low-sodium diet to prevent a hospital admission in this population was six \u2014 meaning that for every six people who are moved from a low-sodium diet to a normal diet, one hospital admission would be prevented.", "paragraph_sentence": "I wrote here at The Upshot not long ago about how a growing body of epidemiologic data was pointing out that low-salt diets might actually be unhealthy. But randomized controlled trials exist there, too. A 2008 study randomly assigned patients with congestive heart failure to either normal or low-sodium diets. Those on the low-sodium diet had significantly more hospital admissions. The \u201cnumber needed to treat\u201d for a normal-sodium diet above a low-sodium diet to prevent a hospital admission in this population was six \u2014 meaning that for every six people who are moved from a low-sodium diet to a normal diet, one hospital admission would be prevented. That\u2019s a very strong finding.", "paragraph_answer": "I wrote here at The Upshot not long ago about how a growing body of epidemiologic data was pointing out that low-salt diets might actually be unhealthy. But randomized controlled trials exist there, too. A 2008 study randomly assigned patients with congestive heart failure to either normal or low-sodium diets. Those on the low-sodium diet had significantly more hospital admissions. The \u201cnumber needed to treat\u201d for a normal-sodium diet above a low-sodium diet to prevent a hospital admission in this population was six \u2014 meaning that for every six people who are moved from a low-sodium diet to a normal diet, one hospital admission would be prevented. That\u2019s a very strong finding.", "sentence_answer": "The \u201cnumber needed to treat\u201d for a normal-sodium diet above a low-sodium diet to prevent a hospital admission in this population was six \u2014 meaning that for every six people who are moved from a low-sodium diet to a normal diet, one hospital admission would be prevented.", "paragraph_id": "5d701a6cc8e4820a9b66c628"} +{"question": "What is Angela Merkel's party?", "paragraph": "The Flussbad speaks to a tradition here; there are other urban Flussbads in this part of the world, so the idea has local resonance. Gottfried Ludewig is a young member of the Berlin City Parliament from the center-right Christian Democratic Union, Angela Merkel\u2019s party. He has become one of the project\u2019s most vocal champions, enlisting political allies across the aisle, corralling money for a feasibility study and promoting a grass-roots, community-based campaign. Neither he nor Tim Edler would divulge the project\u2019s projected cost, which must be many, many millions of dollars. But both said the major hurdle would not be money. The real struggle is over civic identity.", "answer": "Christian Democratic Union", "sentence": "Gottfried Ludewig is a young member of the Berlin City Parliament from the center-right Christian Democratic Union , Angela Merkel\u2019s party.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Flussbad speaks to a tradition here; there are other urban Flussbads in this part of the world, so the idea has local resonance. Gottfried Ludewig is a young member of the Berlin City Parliament from the center-right Christian Democratic Union , Angela Merkel\u2019s party. He has become one of the project\u2019s most vocal champions, enlisting political allies across the aisle, corralling money for a feasibility study and promoting a grass-roots, community-based campaign. Neither he nor Tim Edler would divulge the project\u2019s projected cost, which must be many, many millions of dollars. But both said the major hurdle would not be money. The real struggle is over civic identity.", "paragraph_answer": "The Flussbad speaks to a tradition here; there are other urban Flussbads in this part of the world, so the idea has local resonance. Gottfried Ludewig is a young member of the Berlin City Parliament from the center-right Christian Democratic Union , Angela Merkel\u2019s party. He has become one of the project\u2019s most vocal champions, enlisting political allies across the aisle, corralling money for a feasibility study and promoting a grass-roots, community-based campaign. Neither he nor Tim Edler would divulge the project\u2019s projected cost, which must be many, many millions of dollars. But both said the major hurdle would not be money. The real struggle is over civic identity.", "sentence_answer": "Gottfried Ludewig is a young member of the Berlin City Parliament from the center-right Christian Democratic Union , Angela Merkel\u2019s party.", "paragraph_id": "5d703f1cc8e4820a9b66e44a"} +{"question": "How many troops did Russia deploy?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe Russians have fought what is largely a proxy war in eastern Ukraine \u2014 and on the cheap, too,\u201d Mark Galeotti, a military analyst, wrote in Foreign Policy magazine. \u201cEven the government in Kiev, which is prone to alarmism, estimates that Russia has deployed, at most, some 9,000 troops.\u201d But the conflict has also reached a point where Russia would have to commit significant new resources for any further advance, which helped clear the way for a settlement to consolidate its gains, Mr. Lukyanov said. The separatists \u201ccannot advance very much without direct Russian involvement, and Russia does not want to get directly involved,\u201d he said.", "answer": "9,000 troops.", "sentence": "\u201cEven the government in Kiev, which is prone to alarmism, estimates that Russia has deployed, at most, some 9,000 troops. \u201d But the conflict has also reached a point where Russia would have to commit significant new resources for any further advance, which helped clear the way for a settlement to consolidate its gains, Mr. Lukyanov said.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe Russians have fought what is largely a proxy war in eastern Ukraine \u2014 and on the cheap, too,\u201d Mark Galeotti, a military analyst, wrote in Foreign Policy magazine. \u201cEven the government in Kiev, which is prone to alarmism, estimates that Russia has deployed, at most, some 9,000 troops. \u201d But the conflict has also reached a point where Russia would have to commit significant new resources for any further advance, which helped clear the way for a settlement to consolidate its gains, Mr. Lukyanov said. The separatists \u201ccannot advance very much without direct Russian involvement, and Russia does not want to get directly involved,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe Russians have fought what is largely a proxy war in eastern Ukraine \u2014 and on the cheap, too,\u201d Mark Galeotti, a military analyst, wrote in Foreign Policy magazine. \u201cEven the government in Kiev, which is prone to alarmism, estimates that Russia has deployed, at most, some 9,000 troops. \u201d But the conflict has also reached a point where Russia would have to commit significant new resources for any further advance, which helped clear the way for a settlement to consolidate its gains, Mr. Lukyanov said. The separatists \u201ccannot advance very much without direct Russian involvement, and Russia does not want to get directly involved,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cEven the government in Kiev, which is prone to alarmism, estimates that Russia has deployed, at most, some 9,000 troops. \u201d But the conflict has also reached a point where Russia would have to commit significant new resources for any further advance, which helped clear the way for a settlement to consolidate its gains, Mr. Lukyanov said.", "paragraph_id": "5d70268fc8e4820a9b66d2e9"} +{"question": "Who spent the 4th quarter on the bench?", "paragraph": "\u201cI thought my guy was taking a lot of hard hits, and I didn\u2019t like it, and I was expressing my opinion,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd LeBron stepped in to sort of protect me in that situation, which is more than fine.\u201d Star player, coach, assistant coach, medical expert. James even found time to impersonate a statistician during the game, approaching the officials during a first-quarter timeout and arguing that a 2-point basket credited to his teammate Kevin Love should have been a 3-pointer. After reviewing the play, the officials made the change. But Love did not make another 3, shot 3 for 11 from the field and, not for the first time, spent the fourth quarter on the bench.", "answer": "Kevin Love", "sentence": "James even found time to impersonate a statistician during the game, approaching the officials during a first-quarter timeout and arguing that a 2-point basket credited to his teammate Kevin Love should have been a 3-pointer.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI thought my guy was taking a lot of hard hits, and I didn\u2019t like it, and I was expressing my opinion,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd LeBron stepped in to sort of protect me in that situation, which is more than fine.\u201d Star player, coach, assistant coach, medical expert. James even found time to impersonate a statistician during the game, approaching the officials during a first-quarter timeout and arguing that a 2-point basket credited to his teammate Kevin Love should have been a 3-pointer. After reviewing the play, the officials made the change. But Love did not make another 3, shot 3 for 11 from the field and, not for the first time, spent the fourth quarter on the bench.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI thought my guy was taking a lot of hard hits, and I didn\u2019t like it, and I was expressing my opinion,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd LeBron stepped in to sort of protect me in that situation, which is more than fine.\u201d Star player, coach, assistant coach, medical expert. James even found time to impersonate a statistician during the game, approaching the officials during a first-quarter timeout and arguing that a 2-point basket credited to his teammate Kevin Love should have been a 3-pointer. After reviewing the play, the officials made the change. But Love did not make another 3, shot 3 for 11 from the field and, not for the first time, spent the fourth quarter on the bench.", "sentence_answer": "James even found time to impersonate a statistician during the game, approaching the officials during a first-quarter timeout and arguing that a 2-point basket credited to his teammate Kevin Love should have been a 3-pointer.", "paragraph_id": "5d703a39c8e4820a9b66e213"} +{"question": "What day of the week did the incident take place?", "paragraph": "Video taken at the scene showed the flames erupting within the crowd at the event \u2014 called Color Play Asia and organized by a group using the same name \u2014 about 8:30 p.m. on Saturday, after nightfall. Some people were shown carrying the injured from the scene in inflatable rafts, and others were shown running away, silhouetted by flames. The fire was quickly controlled, but not before hundreds were hurt. Taiwan\u2019s Ministry of Health and Welfare said on its website that Taipei-area hospitals had victims requiring skin grafts. The ministry said hospitals were also urgently requesting other medical supplies needed to treat burns. The victims were mostly from Taiwan, but among the injured were four people from Hong Kong, one person from the United States, one from Singapore, one from Japan, one from Macau and one from Malaysia, according to the local public health department.", "answer": "Saturday", "sentence": "Video taken at the scene showed the flames erupting within the crowd at the event \u2014 called Color Play Asia and organized by a group using the same name \u2014 about 8:30 p.m. on Saturday , after nightfall.", "paragraph_sentence": " Video taken at the scene showed the flames erupting within the crowd at the event \u2014 called Color Play Asia and organized by a group using the same name \u2014 about 8:30 p.m. on Saturday , after nightfall. Some people were shown carrying the injured from the scene in inflatable rafts, and others were shown running away, silhouetted by flames. The fire was quickly controlled, but not before hundreds were hurt. Taiwan\u2019s Ministry of Health and Welfare said on its website that Taipei-area hospitals had victims requiring skin grafts. The ministry said hospitals were also urgently requesting other medical supplies needed to treat burns. The victims were mostly from Taiwan, but among the injured were four people from Hong Kong, one person from the United States, one from Singapore, one from Japan, one from Macau and one from Malaysia, according to the local public health department.", "paragraph_answer": "Video taken at the scene showed the flames erupting within the crowd at the event \u2014 called Color Play Asia and organized by a group using the same name \u2014 about 8:30 p.m. on Saturday , after nightfall. Some people were shown carrying the injured from the scene in inflatable rafts, and others were shown running away, silhouetted by flames. The fire was quickly controlled, but not before hundreds were hurt. Taiwan\u2019s Ministry of Health and Welfare said on its website that Taipei-area hospitals had victims requiring skin grafts. The ministry said hospitals were also urgently requesting other medical supplies needed to treat burns. The victims were mostly from Taiwan, but among the injured were four people from Hong Kong, one person from the United States, one from Singapore, one from Japan, one from Macau and one from Malaysia, according to the local public health department.", "sentence_answer": "Video taken at the scene showed the flames erupting within the crowd at the event \u2014 called Color Play Asia and organized by a group using the same name \u2014 about 8:30 p.m. on Saturday , after nightfall.", "paragraph_id": "5d704cb9c8e4820a9b66ea09"} +{"question": "What political party in France has called for new borders in Europe?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front. Ms. Le Pen and her party have thrived on an anti-immigration message that has verged on anti-Muslim, as well as a call for re-establishing European borders. These notions had already found traction as France faced an influx of Muslim immigrants from war-afflicted areas of the world. But she gained even more momentum after the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, in which 130 people were killed. However, several analysts said it was important not to overplay the recent attacks in explaining her success. Rather, they see a long-term trend in which the National Front has gained ground in election after election. It has done so even more rapidly since Ms. Le Pen took leadership of the party from her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in 2011.", "answer": "National Front", "sentence": "\u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front .", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front . Ms. Le Pen and her party have thrived on an anti-immigration message that has verged on anti-Muslim, as well as a call for re-establishing European borders. These notions had already found traction as France faced an influx of Muslim immigrants from war-afflicted areas of the world. But she gained even more momentum after the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, in which 130 people were killed. However, several analysts said it was important not to overplay the recent attacks in explaining her success. Rather, they see a long-term trend in which the National Front has gained ground in election after election. It has done so even more rapidly since Ms. Le Pen took leadership of the party from her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in 2011.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front . Ms. Le Pen and her party have thrived on an anti-immigration message that has verged on anti-Muslim, as well as a call for re-establishing European borders. These notions had already found traction as France faced an influx of Muslim immigrants from war-afflicted areas of the world. But she gained even more momentum after the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, in which 130 people were killed. However, several analysts said it was important not to overplay the recent attacks in explaining her success. Rather, they see a long-term trend in which the National Front has gained ground in election after election. It has done so even more rapidly since Ms. Le Pen took leadership of the party from her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in 2011.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front .", "paragraph_id": "5d701089c8e4820a9b66bcf7"} +{"question": "What journal did Araeen found and edit?", "paragraph": "Born in Pakistan in 1935 and a London resident since 1964, Rasheed Araeen has been an art-world legend since the 1980s, when he founded and edited Third Text, a journal that not only gave a voice to contemporary non-Western and nonwhite artists but also helped initiate an entire rethinking of 20th-century art history. Mr. Araeen also produced some of the most influential writing of the time (I still have his clips from 30 years ago) and organized shows like \u201cThe Other Story\u201d in London, which laid the foundation for the concept that modernism, far from being a Western phenomenon, had happened all over the world, on different schedules.", "answer": "Third Text", "sentence": "Born in Pakistan in 1935 and a London resident since 1964, Rasheed Araeen has been an art-world legend since the 1980s, when he founded and edited Third Text , a journal that not only gave a voice to contemporary non-Western and nonwhite artists but also helped initiate an entire rethinking of 20th-century art history.", "paragraph_sentence": " Born in Pakistan in 1935 and a London resident since 1964, Rasheed Araeen has been an art-world legend since the 1980s, when he founded and edited Third Text , a journal that not only gave a voice to contemporary non-Western and nonwhite artists but also helped initiate an entire rethinking of 20th-century art history. Mr. Araeen also produced some of the most influential writing of the time (I still have his clips from 30 years ago) and organized shows like \u201cThe Other Story\u201d in London, which laid the foundation for the concept that modernism, far from being a Western phenomenon, had happened all over the world, on different schedules.", "paragraph_answer": "Born in Pakistan in 1935 and a London resident since 1964, Rasheed Araeen has been an art-world legend since the 1980s, when he founded and edited Third Text , a journal that not only gave a voice to contemporary non-Western and nonwhite artists but also helped initiate an entire rethinking of 20th-century art history. Mr. Araeen also produced some of the most influential writing of the time (I still have his clips from 30 years ago) and organized shows like \u201cThe Other Story\u201d in London, which laid the foundation for the concept that modernism, far from being a Western phenomenon, had happened all over the world, on different schedules.", "sentence_answer": "Born in Pakistan in 1935 and a London resident since 1964, Rasheed Araeen has been an art-world legend since the 1980s, when he founded and edited Third Text , a journal that not only gave a voice to contemporary non-Western and nonwhite artists but also helped initiate an entire rethinking of 20th-century art history.", "paragraph_id": "5d702185c8e4820a9b66cd78"} +{"question": "Who was the team coach?", "paragraph": "Jirkovsky and Stewart swam back toward the boat, and only Stewart got out. She would be the last of the six-person relay team to swim a shift. Each would swim for an hour before yielding to the next, and for the crossing to qualify officially, the team would have to maintain that order, and each athlete would have to spend an hour in the water when the time came. If one of them quit for any reason, the attempt would fail. Jirkovsky kept swimming, following the kayak, which followed the support boat. The current was at his back. After an hour, the team\u2019s leader and coach, Jim McConica, 64, jumped in \u2014 the first shift change. By the time John Chung, 45, tapped him out, the Deep Enders were off to a splendid start. By 3 p.m. Monday, though, the team was fighting the current and dealing with a seven-foot swell. The battle peaked 20 miles into the swim as the team approached Santa Barbara Island that night. \u201cThe island is shaped like an airplane wing,\u201d McConica said, \u201cand the volume of water sweeping around that island was hugely powerful and cut our speed.\u201d", "answer": "Jim McConica,", "sentence": "After an hour, the team\u2019s leader and coach, Jim McConica, 64, jumped in \u2014 the first shift change.", "paragraph_sentence": "Jirkovsky and Stewart swam back toward the boat, and only Stewart got out. She would be the last of the six-person relay team to swim a shift. Each would swim for an hour before yielding to the next, and for the crossing to qualify officially, the team would have to maintain that order, and each athlete would have to spend an hour in the water when the time came. If one of them quit for any reason, the attempt would fail. Jirkovsky kept swimming, following the kayak, which followed the support boat. The current was at his back. After an hour, the team\u2019s leader and coach, Jim McConica, 64, jumped in \u2014 the first shift change. By the time John Chung, 45, tapped him out, the Deep Enders were off to a splendid start. By 3 p.m. Monday, though, the team was fighting the current and dealing with a seven-foot swell. The battle peaked 20 miles into the swim as the team approached Santa Barbara Island that night. \u201cThe island is shaped like an airplane wing,\u201d McConica said, \u201cand the volume of water sweeping around that island was hugely powerful and cut our speed.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Jirkovsky and Stewart swam back toward the boat, and only Stewart got out. She would be the last of the six-person relay team to swim a shift. Each would swim for an hour before yielding to the next, and for the crossing to qualify officially, the team would have to maintain that order, and each athlete would have to spend an hour in the water when the time came. If one of them quit for any reason, the attempt would fail. Jirkovsky kept swimming, following the kayak, which followed the support boat. The current was at his back. After an hour, the team\u2019s leader and coach, Jim McConica, 64, jumped in \u2014 the first shift change. By the time John Chung, 45, tapped him out, the Deep Enders were off to a splendid start. By 3 p.m. Monday, though, the team was fighting the current and dealing with a seven-foot swell. The battle peaked 20 miles into the swim as the team approached Santa Barbara Island that night. \u201cThe island is shaped like an airplane wing,\u201d McConica said, \u201cand the volume of water sweeping around that island was hugely powerful and cut our speed.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "After an hour, the team\u2019s leader and coach, Jim McConica, 64, jumped in \u2014 the first shift change.", "paragraph_id": "5d700fa7c8e4820a9b66bbc9"} +{"question": "In which part of the body was Mr. Watkins stabbed?", "paragraph": "But Mr. Hincapie now maintains he gave a false confession after a detective beat him. He testified in February he was walking down an escalator to the platform when the murder occurred. He was looking for a friend and had tarried at the turnstiles to flirt with some girls, he said. His story was buttressed by the testimony of Luis Montero, who testified he recalled Mr. Hincapie\u2019s being with him at the turnstiles just before the commotion erupted on the platform below. The police arrested Mr. Montero on suspicion of taking part in the mugging as well, but later dropped charges against him. He never confessed. Another man convicted in the attack, Anthony Anderson, took the stand and testified he did not remember Mr. Hincapie\u2019s being on the platform when another teenager, Yul Gary Morales, stabbed Mr. Watkins in the chest. Ms. Santana, a 45-year-old hospital worker, also corroborated Mr. Hincapie\u2019s claim. Having read about the hearing, she voluntarily came forward this year and swore on the stand she had seen the murder but had not seen Mr. Hincapie among the men attacking the Watkins family.", "answer": "the chest", "sentence": "Another man convicted in the attack, Anthony Anderson, took the stand and testified he did not remember Mr. Hincapie\u2019s being on the platform when another teenager, Yul Gary Morales, stabbed Mr. Watkins in the chest .", "paragraph_sentence": "But Mr. Hincapie now maintains he gave a false confession after a detective beat him. He testified in February he was walking down an escalator to the platform when the murder occurred. He was looking for a friend and had tarried at the turnstiles to flirt with some girls, he said. His story was buttressed by the testimony of Luis Montero, who testified he recalled Mr. Hincapie\u2019s being with him at the turnstiles just before the commotion erupted on the platform below. The police arrested Mr. Montero on suspicion of taking part in the mugging as well, but later dropped charges against him. He never confessed. Another man convicted in the attack, Anthony Anderson, took the stand and testified he did not remember Mr. Hincapie\u2019s being on the platform when another teenager, Yul Gary Morales, stabbed Mr. Watkins in the chest . Ms. Santana, a 45-year-old hospital worker, also corroborated Mr. Hincapie\u2019s claim. Having read about the hearing, she voluntarily came forward this year and swore on the stand she had seen the murder but had not seen Mr. Hincapie among the men attacking the Watkins family.", "paragraph_answer": "But Mr. Hincapie now maintains he gave a false confession after a detective beat him. He testified in February he was walking down an escalator to the platform when the murder occurred. He was looking for a friend and had tarried at the turnstiles to flirt with some girls, he said. His story was buttressed by the testimony of Luis Montero, who testified he recalled Mr. Hincapie\u2019s being with him at the turnstiles just before the commotion erupted on the platform below. The police arrested Mr. Montero on suspicion of taking part in the mugging as well, but later dropped charges against him. He never confessed. Another man convicted in the attack, Anthony Anderson, took the stand and testified he did not remember Mr. Hincapie\u2019s being on the platform when another teenager, Yul Gary Morales, stabbed Mr. Watkins in the chest . Ms. Santana, a 45-year-old hospital worker, also corroborated Mr. Hincapie\u2019s claim. Having read about the hearing, she voluntarily came forward this year and swore on the stand she had seen the murder but had not seen Mr. Hincapie among the men attacking the Watkins family.", "sentence_answer": "Another man convicted in the attack, Anthony Anderson, took the stand and testified he did not remember Mr. Hincapie\u2019s being on the platform when another teenager, Yul Gary Morales, stabbed Mr. Watkins in the chest .", "paragraph_id": "5d70253cc8e4820a9b66d1b0"} +{"question": "How many people were seriously injured?", "paragraph": "No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei. The injured, many suffering from serious burns and smoke inhalation, were overwhelmingly young, in their 20s or younger, with one 18-year-old woman receiving burns on 90 percent of her body, according to the official Central News Agency.", "answer": "202", "sentence": "No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei.", "paragraph_sentence": " No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei. The injured, many suffering from serious burns and smoke inhalation, were overwhelmingly young, in their 20s or younger, with one 18-year-old woman receiving burns on 90 percent of her body, according to the official Central News Agency.", "paragraph_answer": "No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei. The injured, many suffering from serious burns and smoke inhalation, were overwhelmingly young, in their 20s or younger, with one 18-year-old woman receiving burns on 90 percent of her body, according to the official Central News Agency.", "sentence_answer": "No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei.", "paragraph_id": "5d704c44c8e4820a9b66e9e4"} +{"question": "Which area gets the water first?", "paragraph": "Just over 50 miles north, in the city of Sirjan, decisions long postponed have begun to impose themselves on local officials, forcing them to make difficult choices in allocating scarce water supplies. Wedged between two newly built neighborhoods of five-story apartment buildings, a convoy of water trucks waited in line to fill their 5,000-gallon tanks. Under a deal with the local water management company, up to 400 of these trucks a day draw water from the city\u2019s main well and head to the Golgohar iron mine, the largest such mine in the Middle East. It employs over 7,000 people, many of them from Sirjan, and a water shortage has compounded an already difficult situation brought on by collapsing iron ore prices. \u201cIt is internationally unprecedented to carry water with tankers, but we have no other way,\u201d Naser Taghizadeh, chief executive of the Golgohar Iron Ore Company, told the local Negarestan news outlet. \u201cIf water is not taken to the complex, projects are stopped, and many people will lose their jobs.\u201d", "answer": "Golgohar iron mine", "sentence": "Under a deal with the local water management company, up to 400 of these trucks a day draw water from the city\u2019s main well and head to the Golgohar iron mine , the largest such mine in the Middle East.", "paragraph_sentence": "Just over 50 miles north, in the city of Sirjan, decisions long postponed have begun to impose themselves on local officials, forcing them to make difficult choices in allocating scarce water supplies. Wedged between two newly built neighborhoods of five-story apartment buildings, a convoy of water trucks waited in line to fill their 5,000-gallon tanks. Under a deal with the local water management company, up to 400 of these trucks a day draw water from the city\u2019s main well and head to the Golgohar iron mine , the largest such mine in the Middle East. It employs over 7,000 people, many of them from Sirjan, and a water shortage has compounded an already difficult situation brought on by collapsing iron ore prices. \u201cIt is internationally unprecedented to carry water with tankers, but we have no other way,\u201d Naser Taghizadeh, chief executive of the Golgohar Iron Ore Company, told the local Negarestan news outlet. \u201cIf water is not taken to the complex, projects are stopped, and many people will lose their jobs.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Just over 50 miles north, in the city of Sirjan, decisions long postponed have begun to impose themselves on local officials, forcing them to make difficult choices in allocating scarce water supplies. Wedged between two newly built neighborhoods of five-story apartment buildings, a convoy of water trucks waited in line to fill their 5,000-gallon tanks. Under a deal with the local water management company, up to 400 of these trucks a day draw water from the city\u2019s main well and head to the Golgohar iron mine , the largest such mine in the Middle East. It employs over 7,000 people, many of them from Sirjan, and a water shortage has compounded an already difficult situation brought on by collapsing iron ore prices. \u201cIt is internationally unprecedented to carry water with tankers, but we have no other way,\u201d Naser Taghizadeh, chief executive of the Golgohar Iron Ore Company, told the local Negarestan news outlet. \u201cIf water is not taken to the complex, projects are stopped, and many people will lose their jobs.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Under a deal with the local water management company, up to 400 of these trucks a day draw water from the city\u2019s main well and head to the Golgohar iron mine , the largest such mine in the Middle East.", "paragraph_id": "5d702098c8e4820a9b66cc78"} +{"question": "How long was training for the Ukrainian soldiers?", "paragraph": "Capt. Andrii Syurkalo, a Ukrainian officer, said it was commendable that the trainers were willing to use the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal as an element in a class on the Geneva Conventions. American officers described the course work as equivalent to the latter months of basic training in the United States. The courses will train 705 Ukrainian soldiers at a cost of $19 million over six months. The Ukrainian National Guard is rotating from the front what units it can spare for the training. American instructors intend to recommend top performers to serve as trainers within other Ukrainian units, and in this way spread the instruction more broadly.", "answer": "over six months", "sentence": "The courses will train 705 Ukrainian soldiers at a cost of $19 million over six months .", "paragraph_sentence": "Capt. Andrii Syurkalo, a Ukrainian officer, said it was commendable that the trainers were willing to use the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal as an element in a class on the Geneva Conventions. American officers described the course work as equivalent to the latter months of basic training in the United States. The courses will train 705 Ukrainian soldiers at a cost of $19 million over six months . The Ukrainian National Guard is rotating from the front what units it can spare for the training. American instructors intend to recommend top performers to serve as trainers within other Ukrainian units, and in this way spread the instruction more broadly.", "paragraph_answer": "Capt. Andrii Syurkalo, a Ukrainian officer, said it was commendable that the trainers were willing to use the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal as an element in a class on the Geneva Conventions. American officers described the course work as equivalent to the latter months of basic training in the United States. The courses will train 705 Ukrainian soldiers at a cost of $19 million over six months . The Ukrainian National Guard is rotating from the front what units it can spare for the training. American instructors intend to recommend top performers to serve as trainers within other Ukrainian units, and in this way spread the instruction more broadly.", "sentence_answer": "The courses will train 705 Ukrainian soldiers at a cost of $19 million over six months .", "paragraph_id": "5d702701c8e4820a9b66d4be"} +{"question": "what is the season high number of assists that Lebron James has attained?", "paragraph": "Andrea Bargnani scored 25 points for the Knicks, who again played without Carmelo Anthony (knee surgery) and Jose Calderon (sore left Achilles\u2019 tendon) and have lost 10 of their last 12. THUNDER 123, 76ERS 118 Russell Westbrook set career highs with 49 points and 16 rebounds, and added 10 assists for his fourth consecutive triple-double, helping host Oklahoma City defeat Philadelphia in overtime. It was the most points by any player with a triple-double since Larry Bird also scored 49 in 1992. CAVALIERS 120, RAPTORS 112 LeBron James scored 29 points and matched a season high with 14 assists, Kevin Love had 22 points and 10 rebounds and visiting Cleveland held on to beat Toronto. Jonas Valanciunas scored 26 points and 11 rebounds, and DeMar DeRozan had 25 points for the Raptors, who lost for the sixth time in seven games.", "answer": "14", "sentence": "CAVALIERS 120, RAPTORS 112 LeBron James scored 29 points and matched a season high with 14 assists, Kevin Love had 22 points and 10 rebounds and visiting Cleveland held on to beat Toronto.", "paragraph_sentence": "Andrea Bargnani scored 25 points for the Knicks, who again played without Carmelo Anthony (knee surgery) and Jose Calderon (sore left Achilles\u2019 tendon) and have lost 10 of their last 12. THUNDER 123, 76ERS 118 Russell Westbrook set career highs with 49 points and 16 rebounds, and added 10 assists for his fourth consecutive triple-double, helping host Oklahoma City defeat Philadelphia in overtime. It was the most points by any player with a triple-double since Larry Bird also scored 49 in 1992. CAVALIERS 120, RAPTORS 112 LeBron James scored 29 points and matched a season high with 14 assists, Kevin Love had 22 points and 10 rebounds and visiting Cleveland held on to beat Toronto. Jonas Valanciunas scored 26 points and 11 rebounds, and DeMar DeRozan had 25 points for the Raptors, who lost for the sixth time in seven games.", "paragraph_answer": "Andrea Bargnani scored 25 points for the Knicks, who again played without Carmelo Anthony (knee surgery) and Jose Calderon (sore left Achilles\u2019 tendon) and have lost 10 of their last 12. THUNDER 123, 76ERS 118 Russell Westbrook set career highs with 49 points and 16 rebounds, and added 10 assists for his fourth consecutive triple-double, helping host Oklahoma City defeat Philadelphia in overtime. It was the most points by any player with a triple-double since Larry Bird also scored 49 in 1992. CAVALIERS 120, RAPTORS 112 LeBron James scored 29 points and matched a season high with 14 assists, Kevin Love had 22 points and 10 rebounds and visiting Cleveland held on to beat Toronto. Jonas Valanciunas scored 26 points and 11 rebounds, and DeMar DeRozan had 25 points for the Raptors, who lost for the sixth time in seven games.", "sentence_answer": "CAVALIERS 120, RAPTORS 112 LeBron James scored 29 points and matched a season high with 14 assists, Kevin Love had 22 points and 10 rebounds and visiting Cleveland held on to beat Toronto.", "paragraph_id": "5d7007ebc8e4820a9b66aee5"} +{"question": "What was the price that represented the first \"art boom\" prices?", "paragraph": "\u201cIn the old days you had a small market. Now globalization is a huge factor,\u201d said James Roundell, a director at the London and New York dealer and adviser Dickinson, who, while working at Christie\u2019s in 1987, represented the winning Japanese telephone bidder for Van Gogh\u2019s \u201cSunflowers.\u201d That $39.9 million was the first of the modern \u201cart boom\u201c prices. \u201cThere\u2019s a lot of fashion involved, and people are buying for show,\u201d Mr. Roundell said. \u201cI\u2019m not sure that many of them are buying for the love of the object. For some, particularly wealthy Americans, it\u2019s all about playing the market. Back in the early 20th century, collectors would buy a painting, live with it in their own home and leave it to a museum. Now it\u2019s about acquisition, not collecting.\u201d", "answer": "$39.9 million", "sentence": "That $39.9 million was the first of the modern \u201cart boom\u201c prices.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIn the old days you had a small market. Now globalization is a huge factor,\u201d said James Roundell, a director at the London and New York dealer and adviser Dickinson, who, while working at Christie\u2019s in 1987, represented the winning Japanese telephone bidder for Van Gogh\u2019s \u201cSunflowers.\u201d That $39.9 million was the first of the modern \u201cart boom\u201c prices. \u201cThere\u2019s a lot of fashion involved, and people are buying for show,\u201d Mr. Roundell said. \u201cI\u2019m not sure that many of them are buying for the love of the object. For some, particularly wealthy Americans, it\u2019s all about playing the market. Back in the early 20th century, collectors would buy a painting, live with it in their own home and leave it to a museum. Now it\u2019s about acquisition, not collecting.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIn the old days you had a small market. Now globalization is a huge factor,\u201d said James Roundell, a director at the London and New York dealer and adviser Dickinson, who, while working at Christie\u2019s in 1987, represented the winning Japanese telephone bidder for Van Gogh\u2019s \u201cSunflowers.\u201d That $39.9 million was the first of the modern \u201cart boom\u201c prices. \u201cThere\u2019s a lot of fashion involved, and people are buying for show,\u201d Mr. Roundell said. \u201cI\u2019m not sure that many of them are buying for the love of the object. For some, particularly wealthy Americans, it\u2019s all about playing the market. Back in the early 20th century, collectors would buy a painting, live with it in their own home and leave it to a museum. Now it\u2019s about acquisition, not collecting.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "That $39.9 million was the first of the modern \u201cart boom\u201c prices.", "paragraph_id": "5d7027e6c8e4820a9b66d595"} +{"question": "Who said, \"They don't want to play the game?'", "paragraph": "But their rigid opposition to animal research in particular may come at a steep price. \u201cThey don\u2019t want to play the game,\u201d said W. McIntyre Burnham, a neuropharmacologist at the University of Toronto, with whom Dr. Ohayon studied. \u201cThey may be the wave of the future, but I think they may also have trouble getting support.\u201d The two came to the idea of an alternative approach to neuroscience on a backpacking trip on Vancouver Island in 2011. Dr. Lam was ending a postdoctoral fellowship, and the two scientists were worried about the direction of neuroscience. As it turned out, they were not the only ones. Eventually they found a kindred spirit in the neuroscientist Jay S. Coggan. The Green Neuroscience Laboratory is affiliated with \u2014 and shares offices with \u2014 the NeuroLinx Research Institute, which he founded.", "answer": "W. McIntyre Burnham", "sentence": "\u201cThey don\u2019t want to play the game,\u201d said W. McIntyre Burnham , a neuropharmacologist at the University of Toronto, with whom Dr. Ohayon studied.", "paragraph_sentence": "But their rigid opposition to animal research in particular may come at a steep price. \u201cThey don\u2019t want to play the game,\u201d said W. McIntyre Burnham , a neuropharmacologist at the University of Toronto, with whom Dr. Ohayon studied. \u201cThey may be the wave of the future, but I think they may also have trouble getting support.\u201d The two came to the idea of an alternative approach to neuroscience on a backpacking trip on Vancouver Island in 2011. Dr. Lam was ending a postdoctoral fellowship, and the two scientists were worried about the direction of neuroscience. As it turned out, they were not the only ones. Eventually they found a kindred spirit in the neuroscientist Jay S. Coggan. The Green Neuroscience Laboratory is affiliated with \u2014 and shares offices with \u2014 the NeuroLinx Research Institute, which he founded.", "paragraph_answer": "But their rigid opposition to animal research in particular may come at a steep price. \u201cThey don\u2019t want to play the game,\u201d said W. McIntyre Burnham , a neuropharmacologist at the University of Toronto, with whom Dr. Ohayon studied. \u201cThey may be the wave of the future, but I think they may also have trouble getting support.\u201d The two came to the idea of an alternative approach to neuroscience on a backpacking trip on Vancouver Island in 2011. Dr. Lam was ending a postdoctoral fellowship, and the two scientists were worried about the direction of neuroscience. As it turned out, they were not the only ones. Eventually they found a kindred spirit in the neuroscientist Jay S. Coggan. The Green Neuroscience Laboratory is affiliated with \u2014 and shares offices with \u2014 the NeuroLinx Research Institute, which he founded.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThey don\u2019t want to play the game,\u201d said W. McIntyre Burnham , a neuropharmacologist at the University of Toronto, with whom Dr. Ohayon studied.", "paragraph_id": "5d700de4c8e4820a9b66b98f"} +{"question": "Which city is mentioned?", "paragraph": "If you\u2019re lucky, you\u2019re reading this somewhere other than Manhattan. For all that it\u2019s been celebrated in song, summer in the city is often a miserable affair. (The lyrics of that Lovin\u2019 Spoonful hit are worth a second listen.) Best to get away, and any app that can help you do that as quickly as Wanderu is worth the space it takes up on your home screen. Not unlike travel websites like Kayak, Wanderu is a service for finding buses and trains to get you from here to there. It was launched two years ago in the Northeast, then gradually expanded its range before releasing iPhone and Android apps earlier this year. The service is now available in most of the United States.", "answer": "Manhattan", "sentence": "If you\u2019re lucky, you\u2019re reading this somewhere other than Manhattan .", "paragraph_sentence": " If you\u2019re lucky, you\u2019re reading this somewhere other than Manhattan . For all that it\u2019s been celebrated in song, summer in the city is often a miserable affair. (The lyrics of that Lovin\u2019 Spoonful hit are worth a second listen.) Best to get away, and any app that can help you do that as quickly as Wanderu is worth the space it takes up on your home screen. Not unlike travel websites like Kayak, Wanderu is a service for finding buses and trains to get you from here to there. It was launched two years ago in the Northeast, then gradually expanded its range before releasing iPhone and Android apps earlier this year. The service is now available in most of the United States.", "paragraph_answer": "If you\u2019re lucky, you\u2019re reading this somewhere other than Manhattan . For all that it\u2019s been celebrated in song, summer in the city is often a miserable affair. (The lyrics of that Lovin\u2019 Spoonful hit are worth a second listen.) Best to get away, and any app that can help you do that as quickly as Wanderu is worth the space it takes up on your home screen. Not unlike travel websites like Kayak, Wanderu is a service for finding buses and trains to get you from here to there. It was launched two years ago in the Northeast, then gradually expanded its range before releasing iPhone and Android apps earlier this year. The service is now available in most of the United States.", "sentence_answer": "If you\u2019re lucky, you\u2019re reading this somewhere other than Manhattan .", "paragraph_id": "5d705469c8e4820a9b66ec6f"} +{"question": "What type of weapon is the armament choice for mass shootings?", "paragraph": "It\u2019s always the same story. The San Bernardino murderers were wielding assault rifles, with which they were able to fire an estimated 65-75 bullets in rapid succession. Assault weapons, which seem to be the armament of choice for mass shootings, used to be illegal under a law that expired in 2004. If the law had stayed on the books, how many victims would have survived in San Bernardino, or at the elementary school in Newtown, Conn.? Given the fact that semiautomatic weapons are totally inappropriate for either hunting or home defense, some of us would love to trade them for the possibility of reduced casualties next time somebody decides to go on a rampage. Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina is an excellent example of the politicians who totally disagree. Last time an assault weapons ban came up, he argued that Americans should not be forced to rely on regular slowpoke rifles \u201cin an environment where the law and order has broken down, whether it\u2019s a hurricane, national disaster, earthquake, terrorist attack, cyberattack where the power goes down and the dam\u2019s broken and chemicals have been released into the air and law enforcement is really not able to respond and people take advantage of that lawless environment.\u201d", "answer": "Assault", "sentence": "Assault weapons, which seem to be the armament of choice for mass shootings, used to be illegal under a law that expired in 2004.", "paragraph_sentence": "It\u2019s always the same story. The San Bernardino murderers were wielding assault rifles, with which they were able to fire an estimated 65-75 bullets in rapid succession. Assault weapons, which seem to be the armament of choice for mass shootings, used to be illegal under a law that expired in 2004. If the law had stayed on the books, how many victims would have survived in San Bernardino, or at the elementary school in Newtown, Conn.? Given the fact that semiautomatic weapons are totally inappropriate for either hunting or home defense, some of us would love to trade them for the possibility of reduced casualties next time somebody decides to go on a rampage. Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina is an excellent example of the politicians who totally disagree. Last time an assault weapons ban came up, he argued that Americans should not be forced to rely on regular slowpoke rifles \u201cin an environment where the law and order has broken down, whether it\u2019s a hurricane, national disaster, earthquake, terrorist attack, cyberattack where the power goes down and the dam\u2019s broken and chemicals have been released into the air and law enforcement is really not able to respond and people take advantage of that lawless environment.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "It\u2019s always the same story. The San Bernardino murderers were wielding assault rifles, with which they were able to fire an estimated 65-75 bullets in rapid succession. Assault weapons, which seem to be the armament of choice for mass shootings, used to be illegal under a law that expired in 2004. If the law had stayed on the books, how many victims would have survived in San Bernardino, or at the elementary school in Newtown, Conn.? Given the fact that semiautomatic weapons are totally inappropriate for either hunting or home defense, some of us would love to trade them for the possibility of reduced casualties next time somebody decides to go on a rampage. Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina is an excellent example of the politicians who totally disagree. Last time an assault weapons ban came up, he argued that Americans should not be forced to rely on regular slowpoke rifles \u201cin an environment where the law and order has broken down, whether it\u2019s a hurricane, national disaster, earthquake, terrorist attack, cyberattack where the power goes down and the dam\u2019s broken and chemicals have been released into the air and law enforcement is really not able to respond and people take advantage of that lawless environment.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Assault weapons, which seem to be the armament of choice for mass shootings, used to be illegal under a law that expired in 2004.", "paragraph_id": "5d7018f9c8e4820a9b66c507"} +{"question": "Was Sidney Blumenthal's testimony public?", "paragraph": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Hillary Rodham Clinton\u2019s longtime adviser Sidney Blumenthal testified before a congressional committee on Tuesday that dozens of memos he sent her when she was secretary of state were written by a longtime high-ranking C.I.A. official. During a seven-and-a-half-hour deposition behind closed doors before the House committee investigating the 2012 attacks in Benghazi, Libya, Mr. Blumenthal identified the official as Tyler Drumheller, according to a person with knowledge of his testimony.", "answer": "behind closed doors", "sentence": "During a seven-and-a-half-hour deposition behind closed doors before the House committee investigating the 2012 attacks in Benghazi, Libya, Mr. Blumenthal identified the official as Tyler Drumheller, according to a person with knowledge of his testimony.", "paragraph_sentence": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Hillary Rodham Clinton\u2019s longtime adviser Sidney Blumenthal testified before a congressional committee on Tuesday that dozens of memos he sent her when she was secretary of state were written by a longtime high-ranking C.I.A. official. During a seven-and-a-half-hour deposition behind closed doors before the House committee investigating the 2012 attacks in Benghazi, Libya, Mr. Blumenthal identified the official as Tyler Drumheller, according to a person with knowledge of his testimony. ", "paragraph_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Hillary Rodham Clinton\u2019s longtime adviser Sidney Blumenthal testified before a congressional committee on Tuesday that dozens of memos he sent her when she was secretary of state were written by a longtime high-ranking C.I.A. official. During a seven-and-a-half-hour deposition behind closed doors before the House committee investigating the 2012 attacks in Benghazi, Libya, Mr. Blumenthal identified the official as Tyler Drumheller, according to a person with knowledge of his testimony.", "sentence_answer": "During a seven-and-a-half-hour deposition behind closed doors before the House committee investigating the 2012 attacks in Benghazi, Libya, Mr. Blumenthal identified the official as Tyler Drumheller, according to a person with knowledge of his testimony.", "paragraph_id": "5d700600c8e4820a9b66aa51"} +{"question": "At which level happen the workplace change first?", "paragraph": "Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees. \u201cWe always knew that we need national standards, but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave.", "answer": "at the state or local level", "sentence": "\u201cWe always knew that we need national standards, but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level ,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave.", "paragraph_sentence": "Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees. \u201cWe always knew that we need national standards, but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level ,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave. ", "paragraph_answer": "Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees. \u201cWe always knew that we need national standards, but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level ,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe always knew that we need national standards, but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level ,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave.", "paragraph_id": "5d708a2dc8e4820a9b66f4d4"} +{"question": "Who was Hirosi Saito planning to meet with?", "paragraph": "The Japanese ambassador, Hirosi Saito, who was planning to meet with the United States secretary of state \u201cto take whatever action was possible to remedy the situation,\u201d went on to explain that \u201cwhile he fully comprehended that in this country, where caricatures of the highest public officials are every day fare in the press, no slight to the person of the Emperor was necessarily intended, yet in Japan a representation of the Emperor as engaged in the menial task of pulling a cart could not be understood or taken lightly.\u201d", "answer": "the United States secretary of state", "sentence": "The Japanese ambassador, Hirosi Saito, who was planning to meet with the United States secretary of state \u201cto take whatever action was possible to remedy the situation,\u201d went on to explain that \u201cwhile he fully comprehended that in this country, where caricatures of the highest public officials are every day fare in the press, no slight to the person of the Emperor was necessarily intended, yet in Japan a representation of the Emperor as engaged in the menial task of pulling a cart could not be understood or taken lightly.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " The Japanese ambassador, Hirosi Saito, who was planning to meet with the United States secretary of state \u201cto take whatever action was possible to remedy the situation,\u201d went on to explain that \u201cwhile he fully comprehended that in this country, where caricatures of the highest public officials are every day fare in the press, no slight to the person of the Emperor was necessarily intended, yet in Japan a representation of the Emperor as engaged in the menial task of pulling a cart could not be understood or taken lightly.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "The Japanese ambassador, Hirosi Saito, who was planning to meet with the United States secretary of state \u201cto take whatever action was possible to remedy the situation,\u201d went on to explain that \u201cwhile he fully comprehended that in this country, where caricatures of the highest public officials are every day fare in the press, no slight to the person of the Emperor was necessarily intended, yet in Japan a representation of the Emperor as engaged in the menial task of pulling a cart could not be understood or taken lightly.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The Japanese ambassador, Hirosi Saito, who was planning to meet with the United States secretary of state \u201cto take whatever action was possible to remedy the situation,\u201d went on to explain that \u201cwhile he fully comprehended that in this country, where caricatures of the highest public officials are every day fare in the press, no slight to the person of the Emperor was necessarily intended, yet in Japan a representation of the Emperor as engaged in the menial task of pulling a cart could not be understood or taken lightly.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d7055f5c8e4820a9b66ecfa"} +{"question": "In 2010, Brazil's economy expanded at what percentage?", "paragraph": "In the last decade, Brazil seemed to be on the verge of the kind of sustainable economic boom that its leaders had predicted for years. Ms. Rousseff\u2019s predecessor, Luiz In\u00e1cio Lula da Silva, had boldly predicted Brazil would rise to greatness in the 21st century, a forecast that seemed entirely plausible when, in 2010, the country\u2019s economy expanded at the rate of 7.5 percent, its greatest performance in 24 years. Brazil, along with China, India and Russia, was regarded as among the world\u2019s most promising emerging markets. Oil was central to Brazil\u2019s strategy, and that gave Petrobras a leading role in the nation\u2019s growing influence \u2014 and pride of place. At one time it was the sixth-largest company in the world by market capitalization and accounted for roughly 10 percent of Brazil\u2019s gross domestic product. For perspective, Apple, which has twice Petrobras\u2019s peak market cap, represents 0.5 percent of the United States\u2019 gross domestic product.", "answer": "7.5", "sentence": "Ms. Rousseff\u2019s predecessor, Luiz In\u00e1cio Lula da Silva, had boldly predicted Brazil would rise to greatness in the 21st century, a forecast that seemed entirely plausible when, in 2010, the country\u2019s economy expanded at the rate of 7.5 percent, its greatest performance in 24 years.", "paragraph_sentence": "In the last decade, Brazil seemed to be on the verge of the kind of sustainable economic boom that its leaders had predicted for years. Ms. Rousseff\u2019s predecessor, Luiz In\u00e1cio Lula da Silva, had boldly predicted Brazil would rise to greatness in the 21st century, a forecast that seemed entirely plausible when, in 2010, the country\u2019s economy expanded at the rate of 7.5 percent, its greatest performance in 24 years. Brazil, along with China, India and Russia, was regarded as among the world\u2019s most promising emerging markets. Oil was central to Brazil\u2019s strategy, and that gave Petrobras a leading role in the nation\u2019s growing influence \u2014 and pride of place. At one time it was the sixth-largest company in the world by market capitalization and accounted for roughly 10 percent of Brazil\u2019s gross domestic product. For perspective, Apple, which has twice Petrobras\u2019s peak market cap, represents 0.5 percent of the United States\u2019 gross domestic product.", "paragraph_answer": "In the last decade, Brazil seemed to be on the verge of the kind of sustainable economic boom that its leaders had predicted for years. Ms. Rousseff\u2019s predecessor, Luiz In\u00e1cio Lula da Silva, had boldly predicted Brazil would rise to greatness in the 21st century, a forecast that seemed entirely plausible when, in 2010, the country\u2019s economy expanded at the rate of 7.5 percent, its greatest performance in 24 years. Brazil, along with China, India and Russia, was regarded as among the world\u2019s most promising emerging markets. Oil was central to Brazil\u2019s strategy, and that gave Petrobras a leading role in the nation\u2019s growing influence \u2014 and pride of place. At one time it was the sixth-largest company in the world by market capitalization and accounted for roughly 10 percent of Brazil\u2019s gross domestic product. For perspective, Apple, which has twice Petrobras\u2019s peak market cap, represents 0.5 percent of the United States\u2019 gross domestic product.", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Rousseff\u2019s predecessor, Luiz In\u00e1cio Lula da Silva, had boldly predicted Brazil would rise to greatness in the 21st century, a forecast that seemed entirely plausible when, in 2010, the country\u2019s economy expanded at the rate of 7.5 percent, its greatest performance in 24 years.", "paragraph_id": "5d701816c8e4820a9b66c409"} +{"question": "Where was the fight?", "paragraph": "For the second straight afternoon, McIlrath got into a fight that he won decisively, knocking off Schenn\u2019s helmet and pounding him with uppercuts. The fight stirred the Madison Square Garden crowd and might have launched the Rangers to a victory. But they suddenly have other problems. After the fight, which unfolded 11 minutes into the game, the Rangers were outshot, 31-21, and the Flyers, who remain the league\u2019s lowest-scoring team, rolled to a 3-0 victory. The Rangers (16-6-2) have lost three games in a row in regulation for the first time this season.", "answer": "Madison Square Garden", "sentence": "The fight stirred the Madison Square Garden crowd and might have launched the Rangers to a victory.", "paragraph_sentence": "For the second straight afternoon, McIlrath got into a fight that he won decisively, knocking off Schenn\u2019s helmet and pounding him with uppercuts. The fight stirred the Madison Square Garden crowd and might have launched the Rangers to a victory. But they suddenly have other problems. After the fight, which unfolded 11 minutes into the game, the Rangers were outshot, 31-21, and the Flyers, who remain the league\u2019s lowest-scoring team, rolled to a 3-0 victory. The Rangers (16-6-2) have lost three games in a row in regulation for the first time this season.", "paragraph_answer": "For the second straight afternoon, McIlrath got into a fight that he won decisively, knocking off Schenn\u2019s helmet and pounding him with uppercuts. The fight stirred the Madison Square Garden crowd and might have launched the Rangers to a victory. But they suddenly have other problems. After the fight, which unfolded 11 minutes into the game, the Rangers were outshot, 31-21, and the Flyers, who remain the league\u2019s lowest-scoring team, rolled to a 3-0 victory. The Rangers (16-6-2) have lost three games in a row in regulation for the first time this season.", "sentence_answer": "The fight stirred the Madison Square Garden crowd and might have launched the Rangers to a victory.", "paragraph_id": "5d7021cbc8e4820a9b66cdde"} +{"question": "Where were the Chanels sent instead of prison?", "paragraph": "Most Likely Thing That Could Come of This ShowThe Chanels were sentenced not to prison but to the Palmer Asylum for the Insane. If \u201cScream Queens\u201d does get a renewal, we could be looking at a subtitle: \u201cScream Queens: Asylum.\u201d What\u2019s that you say? It\u2019s already been done? Anyway, goodbye for now to this brash, sometimes offensive, sometimes funny, reference-heavy series. Which ended, of course, with a reference: \u201cDon\u2019t You (Forget About Me),\u201d the Simple Minds song identified with \u201cThe Breakfast Club.\u201d Reference-dropping, apparently, is the new originality.", "answer": "Palmer Asylum for the Insane", "sentence": "Most Likely Thing That Could Come of This ShowThe Chanels were sentenced not to prison but to the Palmer Asylum for the Insane .", "paragraph_sentence": " Most Likely Thing That Could Come of This ShowThe Chanels were sentenced not to prison but to the Palmer Asylum for the Insane . If \u201cScream Queens\u201d does get a renewal, we could be looking at a subtitle: \u201cScream Queens: Asylum.\u201d What\u2019s that you say? It\u2019s already been done? Anyway, goodbye for now to this brash, sometimes offensive, sometimes funny, reference-heavy series. Which ended, of course, with a reference: \u201cDon\u2019t You (Forget About Me),\u201d the Simple Minds song identified with \u201cThe Breakfast Club.\u201d Reference-dropping, apparently, is the new originality.", "paragraph_answer": "Most Likely Thing That Could Come of This ShowThe Chanels were sentenced not to prison but to the Palmer Asylum for the Insane . If \u201cScream Queens\u201d does get a renewal, we could be looking at a subtitle: \u201cScream Queens: Asylum.\u201d What\u2019s that you say? It\u2019s already been done? Anyway, goodbye for now to this brash, sometimes offensive, sometimes funny, reference-heavy series. Which ended, of course, with a reference: \u201cDon\u2019t You (Forget About Me),\u201d the Simple Minds song identified with \u201cThe Breakfast Club.\u201d Reference-dropping, apparently, is the new originality.", "sentence_answer": "Most Likely Thing That Could Come of This ShowThe Chanels were sentenced not to prison but to the Palmer Asylum for the Insane .", "paragraph_id": "5d7052c0c8e4820a9b66ebf3"} +{"question": "Where does Will move to?", "paragraph": "Charlie speaks in double talk. Announcing the end of her marriage to Will, she says she loves him. \u201cThe problem is I don\u2019t love my life,\u201d she explains. A whiny, high-strung control freak and compulsive scold, she is such a pill that you wonder what the brokenhearted Will, who moves to Astoria, Queens, could possibly have seen in her. The story jumps ahead a year. After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane (Regina Hall), a teacher of American literature at Columbia. When they meet, it is obvious that they are compatible. At the very moment when \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d has a chance to soar, it turns prissy, indecisive and picayune. The story meanders along with too-cute scenes of Will bonding with his daughters. Meanwhile, Charlie, now pregnant, plans to get married. As the movie fizzles, Mr. Clement\u2019s endearing performance breathes what little life is left into a movie that, much like the insufferable Charlie, can\u2019t make up its mind about where to go or how to get there. \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). Language, mild sexual situations and brief nudity.", "answer": "Astoria, Queens", "sentence": "A whiny, high-strung control freak and compulsive scold, she is such a pill that you wonder what the brokenhearted Will, who moves to Astoria, Queens , could possibly have seen in her.", "paragraph_sentence": "Charlie speaks in double talk. Announcing the end of her marriage to Will, she says she loves him. \u201cThe problem is I don\u2019t love my life,\u201d she explains. A whiny, high-strung control freak and compulsive scold, she is such a pill that you wonder what the brokenhearted Will, who moves to Astoria, Queens , could possibly have seen in her. The story jumps ahead a year. After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane (Regina Hall), a teacher of American literature at Columbia. When they meet, it is obvious that they are compatible. At the very moment when \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d has a chance to soar, it turns prissy, indecisive and picayune. The story meanders along with too-cute scenes of Will bonding with his daughters. Meanwhile, Charlie, now pregnant, plans to get married. As the movie fizzles, Mr. Clement\u2019s endearing performance breathes what little life is left into a movie that, much like the insufferable Charlie, can\u2019t make up its mind about where to go or how to get there. \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). Language, mild sexual situations and brief nudity.", "paragraph_answer": "Charlie speaks in double talk. Announcing the end of her marriage to Will, she says she loves him. \u201cThe problem is I don\u2019t love my life,\u201d she explains. A whiny, high-strung control freak and compulsive scold, she is such a pill that you wonder what the brokenhearted Will, who moves to Astoria, Queens , could possibly have seen in her. The story jumps ahead a year. After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane (Regina Hall), a teacher of American literature at Columbia. When they meet, it is obvious that they are compatible. At the very moment when \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d has a chance to soar, it turns prissy, indecisive and picayune. The story meanders along with too-cute scenes of Will bonding with his daughters. Meanwhile, Charlie, now pregnant, plans to get married. As the movie fizzles, Mr. Clement\u2019s endearing performance breathes what little life is left into a movie that, much like the insufferable Charlie, can\u2019t make up its mind about where to go or how to get there. \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). Language, mild sexual situations and brief nudity.", "sentence_answer": "A whiny, high-strung control freak and compulsive scold, she is such a pill that you wonder what the brokenhearted Will, who moves to Astoria, Queens , could possibly have seen in her.", "paragraph_id": "5d707b60c8e4820a9b66f32b"} +{"question": "When did Mr. Kohlberg retire?", "paragraph": "Yet Mr. Kohlberg and his prot\u00e9g\u00e9s grew apart, separated by philosophies over corporate strategy and lifestyle. Where Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts were willing to pursue large-scale, hostile takeovers, Mr. Kohlberg instead chose to focus on smaller deals, always on friendly terms. By the time Mr. Kohlberg retired from the sector altogether in 1994, the leveraged-buyout business \u2014 since renamed \u201cprivate equity\u201d \u2014 was on its path to becoming immense, eventually making billionaires of Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, as well as rivals like Stephen A. Schwarzman of the Blackstone Group and David Rubenstein of the Carlyle Group. Mr. Kohlberg maintained a less ostentatious life, shunning the high-roller social soirees for tennis, reading and later yoga.", "answer": "1994", "sentence": "By the time Mr. Kohlberg retired from the sector altogether in 1994 , the leveraged-buyout business \u2014 since renamed \u201cprivate equity\u201d \u2014 was on its path to becoming immense, eventually making billionaires of Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, as well as rivals like Stephen A. Schwarzman of the Blackstone Group and David Rubenstein of the Carlyle Group.", "paragraph_sentence": "Yet Mr. Kohlberg and his prot\u00e9g\u00e9s grew apart, separated by philosophies over corporate strategy and lifestyle. Where Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts were willing to pursue large-scale, hostile takeovers, Mr. Kohlberg instead chose to focus on smaller deals, always on friendly terms. By the time Mr. Kohlberg retired from the sector altogether in 1994 , the leveraged-buyout business \u2014 since renamed \u201cprivate equity\u201d \u2014 was on its path to becoming immense, eventually making billionaires of Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, as well as rivals like Stephen A. Schwarzman of the Blackstone Group and David Rubenstein of the Carlyle Group. Mr. Kohlberg maintained a less ostentatious life, shunning the high-roller social soirees for tennis, reading and later yoga.", "paragraph_answer": "Yet Mr. Kohlberg and his prot\u00e9g\u00e9s grew apart, separated by philosophies over corporate strategy and lifestyle. Where Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts were willing to pursue large-scale, hostile takeovers, Mr. Kohlberg instead chose to focus on smaller deals, always on friendly terms. By the time Mr. Kohlberg retired from the sector altogether in 1994 , the leveraged-buyout business \u2014 since renamed \u201cprivate equity\u201d \u2014 was on its path to becoming immense, eventually making billionaires of Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, as well as rivals like Stephen A. Schwarzman of the Blackstone Group and David Rubenstein of the Carlyle Group. Mr. Kohlberg maintained a less ostentatious life, shunning the high-roller social soirees for tennis, reading and later yoga.", "sentence_answer": "By the time Mr. Kohlberg retired from the sector altogether in 1994 , the leveraged-buyout business \u2014 since renamed \u201cprivate equity\u201d \u2014 was on its path to becoming immense, eventually making billionaires of Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, as well as rivals like Stephen A. Schwarzman of the Blackstone Group and David Rubenstein of the Carlyle Group.", "paragraph_id": "5d704a31c8e4820a9b66e965"} +{"question": "What was written on the movie poster with a woman?", "paragraph": "Among the authority\u2019s list of banned items: violent images that could scare children, material that could \u201cincite or provoke violence,\u201d and ads for escort services and tobacco products. Then there is the provision about depicting sexual activities in an offensive manner, which leaves room for interpretation. An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children. \u201cI glanced at it from the side of my eye, but I didn\u2019t really care to read it,\u201d said the passenger, Tara Griffiths, 21, a student at St. John\u2019s University in Queens. \u201cIt reminds me of \u2018Fifty Shades of Grey.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "\u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d", "sentence": "An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children.", "paragraph_sentence": "Among the authority\u2019s list of banned items: violent images that could scare children, material that could \u201cincite or provoke violence,\u201d and ads for escort services and tobacco products. Then there is the provision about depicting sexual activities in an offensive manner, which leaves room for interpretation. An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children. \u201cI glanced at it from the side of my eye, but I didn\u2019t really care to read it,\u201d said the passenger, Tara Griffiths, 21, a student at St. John\u2019s University in Queens. \u201cIt reminds me of \u2018Fifty Shades of Grey.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Among the authority\u2019s list of banned items: violent images that could scare children, material that could \u201cincite or provoke violence,\u201d and ads for escort services and tobacco products. Then there is the provision about depicting sexual activities in an offensive manner, which leaves room for interpretation. An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children. \u201cI glanced at it from the side of my eye, but I didn\u2019t really care to read it,\u201d said the passenger, Tara Griffiths, 21, a student at St. John\u2019s University in Queens. \u201cIt reminds me of \u2018Fifty Shades of Grey.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children.", "paragraph_id": "5d7019a6c8e4820a9b66c5b1"} +{"question": "According to the author, which fanbase has strong feelings about Rodriguez?", "paragraph": "\u201cI wasn\u2019t sure what to expect in spring training,\u201d Girardi said last week. \u201cBut Alex is a worker and he knows how to play the game. And he\u2019s been a really smart player for a long period of time, so if there\u2019s anyone who can figure it out quickly, it would be Alex.\u201d Rodriguez\u2019s performance has moved him into the good graces of many, but not all, Yankees fans. On the road, Rodriguez has been booed, though it often seems as if it is a matter of course. As Rodriguez noted recently, he has been a popular villain since 2001, when he signed a then-record $252 million free-agent contract with the Texas Rangers.", "answer": "Yankees fans", "sentence": "Rodriguez\u2019s performance has moved him into the good graces of many, but not all, Yankees fans .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI wasn\u2019t sure what to expect in spring training,\u201d Girardi said last week. \u201cBut Alex is a worker and he knows how to play the game. And he\u2019s been a really smart player for a long period of time, so if there\u2019s anyone who can figure it out quickly, it would be Alex.\u201d Rodriguez\u2019s performance has moved him into the good graces of many, but not all, Yankees fans . On the road, Rodriguez has been booed, though it often seems as if it is a matter of course. As Rodriguez noted recently, he has been a popular villain since 2001, when he signed a then-record $252 million free-agent contract with the Texas Rangers.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI wasn\u2019t sure what to expect in spring training,\u201d Girardi said last week. \u201cBut Alex is a worker and he knows how to play the game. And he\u2019s been a really smart player for a long period of time, so if there\u2019s anyone who can figure it out quickly, it would be Alex.\u201d Rodriguez\u2019s performance has moved him into the good graces of many, but not all, Yankees fans . On the road, Rodriguez has been booed, though it often seems as if it is a matter of course. As Rodriguez noted recently, he has been a popular villain since 2001, when he signed a then-record $252 million free-agent contract with the Texas Rangers.", "sentence_answer": "Rodriguez\u2019s performance has moved him into the good graces of many, but not all, Yankees fans .", "paragraph_id": "5d70306ec8e4820a9b66dcaf"} +{"question": "What kind of study can prove causation?", "paragraph": "It is frustrating enough when we over-read the results of epidemiologic studies and make the mistake of believing that correlation is the same as causation. It\u2019s maddening, however, when we ignore the results of randomized controlled trials, which can prove causation, to continue down the wrong path. In reviewing the literature, it\u2019s hard to come away with a sense that anyone knows for sure what diet should be recommended to all Americans. I understand people\u2019s frustration at the continuing shifts in nutrition recommendations. For decades, they\u2019ve been told what to eat because \u201cscience says so.\u201d Unfortunately, that doesn\u2019t appear to be true. That\u2019s disappointing not only because it reduces people\u2019s faith in science as a whole, but also because it may have cost some people better health, or potentially even their lives.", "answer": "randomized controlled trials", "sentence": "It\u2019s maddening, however, when we ignore the results of randomized controlled trials , which can prove causation, to continue down the wrong path.", "paragraph_sentence": "It is frustrating enough when we over-read the results of epidemiologic studies and make the mistake of believing that correlation is the same as causation. It\u2019s maddening, however, when we ignore the results of randomized controlled trials , which can prove causation, to continue down the wrong path. In reviewing the literature, it\u2019s hard to come away with a sense that anyone knows for sure what diet should be recommended to all Americans. I understand people\u2019s frustration at the continuing shifts in nutrition recommendations. For decades, they\u2019ve been told what to eat because \u201cscience says so.\u201d Unfortunately, that doesn\u2019t appear to be true. That\u2019s disappointing not only because it reduces people\u2019s faith in science as a whole, but also because it may have cost some people better health, or potentially even their lives.", "paragraph_answer": "It is frustrating enough when we over-read the results of epidemiologic studies and make the mistake of believing that correlation is the same as causation. It\u2019s maddening, however, when we ignore the results of randomized controlled trials , which can prove causation, to continue down the wrong path. In reviewing the literature, it\u2019s hard to come away with a sense that anyone knows for sure what diet should be recommended to all Americans. I understand people\u2019s frustration at the continuing shifts in nutrition recommendations. For decades, they\u2019ve been told what to eat because \u201cscience says so.\u201d Unfortunately, that doesn\u2019t appear to be true. That\u2019s disappointing not only because it reduces people\u2019s faith in science as a whole, but also because it may have cost some people better health, or potentially even their lives.", "sentence_answer": "It\u2019s maddening, however, when we ignore the results of randomized controlled trials , which can prove causation, to continue down the wrong path.", "paragraph_id": "5d701e1ec8e4820a9b66c982"} +{"question": "How much did it cost to train the Ukrainian soldier?", "paragraph": "Capt. Andrii Syurkalo, a Ukrainian officer, said it was commendable that the trainers were willing to use the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal as an element in a class on the Geneva Conventions. American officers described the course work as equivalent to the latter months of basic training in the United States. The courses will train 705 Ukrainian soldiers at a cost of $19 million over six months. The Ukrainian National Guard is rotating from the front what units it can spare for the training. American instructors intend to recommend top performers to serve as trainers within other Ukrainian units, and in this way spread the instruction more broadly.", "answer": "$19 million", "sentence": "The courses will train 705 Ukrainian soldiers at a cost of $19 million over six months.", "paragraph_sentence": "Capt. Andrii Syurkalo, a Ukrainian officer, said it was commendable that the trainers were willing to use the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal as an element in a class on the Geneva Conventions. American officers described the course work as equivalent to the latter months of basic training in the United States. The courses will train 705 Ukrainian soldiers at a cost of $19 million over six months. The Ukrainian National Guard is rotating from the front what units it can spare for the training. American instructors intend to recommend top performers to serve as trainers within other Ukrainian units, and in this way spread the instruction more broadly.", "paragraph_answer": "Capt. Andrii Syurkalo, a Ukrainian officer, said it was commendable that the trainers were willing to use the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal as an element in a class on the Geneva Conventions. American officers described the course work as equivalent to the latter months of basic training in the United States. The courses will train 705 Ukrainian soldiers at a cost of $19 million over six months. The Ukrainian National Guard is rotating from the front what units it can spare for the training. American instructors intend to recommend top performers to serve as trainers within other Ukrainian units, and in this way spread the instruction more broadly.", "sentence_answer": "The courses will train 705 Ukrainian soldiers at a cost of $19 million over six months.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026f6c8e4820a9b66d463"} +{"question": "What did Ms Bedford before she said she wanted to do a coloring book for adults?", "paragraph": "\u201cI came back and said I would like to do a coloring book for grown-ups, and it got a bit quiet for a moment,\u201d Ms. Basford said. \u201cColoring books for adults weren\u2019t as much of a thing then.\u201d", "answer": "came back", "sentence": "\u201cI came back and said I would like to do a coloring book for grown-ups, and it got a bit quiet for a moment,\u201d Ms. Basford said.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cI came back and said I would like to do a coloring book for grown-ups, and it got a bit quiet for a moment,\u201d Ms. Basford said. \u201cColoring books for adults weren\u2019t as much of a thing then.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI came back and said I would like to do a coloring book for grown-ups, and it got a bit quiet for a moment,\u201d Ms. Basford said. \u201cColoring books for adults weren\u2019t as much of a thing then.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI came back and said I would like to do a coloring book for grown-ups, and it got a bit quiet for a moment,\u201d Ms. Basford said.", "paragraph_id": "5d7023f3c8e4820a9b66d040"} +{"question": "Who are the world powers?", "paragraph": "Speaking at a news conference to recognize the second anniversary of his election, Mr. Rouhani dismissed reports that Iranians would have to wait more than a few months for the lifting of sanctions, which have crippled Iran\u2019s economy. Asked whether the wait for relief could be as long as a year, he said, \u201cA one-year difference is totally untrue.\u201d \u201cIt might be one month,\u201d he added. \u201cWe are still discussing.\u201d In the coming weeks, Iran and the world powers \u2014 the United States, Russia, France, Britain, China and Germany \u2014 will intensify talks that can lead either to a breakthrough deal on Iran\u2019s nuclear program or a more remote possibility, the end of negotiations. In recent months, Iranian leaders have insisted that if they need more time to reach a deal, the talks should continue beyond the June 30 deadline.", "answer": "United States, Russia, France, Britain, China and Germany", "sentence": "In the coming weeks, Iran and the world powers \u2014 the United States, Russia, France, Britain, China and Germany \u2014 will intensify talks that can lead either to a breakthrough deal on Iran\u2019s nuclear program or a more remote possibility, the end of negotiations.", "paragraph_sentence": "Speaking at a news conference to recognize the second anniversary of his election, Mr. Rouhani dismissed reports that Iranians would have to wait more than a few months for the lifting of sanctions, which have crippled Iran\u2019s economy. Asked whether the wait for relief could be as long as a year, he said, \u201cA one-year difference is totally untrue.\u201d \u201cIt might be one month,\u201d he added. \u201cWe are still discussing.\u201d In the coming weeks, Iran and the world powers \u2014 the United States, Russia, France, Britain, China and Germany \u2014 will intensify talks that can lead either to a breakthrough deal on Iran\u2019s nuclear program or a more remote possibility, the end of negotiations. In recent months, Iranian leaders have insisted that if they need more time to reach a deal, the talks should continue beyond the June 30 deadline.", "paragraph_answer": "Speaking at a news conference to recognize the second anniversary of his election, Mr. Rouhani dismissed reports that Iranians would have to wait more than a few months for the lifting of sanctions, which have crippled Iran\u2019s economy. Asked whether the wait for relief could be as long as a year, he said, \u201cA one-year difference is totally untrue.\u201d \u201cIt might be one month,\u201d he added. \u201cWe are still discussing.\u201d In the coming weeks, Iran and the world powers \u2014 the United States, Russia, France, Britain, China and Germany \u2014 will intensify talks that can lead either to a breakthrough deal on Iran\u2019s nuclear program or a more remote possibility, the end of negotiations. In recent months, Iranian leaders have insisted that if they need more time to reach a deal, the talks should continue beyond the June 30 deadline.", "sentence_answer": "In the coming weeks, Iran and the world powers \u2014 the United States, Russia, France, Britain, China and Germany \u2014 will intensify talks that can lead either to a breakthrough deal on Iran\u2019s nuclear program or a more remote possibility, the end of negotiations.", "paragraph_id": "5d702671c8e4820a9b66d2b7"} +{"question": "How many people can seat the Broadway theater?", "paragraph": "In preparing for your show, did you think about how it would fit together with David Letterman\u2019s \u201cLate Show\u201d? We would talk about it in terms of atmosphere, and we\u2019d go, what\u2019s the show that\u2019s on before us? It\u2019s \u201cLate Show With David Letterman\u201d and it\u2019s going to come from a Broadway theater that seats about 400 to 500 people. OK, well, where would you go after you\u2019ve been to the theater? You\u2019d go to somewhere that feels more intimate. So then we were like, What if we have a bar, and we\u2019ll bring the audience closer? And then what if we have all of our guests out at the same time? I don\u2019t know if we\u2019re right. We could be very, very wrong. Do you expect a recalibration after Stephen Colbert takes over?", "answer": "about 400 to 500", "sentence": "It\u2019s \u201cLate Show With David Letterman\u201d and it\u2019s going to come from a Broadway theater that seats about 400 to 500 people.", "paragraph_sentence": "In preparing for your show, did you think about how it would fit together with David Letterman\u2019s \u201cLate Show\u201d? We would talk about it in terms of atmosphere, and we\u2019d go, what\u2019s the show that\u2019s on before us? It\u2019s \u201cLate Show With David Letterman\u201d and it\u2019s going to come from a Broadway theater that seats about 400 to 500 people. OK, well, where would you go after you\u2019ve been to the theater? You\u2019d go to somewhere that feels more intimate. So then we were like, What if we have a bar, and we\u2019ll bring the audience closer? And then what if we have all of our guests out at the same time? I don\u2019t know if we\u2019re right. We could be very, very wrong. Do you expect a recalibration after Stephen Colbert takes over?", "paragraph_answer": "In preparing for your show, did you think about how it would fit together with David Letterman\u2019s \u201cLate Show\u201d? We would talk about it in terms of atmosphere, and we\u2019d go, what\u2019s the show that\u2019s on before us? It\u2019s \u201cLate Show With David Letterman\u201d and it\u2019s going to come from a Broadway theater that seats about 400 to 500 people. OK, well, where would you go after you\u2019ve been to the theater? You\u2019d go to somewhere that feels more intimate. So then we were like, What if we have a bar, and we\u2019ll bring the audience closer? And then what if we have all of our guests out at the same time? I don\u2019t know if we\u2019re right. We could be very, very wrong. Do you expect a recalibration after Stephen Colbert takes over?", "sentence_answer": "It\u2019s \u201cLate Show With David Letterman\u201d and it\u2019s going to come from a Broadway theater that seats about 400 to 500 people.", "paragraph_id": "5d700c44c8e4820a9b66b748"} +{"question": "Who is Fraser Nelson?", "paragraph": "Those start with his pledge to hold a referendum by the end of 2017 on Britain\u2019s continued membership in the European Union. He will also be under increased pressure from the other big winner of the election, the Scottish National Party, to revisit the question of independence for Scotland. \u201cA small majority can quickly turn into a bed of nails,\u201d said Fraser Nelson, editor of The Spectator magazine. Backbenchers in Mr. Cameron\u2019s own party, many of them farther to the right than he is on questions of immigration and Britain\u2019s membership in the European Union, \u201cwill be his real opposition,\u201d Mr. Nelson said.", "answer": "editor of The Spectator magazine", "sentence": "\u201cA small majority can quickly turn into a bed of nails,\u201d said Fraser Nelson, editor of The Spectator magazine .", "paragraph_sentence": "Those start with his pledge to hold a referendum by the end of 2017 on Britain\u2019s continued membership in the European Union. He will also be under increased pressure from the other big winner of the election, the Scottish National Party, to revisit the question of independence for Scotland. \u201cA small majority can quickly turn into a bed of nails,\u201d said Fraser Nelson, editor of The Spectator magazine . Backbenchers in Mr. Cameron\u2019s own party, many of them farther to the right than he is on questions of immigration and Britain\u2019s membership in the European Union, \u201cwill be his real opposition,\u201d Mr. Nelson said.", "paragraph_answer": "Those start with his pledge to hold a referendum by the end of 2017 on Britain\u2019s continued membership in the European Union. He will also be under increased pressure from the other big winner of the election, the Scottish National Party, to revisit the question of independence for Scotland. \u201cA small majority can quickly turn into a bed of nails,\u201d said Fraser Nelson, editor of The Spectator magazine . Backbenchers in Mr. Cameron\u2019s own party, many of them farther to the right than he is on questions of immigration and Britain\u2019s membership in the European Union, \u201cwill be his real opposition,\u201d Mr. Nelson said.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cA small majority can quickly turn into a bed of nails,\u201d said Fraser Nelson, editor of The Spectator magazine .", "paragraph_id": "5d704120c8e4820a9b66e56c"} +{"question": "What is the name of the terrorist group that struck across Nigeria's border into the Niger for the first time on Friday?", "paragraph": "DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa.", "answer": "Boko Haram", "sentence": "DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa.", "paragraph_sentence": " DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa. ", "paragraph_answer": "DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa.", "sentence_answer": "DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa.", "paragraph_id": "5d704d1ac8e4820a9b66ea3f"} +{"question": "How many clients does Mr. Fernandez have?", "paragraph": "\u201cThey all come to the salon before going out,\u201d Mr. Fernand\u00e9z said of his nearly 20 clients a night. His own balding hair closely cropped, Mr. Fernand\u00e9z said he started in a state-run barbershop but had creative differences with his partners. \u201cBack then there was no styling and they wouldn\u2019t even wash hair,\u201d he remembered. \u201cI wanted to be different.\u201d His dream is to start a chain and help bring Cuban men\u2019s style back to the glory days. \u201cIt\u2019s like the \u201950s in Havana,\u201d Pavel Premdes, 26, said as he had his hair touched upward in a \u201cGrease\u201d-like wave. \u201cDorian is bringing it back.\u201d As another client showed off a cellphone picture of his girlfriend in librarian glasses straddling a pool table, an assistant to Mr. Fernand\u00e9z stood under an elevated glass chamber that looks like the cockpit of a helicopter that had crashed into the salon. It is used for hair straightening.", "answer": "nearly 20 clients a night", "sentence": "\u201cThey all come to the salon before going out,\u201d Mr. Fernand\u00e9z said of his nearly 20 clients a night .", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThey all come to the salon before going out,\u201d Mr. Fernand\u00e9z said of his nearly 20 clients a night . His own balding hair closely cropped, Mr. Fernand\u00e9z said he started in a state-run barbershop but had creative differences with his partners. \u201cBack then there was no styling and they wouldn\u2019t even wash hair,\u201d he remembered. \u201cI wanted to be different.\u201d His dream is to start a chain and help bring Cuban men\u2019s style back to the glory days. \u201cIt\u2019s like the \u201950s in Havana,\u201d Pavel Premdes, 26, said as he had his hair touched upward in a \u201cGrease\u201d-like wave. \u201cDorian is bringing it back.\u201d As another client showed off a cellphone picture of his girlfriend in librarian glasses straddling a pool table, an assistant to Mr. Fernand\u00e9z stood under an elevated glass chamber that looks like the cockpit of a helicopter that had crashed into the salon. It is used for hair straightening.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThey all come to the salon before going out,\u201d Mr. Fernand\u00e9z said of his nearly 20 clients a night . His own balding hair closely cropped, Mr. Fernand\u00e9z said he started in a state-run barbershop but had creative differences with his partners. \u201cBack then there was no styling and they wouldn\u2019t even wash hair,\u201d he remembered. \u201cI wanted to be different.\u201d His dream is to start a chain and help bring Cuban men\u2019s style back to the glory days. \u201cIt\u2019s like the \u201950s in Havana,\u201d Pavel Premdes, 26, said as he had his hair touched upward in a \u201cGrease\u201d-like wave. \u201cDorian is bringing it back.\u201d As another client showed off a cellphone picture of his girlfriend in librarian glasses straddling a pool table, an assistant to Mr. Fernand\u00e9z stood under an elevated glass chamber that looks like the cockpit of a helicopter that had crashed into the salon. It is used for hair straightening.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThey all come to the salon before going out,\u201d Mr. Fernand\u00e9z said of his nearly 20 clients a night .", "paragraph_id": "5d70081bc8e4820a9b66af4d"} +{"question": "What position did Michael D'Andrea hold when the targeted killing program began?", "paragraph": "Perhaps no single C.I.A. officer has been more central to the effort than Michael D\u2019Andrea, a gaunt, chain-smoking convert to Islam who was chief of operations during the birth of the agency\u2019s detention and interrogation program and then, as head of the C.I.A. Counterterrorism Center, became an architect of the targeted killing program. Until last month, when Mr. D\u2019Andrea was quietly shifted to another job, he presided over the growth of C.I.A. drone operations and hundreds of strikes in Pakistan and Yemen during nine years in the position.", "answer": "head of the C.I.A. Counterterrorism Center", "sentence": "Perhaps no single C.I.A. officer has been more central to the effort than Michael D\u2019Andrea, a gaunt, chain-smoking convert to Islam who was chief of operations during the birth of the agency\u2019s detention and interrogation program and then, as head of the C.I.A. Counterterrorism Center , became an architect of the targeted killing program.", "paragraph_sentence": " Perhaps no single C.I.A. officer has been more central to the effort than Michael D\u2019Andrea, a gaunt, chain-smoking convert to Islam who was chief of operations during the birth of the agency\u2019s detention and interrogation program and then, as head of the C.I.A. Counterterrorism Center , became an architect of the targeted killing program. Until last month, when Mr. D\u2019Andrea was quietly shifted to another job, he presided over the growth of C.I.A. drone operations and hundreds of strikes in Pakistan and Yemen during nine years in the position.", "paragraph_answer": "Perhaps no single C.I.A. officer has been more central to the effort than Michael D\u2019Andrea, a gaunt, chain-smoking convert to Islam who was chief of operations during the birth of the agency\u2019s detention and interrogation program and then, as head of the C.I.A. Counterterrorism Center , became an architect of the targeted killing program. Until last month, when Mr. D\u2019Andrea was quietly shifted to another job, he presided over the growth of C.I.A. drone operations and hundreds of strikes in Pakistan and Yemen during nine years in the position.", "sentence_answer": "Perhaps no single C.I.A. officer has been more central to the effort than Michael D\u2019Andrea, a gaunt, chain-smoking convert to Islam who was chief of operations during the birth of the agency\u2019s detention and interrogation program and then, as head of the C.I.A. Counterterrorism Center , became an architect of the targeted killing program.", "paragraph_id": "5d7033a5c8e4820a9b66debf"} +{"question": "What type of defense were the Panthers in for almost the entire game?", "paragraph": "\u201cHe cried a little bit,\u201d Manning said. \u201cI didn\u2019t think that was really necessary. I think Odell took the higher road, and I\u2019m proud of him for that.\u201d Manning later did a little trash talking, although in his typically subtle way. He credited Beckham for regaining his composure later in the game, and then Manning mentioned that the Panthers were in a zone defense for almost the entire game \u2014 except for when Beckham caught a fourth-quarter touchdown pass. \u201cIt was probably the only time Norman played Odell man-to-man, and Odell beat him.\u201d", "answer": "zone", "sentence": "He credited Beckham for regaining his composure later in the game, and then Manning mentioned that the Panthers were in a zone defense for almost the entire game \u2014 except for when Beckham caught a fourth-quarter touchdown pass.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cHe cried a little bit,\u201d Manning said. \u201cI didn\u2019t think that was really necessary. I think Odell took the higher road, and I\u2019m proud of him for that.\u201d Manning later did a little trash talking, although in his typically subtle way. He credited Beckham for regaining his composure later in the game, and then Manning mentioned that the Panthers were in a zone defense for almost the entire game \u2014 except for when Beckham caught a fourth-quarter touchdown pass. \u201cIt was probably the only time Norman played Odell man-to-man, and Odell beat him.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cHe cried a little bit,\u201d Manning said. \u201cI didn\u2019t think that was really necessary. I think Odell took the higher road, and I\u2019m proud of him for that.\u201d Manning later did a little trash talking, although in his typically subtle way. He credited Beckham for regaining his composure later in the game, and then Manning mentioned that the Panthers were in a zone defense for almost the entire game \u2014 except for when Beckham caught a fourth-quarter touchdown pass. \u201cIt was probably the only time Norman played Odell man-to-man, and Odell beat him.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "He credited Beckham for regaining his composure later in the game, and then Manning mentioned that the Panthers were in a zone defense for almost the entire game \u2014 except for when Beckham caught a fourth-quarter touchdown pass.", "paragraph_id": "5d703d6ac8e4820a9b66e395"} +{"question": "Who could potentially collaborate with New Jersey Transit on a new rail project?", "paragraph": "Mr. Fox said he had hoped to find a long-term solution for the transportation fund within a year.\u201cI deeply regret we were unable to do so, and with a year behind me, it is time for me to return to the private sector and pursue new opportunities,\u201d he said. A spokesman for the commissioner, Stephen Schapiro, said Mr. Fox declined to comment further. Calls to his lawyer, Robert Fettweis, were not returned on Friday night. On Thursday, Mr. Fox expressed support for a proposal to build a new rail tunnel under the Hudson River, saying that New Jersey Transit, an agency for which he serves as board chairman, looked forward to working with Amtrak on the project. This year, he said the state was facing a transportation funding crisis, a characterization that Mr. Christie has disputed. Veronica Vanterpool, executive director of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign, an advocacy organization, said Mr. Fox had been a \u201cstrong advocate\u201d for the state\u2019s transportation system, but had been unable to motivate the state to act with any urgency.", "answer": "Amtrak", "sentence": "On Thursday, Mr. Fox expressed support for a proposal to build a new rail tunnel under the Hudson River, saying that New Jersey Transit, an agency for which he serves as board chairman, looked forward to working with Amtrak on the project.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Fox said he had hoped to find a long-term solution for the transportation fund within a year. \u201cI deeply regret we were unable to do so, and with a year behind me, it is time for me to return to the private sector and pursue new opportunities,\u201d he said. A spokesman for the commissioner, Stephen Schapiro, said Mr. Fox declined to comment further. Calls to his lawyer, Robert Fettweis, were not returned on Friday night. On Thursday, Mr. Fox expressed support for a proposal to build a new rail tunnel under the Hudson River, saying that New Jersey Transit, an agency for which he serves as board chairman, looked forward to working with Amtrak on the project. This year, he said the state was facing a transportation funding crisis, a characterization that Mr. Christie has disputed. Veronica Vanterpool, executive director of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign, an advocacy organization, said Mr. Fox had been a \u201cstrong advocate\u201d for the state\u2019s transportation system, but had been unable to motivate the state to act with any urgency.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Fox said he had hoped to find a long-term solution for the transportation fund within a year.\u201cI deeply regret we were unable to do so, and with a year behind me, it is time for me to return to the private sector and pursue new opportunities,\u201d he said. A spokesman for the commissioner, Stephen Schapiro, said Mr. Fox declined to comment further. Calls to his lawyer, Robert Fettweis, were not returned on Friday night. On Thursday, Mr. Fox expressed support for a proposal to build a new rail tunnel under the Hudson River, saying that New Jersey Transit, an agency for which he serves as board chairman, looked forward to working with Amtrak on the project. This year, he said the state was facing a transportation funding crisis, a characterization that Mr. Christie has disputed. Veronica Vanterpool, executive director of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign, an advocacy organization, said Mr. Fox had been a \u201cstrong advocate\u201d for the state\u2019s transportation system, but had been unable to motivate the state to act with any urgency.", "sentence_answer": "On Thursday, Mr. Fox expressed support for a proposal to build a new rail tunnel under the Hudson River, saying that New Jersey Transit, an agency for which he serves as board chairman, looked forward to working with Amtrak on the project.", "paragraph_id": "5d701e6cc8e4820a9b66c9f6"} +{"question": "What type of architect was Karl Friedrich Schinkel?", "paragraph": "\u201cUrban development and politics here should be like music in the city, where you have both the Philharmonic and nightclubs like Berghain,\u201d Mr. Ludewig argued. \u201cWe should have Museum Island and also the Flussbad to show we\u2019re still a city where crazy ideas can become reality.\u201d Opponents of the Flussbad fume about the prospect of bikini-clad bathers despoiling a noble site. But the real embarrassment is the dirty canal. Architectural preservationists fret that stairways cut into the canal\u2019s retaining walls will tamper with a World Heritage Site, altering the work of a cultural hero, the neo-Classical architect Karl Friedrich Schinkel, who conceived the museum quarter. But the walls have been rebuilt untold times over the years, and a mess of lights, moorings and signs have been stuck onto them. They are hardly inviolable.", "answer": "neo-Classical", "sentence": "Architectural preservationists fret that stairways cut into the canal\u2019s retaining walls will tamper with a World Heritage Site, altering the work of a cultural hero, the neo-Classical architect Karl Friedrich Schinkel, who conceived the museum quarter.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cUrban development and politics here should be like music in the city, where you have both the Philharmonic and nightclubs like Berghain,\u201d Mr. Ludewig argued. \u201cWe should have Museum Island and also the Flussbad to show we\u2019re still a city where crazy ideas can become reality.\u201d Opponents of the Flussbad fume about the prospect of bikini-clad bathers despoiling a noble site. But the real embarrassment is the dirty canal. Architectural preservationists fret that stairways cut into the canal\u2019s retaining walls will tamper with a World Heritage Site, altering the work of a cultural hero, the neo-Classical architect Karl Friedrich Schinkel, who conceived the museum quarter. But the walls have been rebuilt untold times over the years, and a mess of lights, moorings and signs have been stuck onto them. They are hardly inviolable.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cUrban development and politics here should be like music in the city, where you have both the Philharmonic and nightclubs like Berghain,\u201d Mr. Ludewig argued. \u201cWe should have Museum Island and also the Flussbad to show we\u2019re still a city where crazy ideas can become reality.\u201d Opponents of the Flussbad fume about the prospect of bikini-clad bathers despoiling a noble site. But the real embarrassment is the dirty canal. Architectural preservationists fret that stairways cut into the canal\u2019s retaining walls will tamper with a World Heritage Site, altering the work of a cultural hero, the neo-Classical architect Karl Friedrich Schinkel, who conceived the museum quarter. But the walls have been rebuilt untold times over the years, and a mess of lights, moorings and signs have been stuck onto them. They are hardly inviolable.", "sentence_answer": "Architectural preservationists fret that stairways cut into the canal\u2019s retaining walls will tamper with a World Heritage Site, altering the work of a cultural hero, the neo-Classical architect Karl Friedrich Schinkel, who conceived the museum quarter.", "paragraph_id": "5d704015c8e4820a9b66e4cd"} +{"question": "Due to Facebook's algorithm and user's deleting friends with differing opinions what sort of environment is being created on the platform?", "paragraph": "With the presidential race heating up, a torrent of politically charged commentary has flooded Facebook, the world\u2019s largest social networking site, with some users deploying their \u201cunfollow\u201d buttons like a television remote to silence distasteful political views. Coupled with the algorithm now powering Facebook\u2019s news feed, the unfollowing is creating a more homogenized political experience of like-minded users, resulting in the kind of polarization more often associated with MSNBC or Fox News. And it may ultimately deflate a central promise of the Internet: Instead of offering people a diverse marketplace of challenging ideas, the web is becoming just another self-perpetuating echo chamber.", "answer": "a more homogenized political experience of like-minded users,", "sentence": "Coupled with the algorithm now powering Facebook\u2019s news feed, the unfollowing is creating a more homogenized political experience of like-minded users, resulting in the kind of polarization more often associated with MSNBC or Fox News.", "paragraph_sentence": "With the presidential race heating up, a torrent of politically charged commentary has flooded Facebook, the world\u2019s largest social networking site, with some users deploying their \u201cunfollow\u201d buttons like a television remote to silence distasteful political views. Coupled with the algorithm now powering Facebook\u2019s news feed, the unfollowing is creating a more homogenized political experience of like-minded users, resulting in the kind of polarization more often associated with MSNBC or Fox News. And it may ultimately deflate a central promise of the Internet: Instead of offering people a diverse marketplace of challenging ideas, the web is becoming just another self-perpetuating echo chamber.", "paragraph_answer": "With the presidential race heating up, a torrent of politically charged commentary has flooded Facebook, the world\u2019s largest social networking site, with some users deploying their \u201cunfollow\u201d buttons like a television remote to silence distasteful political views. Coupled with the algorithm now powering Facebook\u2019s news feed, the unfollowing is creating a more homogenized political experience of like-minded users, resulting in the kind of polarization more often associated with MSNBC or Fox News. And it may ultimately deflate a central promise of the Internet: Instead of offering people a diverse marketplace of challenging ideas, the web is becoming just another self-perpetuating echo chamber.", "sentence_answer": "Coupled with the algorithm now powering Facebook\u2019s news feed, the unfollowing is creating a more homogenized political experience of like-minded users, resulting in the kind of polarization more often associated with MSNBC or Fox News.", "paragraph_id": "5d702a95c8e4820a9b66d82f"} +{"question": "Who is Tim Neale?", "paragraph": "The public faces of the Ex-Im Bank battle may be mom-and-pop exporters walking the hallways of Capitol Hill in support of the agency, and the ideological spear carriers of the conservative, free-market movement, like Club for Growth and the Heritage Foundation, in opposition. But those message makers mask a behind-the-scenes slugfest between two heavyweights, Boeing and Delta, which have narrower, bottom-line interests and very deep pockets. The normally obscure Export-Import Bank, whose main job is to help American businesses sell their goods and services abroad, will cease to exist on July 1 if Congress does not renew its authorization. Delta has spent nearly $10 million on lobbying since 2012, at least in part to kill the Ex-Im Bank or greatly diminish loan guarantees for Boeing customers abroad, according to lobby disclosure forms. Boeing has already put up more than $69 million over that same period on Ex-Im and other interests, according to the documents. \u201cWe have been lobbying a lot on this because it\u2019s a very important issue for us,\u201d said Tim Neale, Boeing\u2019s government operations spokesman. \u201cWe know our business, and we know there are customers even in times of good credit availability that need a government loan guarantee.\u201d", "answer": "Boeing\u2019s government operations spokesman", "sentence": "\u201cWe have been lobbying a lot on this because it\u2019s a very important issue for us,\u201d said Tim Neale, Boeing\u2019s government operations spokesman .", "paragraph_sentence": "The public faces of the Ex-Im Bank battle may be mom-and-pop exporters walking the hallways of Capitol Hill in support of the agency, and the ideological spear carriers of the conservative, free-market movement, like Club for Growth and the Heritage Foundation, in opposition. But those message makers mask a behind-the-scenes slugfest between two heavyweights, Boeing and Delta, which have narrower, bottom-line interests and very deep pockets. The normally obscure Export-Import Bank, whose main job is to help American businesses sell their goods and services abroad, will cease to exist on July 1 if Congress does not renew its authorization. Delta has spent nearly $10 million on lobbying since 2012, at least in part to kill the Ex-Im Bank or greatly diminish loan guarantees for Boeing customers abroad, according to lobby disclosure forms. Boeing has already put up more than $69 million over that same period on Ex-Im and other interests, according to the documents. \u201cWe have been lobbying a lot on this because it\u2019s a very important issue for us,\u201d said Tim Neale, Boeing\u2019s government operations spokesman . \u201cWe know our business, and we know there are customers even in times of good credit availability that need a government loan guarantee.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The public faces of the Ex-Im Bank battle may be mom-and-pop exporters walking the hallways of Capitol Hill in support of the agency, and the ideological spear carriers of the conservative, free-market movement, like Club for Growth and the Heritage Foundation, in opposition. But those message makers mask a behind-the-scenes slugfest between two heavyweights, Boeing and Delta, which have narrower, bottom-line interests and very deep pockets. The normally obscure Export-Import Bank, whose main job is to help American businesses sell their goods and services abroad, will cease to exist on July 1 if Congress does not renew its authorization. Delta has spent nearly $10 million on lobbying since 2012, at least in part to kill the Ex-Im Bank or greatly diminish loan guarantees for Boeing customers abroad, according to lobby disclosure forms. Boeing has already put up more than $69 million over that same period on Ex-Im and other interests, according to the documents. \u201cWe have been lobbying a lot on this because it\u2019s a very important issue for us,\u201d said Tim Neale, Boeing\u2019s government operations spokesman . \u201cWe know our business, and we know there are customers even in times of good credit availability that need a government loan guarantee.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe have been lobbying a lot on this because it\u2019s a very important issue for us,\u201d said Tim Neale, Boeing\u2019s government operations spokesman .", "paragraph_id": "5d70073fc8e4820a9b66ad31"} +{"question": "What is the defining characteristic of a \"me too\" drug?", "paragraph": "Prior disclosure can come in the form of an obscure research article; an old, expired patent; or inclusion of a chemical structure in a giant online database, for example. (When it comes to obviousness, there\u2019s a tension. We don\u2019t want to provide patent protection for profit-increasing activities that do not benefit patients, like \u201cme too\u201d drugs \u2014 drugs that are only trivially different from existing ones. But some things that are obvious also might be beneficial, and for those we\u2019d want to encourage development.) The crux of the problem is this: For pharmaceuticals, patent protection is used as a means for innovators to recoup the costly investments that drug development requires. But the patent system was not devised to solve this specific problem. It\u2019s a broader system intended to encourage innovation, which it does, while at the same time permitting individuals and firms to exploit obvious and old ideas freely, which is generally a valuable protection.", "answer": "trivially different from existing ones", "sentence": "We don\u2019t want to provide patent protection for profit-increasing activities that do not benefit patients, like \u201cme too\u201d drugs \u2014 drugs that are only trivially different from existing ones .", "paragraph_sentence": "Prior disclosure can come in the form of an obscure research article; an old, expired patent; or inclusion of a chemical structure in a giant online database, for example. (When it comes to obviousness, there\u2019s a tension. We don\u2019t want to provide patent protection for profit-increasing activities that do not benefit patients, like \u201cme too\u201d drugs \u2014 drugs that are only trivially different from existing ones . But some things that are obvious also might be beneficial, and for those we\u2019d want to encourage development.) The crux of the problem is this: For pharmaceuticals, patent protection is used as a means for innovators to recoup the costly investments that drug development requires. But the patent system was not devised to solve this specific problem. It\u2019s a broader system intended to encourage innovation, which it does, while at the same time permitting individuals and firms to exploit obvious and old ideas freely, which is generally a valuable protection.", "paragraph_answer": "Prior disclosure can come in the form of an obscure research article; an old, expired patent; or inclusion of a chemical structure in a giant online database, for example. (When it comes to obviousness, there\u2019s a tension. We don\u2019t want to provide patent protection for profit-increasing activities that do not benefit patients, like \u201cme too\u201d drugs \u2014 drugs that are only trivially different from existing ones . But some things that are obvious also might be beneficial, and for those we\u2019d want to encourage development.) The crux of the problem is this: For pharmaceuticals, patent protection is used as a means for innovators to recoup the costly investments that drug development requires. But the patent system was not devised to solve this specific problem. It\u2019s a broader system intended to encourage innovation, which it does, while at the same time permitting individuals and firms to exploit obvious and old ideas freely, which is generally a valuable protection.", "sentence_answer": "We don\u2019t want to provide patent protection for profit-increasing activities that do not benefit patients, like \u201cme too\u201d drugs \u2014 drugs that are only trivially different from existing ones .", "paragraph_id": "5d70108dc8e4820a9b66bcff"} +{"question": "Whom was the movie Citizen Four about (who's life story?)", "paragraph": "There were some moments that went against the usual Oscar formula of tears and gratitude. Patricia Arquette\u2019s feminist call to arms at the end of her acceptance speech for supporting actress was unexpected and fierce. \u201cWe have fought for everybody else\u2019s equal rights. It\u2019s our time to have wage equality once and for all, and equal rights for women in the United States of America,\u201d she said as Meryl Streep and others roared their approval. \u201cCitizenfour,\u201d about the National Security Agency leaker Edward J. Snowden, won best documentary, and its makers thanked Mr. Snowden, who is still in Russia, for his courage. Mr. Harris joked that Mr. Snowden \u201ccouldn\u2019t be here for some treason.\u201d Oscar nights usually do have their share of political posturing, but this was a particularly passionate evening.", "answer": "Edward J. Snowden", "sentence": "\u201cCitizenfour,\u201d about the National Security Agency leaker Edward J. Snowden , won best documentary, and its makers thanked Mr. Snowden, who is still in Russia, for his courage.", "paragraph_sentence": "There were some moments that went against the usual Oscar formula of tears and gratitude. Patricia Arquette\u2019s feminist call to arms at the end of her acceptance speech for supporting actress was unexpected and fierce. \u201cWe have fought for everybody else\u2019s equal rights. It\u2019s our time to have wage equality once and for all, and equal rights for women in the United States of America,\u201d she said as Meryl Streep and others roared their approval. \u201cCitizenfour,\u201d about the National Security Agency leaker Edward J. Snowden , won best documentary, and its makers thanked Mr. Snowden, who is still in Russia, for his courage. Mr. Harris joked that Mr. Snowden \u201ccouldn\u2019t be here for some treason.\u201d Oscar nights usually do have their share of political posturing, but this was a particularly passionate evening.", "paragraph_answer": "There were some moments that went against the usual Oscar formula of tears and gratitude. Patricia Arquette\u2019s feminist call to arms at the end of her acceptance speech for supporting actress was unexpected and fierce. \u201cWe have fought for everybody else\u2019s equal rights. It\u2019s our time to have wage equality once and for all, and equal rights for women in the United States of America,\u201d she said as Meryl Streep and others roared their approval. \u201cCitizenfour,\u201d about the National Security Agency leaker Edward J. Snowden , won best documentary, and its makers thanked Mr. Snowden, who is still in Russia, for his courage. Mr. Harris joked that Mr. Snowden \u201ccouldn\u2019t be here for some treason.\u201d Oscar nights usually do have their share of political posturing, but this was a particularly passionate evening.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cCitizenfour,\u201d about the National Security Agency leaker Edward J. Snowden , won best documentary, and its makers thanked Mr. Snowden, who is still in Russia, for his courage.", "paragraph_id": "5d700ca5c8e4820a9b66b7fc"} +{"question": "Who is the officiant?", "paragraph": "Cheryl Yvette Dawson and Madifing Kaba are to be married Sunday evening at the Alger House, an event space in Manhattan. The Rev. Jill Flowers, who was ordained by the One Spirit Interfaith Seminary, is to officiate. Mrs. Kaba, 33, works in Manhattan as a senior manager specializing in small-merchants pricing strategy for American Express. She graduated from Duke and received an M.B.A. from Columbia. She is a daughter of Annette I. Dawson and Michael Dawson of Hollis, Queens. The bride\u2019s father retired as a mechanic who worked on trains for Metro-North in Manhattan. Her mother retired as an executive assistant at the Manhattan law firm Sidley Austin. Mr. Kaba, 42, is a management consultant in the banking and capital markets advisory group of PricewaterhouseCoopers in Manhattan. He graduated from the University of Illinois and received an M.B.A. and a master's in public policy from Carnegie Mellon University.", "answer": "Rev. Jill Flowers", "sentence": "The Rev. Jill Flowers , who was ordained by the One Spirit Interfaith Seminary, is to officiate.", "paragraph_sentence": "Cheryl Yvette Dawson and Madifing Kaba are to be married Sunday evening at the Alger House, an event space in Manhattan. The Rev. Jill Flowers , who was ordained by the One Spirit Interfaith Seminary, is to officiate. Mrs. Kaba, 33, works in Manhattan as a senior manager specializing in small-merchants pricing strategy for American Express. She graduated from Duke and received an M.B.A. from Columbia. She is a daughter of Annette I. Dawson and Michael Dawson of Hollis, Queens. The bride\u2019s father retired as a mechanic who worked on trains for Metro-North in Manhattan. Her mother retired as an executive assistant at the Manhattan law firm Sidley Austin. Mr. Kaba, 42, is a management consultant in the banking and capital markets advisory group of PricewaterhouseCoopers in Manhattan. He graduated from the University of Illinois and received an M.B.A. and a master's in public policy from Carnegie Mellon University.", "paragraph_answer": "Cheryl Yvette Dawson and Madifing Kaba are to be married Sunday evening at the Alger House, an event space in Manhattan. The Rev. Jill Flowers , who was ordained by the One Spirit Interfaith Seminary, is to officiate. Mrs. Kaba, 33, works in Manhattan as a senior manager specializing in small-merchants pricing strategy for American Express. She graduated from Duke and received an M.B.A. from Columbia. She is a daughter of Annette I. Dawson and Michael Dawson of Hollis, Queens. The bride\u2019s father retired as a mechanic who worked on trains for Metro-North in Manhattan. Her mother retired as an executive assistant at the Manhattan law firm Sidley Austin. Mr. Kaba, 42, is a management consultant in the banking and capital markets advisory group of PricewaterhouseCoopers in Manhattan. He graduated from the University of Illinois and received an M.B.A. and a master's in public policy from Carnegie Mellon University.", "sentence_answer": "The Rev. Jill Flowers , who was ordained by the One Spirit Interfaith Seminary, is to officiate.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026abc8e4820a9b66d318"} +{"question": "What type of fortification is the City of York?", "paragraph": "Theakston\u2019s best bitter and XB were excellent, with more of that yeast aroma I\u2019d noticed at the Black Sheep. But the big surprise was the brewery\u2019s strong ale, Old Peculier, named after the Peculier of Masham, a legal district created by the Archbishop of York in the 12th century. Dark, plummy and mysteriously bitter, with 5.6 percent alcohol it was much stronger than many of the local beers, though still weaker than many American craft brews. After the two traditional breweries in Masham, I wanted to see how things were changing elsewhere in Yorkshire. After a night in the beautiful walled city of York and an afternoon in Tadcaster, Samuel Smith\u2019s hometown, I headed down to Sheffield, the South Yorkshire manufacturing city. Sheffield seemed to be in transition, not quite recovered from its industrial past, including the wartime bombing that had scarred it. But the town\u2019s two major universities gave it a youthful air, as did Sheffield\u2019s diverse list of bands and musicians, including Joe Cocker, the Human League, Pulp, Def Leppard and the Arctic Monkeys.", "answer": "walled", "sentence": "After a night in the beautiful walled city of York and an afternoon in Tadcaster, Samuel Smith\u2019s hometown, I headed down to Sheffield, the South Yorkshire manufacturing city.", "paragraph_sentence": "Theakston\u2019s best bitter and XB were excellent, with more of that yeast aroma I\u2019d noticed at the Black Sheep. But the big surprise was the brewery\u2019s strong ale, Old Peculier, named after the Peculier of Masham, a legal district created by the Archbishop of York in the 12th century. Dark, plummy and mysteriously bitter, with 5.6 percent alcohol it was much stronger than many of the local beers, though still weaker than many American craft brews. After the two traditional breweries in Masham, I wanted to see how things were changing elsewhere in Yorkshire. After a night in the beautiful walled city of York and an afternoon in Tadcaster, Samuel Smith\u2019s hometown, I headed down to Sheffield, the South Yorkshire manufacturing city. Sheffield seemed to be in transition, not quite recovered from its industrial past, including the wartime bombing that had scarred it. But the town\u2019s two major universities gave it a youthful air, as did Sheffield\u2019s diverse list of bands and musicians, including Joe Cocker, the Human League, Pulp, Def Leppard and the Arctic Monkeys.", "paragraph_answer": "Theakston\u2019s best bitter and XB were excellent, with more of that yeast aroma I\u2019d noticed at the Black Sheep. But the big surprise was the brewery\u2019s strong ale, Old Peculier, named after the Peculier of Masham, a legal district created by the Archbishop of York in the 12th century. Dark, plummy and mysteriously bitter, with 5.6 percent alcohol it was much stronger than many of the local beers, though still weaker than many American craft brews. After the two traditional breweries in Masham, I wanted to see how things were changing elsewhere in Yorkshire. After a night in the beautiful walled city of York and an afternoon in Tadcaster, Samuel Smith\u2019s hometown, I headed down to Sheffield, the South Yorkshire manufacturing city. Sheffield seemed to be in transition, not quite recovered from its industrial past, including the wartime bombing that had scarred it. But the town\u2019s two major universities gave it a youthful air, as did Sheffield\u2019s diverse list of bands and musicians, including Joe Cocker, the Human League, Pulp, Def Leppard and the Arctic Monkeys.", "sentence_answer": "After a night in the beautiful walled city of York and an afternoon in Tadcaster, Samuel Smith\u2019s hometown, I headed down to Sheffield, the South Yorkshire manufacturing city.", "paragraph_id": "5d703866c8e4820a9b66e11e"} +{"question": "Who is Bayern's goalkeeper?", "paragraph": "Robert Lewandowski and Thomas M\u00fcller have been harder to stop than just about any other strikers in Europe this season, and Douglas Costa, Munich\u2019s new Brazilian winger, has bamboozled many a defense with his combination of speed, sorcery and delivery. For much of Tuesday\u2019s game, Bayern looked like what it is: The most attack-minded, fluent and controlling team in soccer. And when Arsenal did break through, about 30 minutes in, Bayern goalkeeper Manuel Neuer was able to make a wonderful save as he dove low to his left to block a header by Theo Walcott from six yards out. Had Walcott\u2019s header been more decisive, the keeper might never have reached the ball. But then again, had Lewandowski shot earlier than he did late in the second half, then Arsenal\u2019s goalkeeper, Petr Cech, would not have been able to race from his line and make a bold interception with his legs.", "answer": "Manuel Neuer", "sentence": "And when Arsenal did break through, about 30 minutes in, Bayern goalkeeper Manuel Neuer was able to make a wonderful save as he dove low to his left to block a header by Theo Walcott from six yards out.", "paragraph_sentence": "Robert Lewandowski and Thomas M\u00fcller have been harder to stop than just about any other strikers in Europe this season, and Douglas Costa, Munich\u2019s new Brazilian winger, has bamboozled many a defense with his combination of speed, sorcery and delivery. For much of Tuesday\u2019s game, Bayern looked like what it is: The most attack-minded, fluent and controlling team in soccer. And when Arsenal did break through, about 30 minutes in, Bayern goalkeeper Manuel Neuer was able to make a wonderful save as he dove low to his left to block a header by Theo Walcott from six yards out. Had Walcott\u2019s header been more decisive, the keeper might never have reached the ball. But then again, had Lewandowski shot earlier than he did late in the second half, then Arsenal\u2019s goalkeeper, Petr Cech, would not have been able to race from his line and make a bold interception with his legs.", "paragraph_answer": "Robert Lewandowski and Thomas M\u00fcller have been harder to stop than just about any other strikers in Europe this season, and Douglas Costa, Munich\u2019s new Brazilian winger, has bamboozled many a defense with his combination of speed, sorcery and delivery. For much of Tuesday\u2019s game, Bayern looked like what it is: The most attack-minded, fluent and controlling team in soccer. And when Arsenal did break through, about 30 minutes in, Bayern goalkeeper Manuel Neuer was able to make a wonderful save as he dove low to his left to block a header by Theo Walcott from six yards out. Had Walcott\u2019s header been more decisive, the keeper might never have reached the ball. But then again, had Lewandowski shot earlier than he did late in the second half, then Arsenal\u2019s goalkeeper, Petr Cech, would not have been able to race from his line and make a bold interception with his legs.", "sentence_answer": "And when Arsenal did break through, about 30 minutes in, Bayern goalkeeper Manuel Neuer was able to make a wonderful save as he dove low to his left to block a header by Theo Walcott from six yards out.", "paragraph_id": "5d70280bc8e4820a9b66d5c1"} +{"question": "In what year did catalogs begin to increase after a steady decline?", "paragraph": "\u201cJ. C. Penney is making a big statement,\u201d said Bruce Cohen, a retail private equity strategist at Kurt Salmon, a consulting firm. \u201cIt\u2019s a pronouncement in favor of what all retailers are recognizing \u2014 that there are moments when people want to slow down, and there\u2019s still an important place for the catalog.\u201d After years of decline, the number of catalogs mailed in the United States increased in 2013, to 11.9 billion, according to the Direct Marketing Association, a trade group. While that figure is about 60 percent of what it was at its peak in 2007, some analysts say the recent 1 percent rise in mailed catalogs, coupled with the care retailers are putting into them, may signal something of a renaissance. Not all catalogs will rebound in this environment. The parent company of SkyMall, the in-flight shopping magazine, filed for bankruptcy last week. But Paul Swinand, an analyst for Morningstar, called that catalog different from most with its quirky assortment of goods. \u201cIt\u2019s not about brand with SkyMall,\u201d he said. \u201cThere\u2019s nothing emotional about it.\u201d", "answer": "2013", "sentence": "After years of decline, the number of catalogs mailed in the United States increased in 2013 , to 11.9 billion, according to the Direct Marketing Association, a trade group.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cJ. C. Penney is making a big statement,\u201d said Bruce Cohen, a retail private equity strategist at Kurt Salmon, a consulting firm. \u201cIt\u2019s a pronouncement in favor of what all retailers are recognizing \u2014 that there are moments when people want to slow down, and there\u2019s still an important place for the catalog.\u201d After years of decline, the number of catalogs mailed in the United States increased in 2013 , to 11.9 billion, according to the Direct Marketing Association, a trade group. While that figure is about 60 percent of what it was at its peak in 2007, some analysts say the recent 1 percent rise in mailed catalogs, coupled with the care retailers are putting into them, may signal something of a renaissance. Not all catalogs will rebound in this environment. The parent company of SkyMall, the in-flight shopping magazine, filed for bankruptcy last week. But Paul Swinand, an analyst for Morningstar, called that catalog different from most with its quirky assortment of goods. \u201cIt\u2019s not about brand with SkyMall,\u201d he said. \u201cThere\u2019s nothing emotional about it.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cJ. C. Penney is making a big statement,\u201d said Bruce Cohen, a retail private equity strategist at Kurt Salmon, a consulting firm. \u201cIt\u2019s a pronouncement in favor of what all retailers are recognizing \u2014 that there are moments when people want to slow down, and there\u2019s still an important place for the catalog.\u201d After years of decline, the number of catalogs mailed in the United States increased in 2013 , to 11.9 billion, according to the Direct Marketing Association, a trade group. While that figure is about 60 percent of what it was at its peak in 2007, some analysts say the recent 1 percent rise in mailed catalogs, coupled with the care retailers are putting into them, may signal something of a renaissance. Not all catalogs will rebound in this environment. The parent company of SkyMall, the in-flight shopping magazine, filed for bankruptcy last week. But Paul Swinand, an analyst for Morningstar, called that catalog different from most with its quirky assortment of goods. \u201cIt\u2019s not about brand with SkyMall,\u201d he said. \u201cThere\u2019s nothing emotional about it.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "After years of decline, the number of catalogs mailed in the United States increased in 2013 , to 11.9 billion, according to the Direct Marketing Association, a trade group.", "paragraph_id": "5d702488c8e4820a9b66d0bc"} +{"question": "Who bounced back from a poor performance?", "paragraph": "Brayden Schenn and Claude Giroux had goals in regulation for the host Flyers, who were shut out in the previous two games and entered averaging an N.H.L.-worst 1.70 goals per game. BLUES 2, SABRES 1 Troy Brouwer and Robby Fabbri scored third-period goals, and St. Louis came back to win in Buffalo. Jake Allen made 24 saves in the win, the Blues\u2019 second against Buffalo in the last week. KINGS 3, PANTHERS 1 Jonathan Quick bounced back from a poor performance and Alec Martinez scored the go-ahead goal late in the second period to lift Los Angeles over Florida.", "answer": "Jonathan Quick", "sentence": "KINGS 3, PANTHERS 1 Jonathan Quick bounced back from a poor performance and Alec Martinez scored the go-ahead goal late in the second period to lift Los Angeles over Florida.", "paragraph_sentence": "Brayden Schenn and Claude Giroux had goals in regulation for the host Flyers, who were shut out in the previous two games and entered averaging an N.H.L.-worst 1.70 goals per game. BLUES 2, SABRES 1 Troy Brouwer and Robby Fabbri scored third-period goals, and St. Louis came back to win in Buffalo. Jake Allen made 24 saves in the win, the Blues\u2019 second against Buffalo in the last week. KINGS 3, PANTHERS 1 Jonathan Quick bounced back from a poor performance and Alec Martinez scored the go-ahead goal late in the second period to lift Los Angeles over Florida. ", "paragraph_answer": "Brayden Schenn and Claude Giroux had goals in regulation for the host Flyers, who were shut out in the previous two games and entered averaging an N.H.L.-worst 1.70 goals per game. BLUES 2, SABRES 1 Troy Brouwer and Robby Fabbri scored third-period goals, and St. Louis came back to win in Buffalo. Jake Allen made 24 saves in the win, the Blues\u2019 second against Buffalo in the last week. KINGS 3, PANTHERS 1 Jonathan Quick bounced back from a poor performance and Alec Martinez scored the go-ahead goal late in the second period to lift Los Angeles over Florida.", "sentence_answer": "KINGS 3, PANTHERS 1 Jonathan Quick bounced back from a poor performance and Alec Martinez scored the go-ahead goal late in the second period to lift Los Angeles over Florida.", "paragraph_id": "5d70543ec8e4820a9b66ec5f"} +{"question": "Why can't Mr. Obama shut down the Guantanamo Bay military prison?", "paragraph": "The House bill invests millions of extra dollars in a questionable missile defense program. It continues to prohibit Mr. Obama from shutting down the Guant\u00e1namo Bay military prison in Cuba. And it fails to address some of the sensible reforms pushed by a diverse group of defense experts, like reducing the number of private contractors working for the Pentagon and closing excess military bases in the United States. These could save billions of dollars. The country faces daunting security challenges \u2014 from the Islamic State to Russia in Ukraine and China in the South China Sea. But throwing money at the military doesn\u2019t guarantee security, especially when it is spent on programs that don\u2019t make the country safer and is denied to programs that enhance security.", "answer": "The House bill invests millions of extra dollars in a questionable missile defense program. It continues to prohibit", "sentence": "The House bill invests millions of extra dollars in a questionable missile defense program. It continues to prohibit Mr. Obama from shutting down the Guant\u00e1namo Bay military prison in Cuba.", "paragraph_sentence": " The House bill invests millions of extra dollars in a questionable missile defense program. It continues to prohibit Mr. Obama from shutting down the Guant\u00e1namo Bay military prison in Cuba. And it fails to address some of the sensible reforms pushed by a diverse group of defense experts, like reducing the number of private contractors working for the Pentagon and closing excess military bases in the United States. These could save billions of dollars. The country faces daunting security challenges \u2014 from the Islamic State to Russia in Ukraine and China in the South China Sea. But throwing money at the military doesn\u2019t guarantee security, especially when it is spent on programs that don\u2019t make the country safer and is denied to programs that enhance security.", "paragraph_answer": " The House bill invests millions of extra dollars in a questionable missile defense program. It continues to prohibit Mr. Obama from shutting down the Guant\u00e1namo Bay military prison in Cuba. And it fails to address some of the sensible reforms pushed by a diverse group of defense experts, like reducing the number of private contractors working for the Pentagon and closing excess military bases in the United States. These could save billions of dollars. The country faces daunting security challenges \u2014 from the Islamic State to Russia in Ukraine and China in the South China Sea. But throwing money at the military doesn\u2019t guarantee security, especially when it is spent on programs that don\u2019t make the country safer and is denied to programs that enhance security.", "sentence_answer": " The House bill invests millions of extra dollars in a questionable missile defense program. It continues to prohibit Mr. Obama from shutting down the Guant\u00e1namo Bay military prison in Cuba.", "paragraph_id": "5d70052ac8e4820a9b66a88f"} +{"question": "What do people do repeatedly?", "paragraph": "The argument on the other side boils down to a simple notion: Drivers are going to do it anyway, so why not minimize the riskiest kinds of multitasking, like looking down at the phone or handling it? People use their phones too compulsively to expect them to stop, said Nagraj Kashyap, senior vice president for ventures and innovation at Qualcomm Ventures, an investing arm of the telecom giant, which recently injected $3 million into Navdy. \u201cTo completely eliminate it is a pipe dream,\u201d Mr. Kashyap said of motorist multitasking. \u201cThe best way to handle it is to make it as safe as you can.\u201d", "answer": "People use their phones too compulsively", "sentence": "The argument on the other side boils down to a simple notion: Drivers are going to do it anyway, so why not minimize the riskiest kinds of multitasking, like looking down at the phone or handling it? People use their phones too compulsively to expect them to stop, said Nagraj Kashyap, senior vice president for ventures and innovation at Qualcomm Ventures, an investing arm of the telecom giant, which recently injected $3 million into Navdy.", "paragraph_sentence": " The argument on the other side boils down to a simple notion: Drivers are going to do it anyway, so why not minimize the riskiest kinds of multitasking, like looking down at the phone or handling it? People use their phones too compulsively to expect them to stop, said Nagraj Kashyap, senior vice president for ventures and innovation at Qualcomm Ventures, an investing arm of the telecom giant, which recently injected $3 million into Navdy. \u201cTo completely eliminate it is a pipe dream,\u201d Mr. Kashyap said of motorist multitasking. \u201cThe best way to handle it is to make it as safe as you can.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The argument on the other side boils down to a simple notion: Drivers are going to do it anyway, so why not minimize the riskiest kinds of multitasking, like looking down at the phone or handling it? People use their phones too compulsively to expect them to stop, said Nagraj Kashyap, senior vice president for ventures and innovation at Qualcomm Ventures, an investing arm of the telecom giant, which recently injected $3 million into Navdy. \u201cTo completely eliminate it is a pipe dream,\u201d Mr. Kashyap said of motorist multitasking. \u201cThe best way to handle it is to make it as safe as you can.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The argument on the other side boils down to a simple notion: Drivers are going to do it anyway, so why not minimize the riskiest kinds of multitasking, like looking down at the phone or handling it? People use their phones too compulsively to expect them to stop, said Nagraj Kashyap, senior vice president for ventures and innovation at Qualcomm Ventures, an investing arm of the telecom giant, which recently injected $3 million into Navdy.", "paragraph_id": "5d7027eac8e4820a9b66d5a4"} +{"question": "What month did this take place?", "paragraph": "But if that all sounds familiar to contemporary racing enthusiasts, there were other aspects of that mid-20th-century race that were quite different. The track was only about 10 meters, or 35 feet, across; the pits on the main straight were part of the track itself, not separated by a pitlane; and, facing the pits, the spectators sat on benches and bleachers, and some even made their own viewing perches, standing on trestle tables they had set up trackside. It was a hodgepodge, a ragged mass of humanity grouped along and over the edge of the track, with only bales of straw and a mound of earth separating them from the racing cars traveling at top speeds of 300 kilometers, or 185 miles, an hour. Given those conditions, a disaster could have been in the making on that June day should anything go wrong.", "answer": "June", "sentence": "Given those conditions, a disaster could have been in the making on that June day should anything go wrong.", "paragraph_sentence": "But if that all sounds familiar to contemporary racing enthusiasts, there were other aspects of that mid-20th-century race that were quite different. The track was only about 10 meters, or 35 feet, across; the pits on the main straight were part of the track itself, not separated by a pitlane; and, facing the pits, the spectators sat on benches and bleachers, and some even made their own viewing perches, standing on trestle tables they had set up trackside. It was a hodgepodge, a ragged mass of humanity grouped along and over the edge of the track, with only bales of straw and a mound of earth separating them from the racing cars traveling at top speeds of 300 kilometers, or 185 miles, an hour. Given those conditions, a disaster could have been in the making on that June day should anything go wrong. ", "paragraph_answer": "But if that all sounds familiar to contemporary racing enthusiasts, there were other aspects of that mid-20th-century race that were quite different. The track was only about 10 meters, or 35 feet, across; the pits on the main straight were part of the track itself, not separated by a pitlane; and, facing the pits, the spectators sat on benches and bleachers, and some even made their own viewing perches, standing on trestle tables they had set up trackside. It was a hodgepodge, a ragged mass of humanity grouped along and over the edge of the track, with only bales of straw and a mound of earth separating them from the racing cars traveling at top speeds of 300 kilometers, or 185 miles, an hour. Given those conditions, a disaster could have been in the making on that June day should anything go wrong.", "sentence_answer": "Given those conditions, a disaster could have been in the making on that June day should anything go wrong.", "paragraph_id": "5d705abec8e4820a9b66ee80"} +{"question": "What are some other suggestions by the experts?", "paragraph": "Yet, as agricultural interests prepare a major push to get water projects built, doubts are growing about whether spending huge sums to pour high walls of concrete are the best way to solve California\u2019s water problems. Many independent experts, and almost all environmental groups, argue that dams would supply relatively little water for the money. They contend that Californians need to move aggressively to more modern methods of water management, reducing waste to a minimum and learning to live within the limits imposed by an arid environment.", "answer": "reducing waste to a minimum", "sentence": "They contend that Californians need to move aggressively to more modern methods of water management, reducing waste to a minimum and learning to live within the limits imposed by an arid environment.", "paragraph_sentence": "Yet, as agricultural interests prepare a major push to get water projects built, doubts are growing about whether spending huge sums to pour high walls of concrete are the best way to solve California\u2019s water problems. Many independent experts, and almost all environmental groups, argue that dams would supply relatively little water for the money. They contend that Californians need to move aggressively to more modern methods of water management, reducing waste to a minimum and learning to live within the limits imposed by an arid environment. ", "paragraph_answer": "Yet, as agricultural interests prepare a major push to get water projects built, doubts are growing about whether spending huge sums to pour high walls of concrete are the best way to solve California\u2019s water problems. Many independent experts, and almost all environmental groups, argue that dams would supply relatively little water for the money. They contend that Californians need to move aggressively to more modern methods of water management, reducing waste to a minimum and learning to live within the limits imposed by an arid environment.", "sentence_answer": "They contend that Californians need to move aggressively to more modern methods of water management, reducing waste to a minimum and learning to live within the limits imposed by an arid environment.", "paragraph_id": "5d700a8fc8e4820a9b66b47c"} +{"question": "This was the what time Woods failed to break 80 at the PGA tour?", "paragraph": "SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. \u2014 Watching Tiger Woods launch wildly errant drives was hard. Watching his ground-ball chip shots was harder. But the hardest part of watching Woods\u2019s career-worst round Friday at the Phoenix Open was seeing the greatest golfer of his generation turn into the lovable last-place straggler. Fans at T.P.C. Scottsdale, renowned for their crassness, were overcome with compassion as Woods, who was No. 1 in the world at this time last year, struggled to an 11-over-par 82 and a 36-hole total of 13-over 155. It was only the second time in 303 PGA Tour starts as a professional that Woods had failed to break 80 (the other time was in the third round of the 2002 British Open, played in hellacious conditions). For Woods, who has been breaking 80 since age 8, the score was full of foreboding. He might as well have had the Grim Reaper on his bag instead of his trusty caddie, Joe LaCava.", "answer": "second time", "sentence": "It was only the second time in 303 PGA Tour starts as a professional that Woods had failed to break 80 (the other time was in the third round of the 2002 British Open, played in hellacious conditions).", "paragraph_sentence": "SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. \u2014 Watching Tiger Woods launch wildly errant drives was hard. Watching his ground-ball chip shots was harder. But the hardest part of watching Woods\u2019s career-worst round Friday at the Phoenix Open was seeing the greatest golfer of his generation turn into the lovable last-place straggler. Fans at T.P.C. Scottsdale, renowned for their crassness, were overcome with compassion as Woods, who was No. 1 in the world at this time last year, struggled to an 11-over-par 82 and a 36-hole total of 13-over 155. It was only the second time in 303 PGA Tour starts as a professional that Woods had failed to break 80 (the other time was in the third round of the 2002 British Open, played in hellacious conditions). For Woods, who has been breaking 80 since age 8, the score was full of foreboding. He might as well have had the Grim Reaper on his bag instead of his trusty caddie, Joe LaCava.", "paragraph_answer": "SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. \u2014 Watching Tiger Woods launch wildly errant drives was hard. Watching his ground-ball chip shots was harder. But the hardest part of watching Woods\u2019s career-worst round Friday at the Phoenix Open was seeing the greatest golfer of his generation turn into the lovable last-place straggler. Fans at T.P.C. Scottsdale, renowned for their crassness, were overcome with compassion as Woods, who was No. 1 in the world at this time last year, struggled to an 11-over-par 82 and a 36-hole total of 13-over 155. It was only the second time in 303 PGA Tour starts as a professional that Woods had failed to break 80 (the other time was in the third round of the 2002 British Open, played in hellacious conditions). For Woods, who has been breaking 80 since age 8, the score was full of foreboding. He might as well have had the Grim Reaper on his bag instead of his trusty caddie, Joe LaCava.", "sentence_answer": "It was only the second time in 303 PGA Tour starts as a professional that Woods had failed to break 80 (the other time was in the third round of the 2002 British Open, played in hellacious conditions).", "paragraph_id": "5d702213c8e4820a9b66ce1e"} +{"question": "Where did Vanity Fair first advertise?", "paragraph": "96 YEARS AGO Prehistory \u2014 before the Kardashians and Caitlyn with a C, before even the naked and pregnant Demi Moore \u2014 Vanity Fair knew how to strike with an image. It boasted as much in advertisements published in The New York Times in 1919, during the magazine\u2019s first heyday. \u201cVanity Fair prides itself on knowing every lovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman in the world and printing her photograph in its pages,\u201d the ad copy read. This was \u201cthe magazine of leisure interests for men who know enough to have them,\u201d or so its tagline declared in a series of wittily wordy ads that ran in The Times. The image that struck hardest in those early years was not a photograph of a \u201clovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman,\u201d however. It was a cartoon that depicted Emperor Hirohito of Japan, and it was the subject of an international incident.", "answer": "The New York Times", "sentence": "It boasted as much in advertisements published in The New York Times in 1919, during the magazine\u2019s first heyday.", "paragraph_sentence": "96 YEARS AGO Prehistory \u2014 before the Kardashians and Caitlyn with a C, before even the naked and pregnant Demi Moore \u2014 Vanity Fair knew how to strike with an image. It boasted as much in advertisements published in The New York Times in 1919, during the magazine\u2019s first heyday. \u201cVanity Fair prides itself on knowing every lovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman in the world and printing her photograph in its pages,\u201d the ad copy read. This was \u201cthe magazine of leisure interests for men who know enough to have them,\u201d or so its tagline declared in a series of wittily wordy ads that ran in The Times. The image that struck hardest in those early years was not a photograph of a \u201clovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman,\u201d however. It was a cartoon that depicted Emperor Hirohito of Japan, and it was the subject of an international incident.", "paragraph_answer": "96 YEARS AGO Prehistory \u2014 before the Kardashians and Caitlyn with a C, before even the naked and pregnant Demi Moore \u2014 Vanity Fair knew how to strike with an image. It boasted as much in advertisements published in The New York Times in 1919, during the magazine\u2019s first heyday. \u201cVanity Fair prides itself on knowing every lovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman in the world and printing her photograph in its pages,\u201d the ad copy read. This was \u201cthe magazine of leisure interests for men who know enough to have them,\u201d or so its tagline declared in a series of wittily wordy ads that ran in The Times. The image that struck hardest in those early years was not a photograph of a \u201clovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman,\u201d however. It was a cartoon that depicted Emperor Hirohito of Japan, and it was the subject of an international incident.", "sentence_answer": "It boasted as much in advertisements published in The New York Times in 1919, during the magazine\u2019s first heyday.", "paragraph_id": "5d7054e9c8e4820a9b66eca0"} +{"question": "which Italian architect cooked up a tabletop dispenser for incense?", "paragraph": "If you think bell bottoms and beads were the beginning and end of 1960s countercultural design, \u201cHippie Modernism: The Struggle for Utopia\u201d at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis has news. This was the decade, shading into the 1970s, whose architects created the Relaxation Cube, the walk-in Knowledge Box, inflatable Instant Cities and Microhouses for the masses. The Canadian designer Evelyn Roth crocheted heat-repelling car covers from discarded videotape film; the Italian Ettore Sottsass cooked up a tabletop dispenser for incense, LSD, opium and laughing gas.", "answer": "Ettore Sottsass", "sentence": "The Canadian designer Evelyn Roth crocheted heat-repelling car covers from discarded videotape film; the Italian Ettore Sottsass cooked up a tabletop dispenser for incense, LSD, opium and laughing gas.", "paragraph_sentence": "If you think bell bottoms and beads were the beginning and end of 1960s countercultural design, \u201cHippie Modernism: The Struggle for Utopia\u201d at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis has news. This was the decade, shading into the 1970s, whose architects created the Relaxation Cube, the walk-in Knowledge Box, inflatable Instant Cities and Microhouses for the masses. The Canadian designer Evelyn Roth crocheted heat-repelling car covers from discarded videotape film; the Italian Ettore Sottsass cooked up a tabletop dispenser for incense, LSD, opium and laughing gas. ", "paragraph_answer": "If you think bell bottoms and beads were the beginning and end of 1960s countercultural design, \u201cHippie Modernism: The Struggle for Utopia\u201d at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis has news. This was the decade, shading into the 1970s, whose architects created the Relaxation Cube, the walk-in Knowledge Box, inflatable Instant Cities and Microhouses for the masses. The Canadian designer Evelyn Roth crocheted heat-repelling car covers from discarded videotape film; the Italian Ettore Sottsass cooked up a tabletop dispenser for incense, LSD, opium and laughing gas.", "sentence_answer": "The Canadian designer Evelyn Roth crocheted heat-repelling car covers from discarded videotape film; the Italian Ettore Sottsass cooked up a tabletop dispenser for incense, LSD, opium and laughing gas.", "paragraph_id": "5d702b75c8e4820a9b66d909"} +{"question": "How was it called the most expensive painting sold in modern times?", "paragraph": "The $616,000 paid in 1958 by the banking heir Paul Mellon for C\u00e9zanne\u2019s \u201cBoy in a Red Waistcoat\u201d at Sotheby\u2019s sale of works from the Jakob Goldschmidt Collection \u2014 the first-ever \u201cblack tie\u201d evening sale \u2014 was hailed as an auction high for a modern work of art. But then Old Masters were still the dominant collecting taste. Also, as \u201cCapital in the 21st Century\u201d points out, at that time the richest 10 percent claimed less than 35 percent of America\u2019s national income, down from 50 percent in the 1920s, when Huntington was spending $20,000 on phone calls. It\u2019s worth noting that this income-adjusted methodology ranks Van Gogh\u2019s \u201cDr. Gachet\u201d as the most expensive artwork sold at auction in modern times. That result was a direct product of Japan\u2019s late 1980s \u201cbubble\u201d economy. Now, as the auction houses never tire of telling us, there are a lot more players at the top end of the art market from a lot more countries. No fewer than five telephone bidders were prepared to spend more than $120 million on Picasso\u2019s \u201cFemmes d\u2019Alger\u201d in New York last month.", "answer": "Dr. Gachet", "sentence": "It\u2019s worth noting that this income-adjusted methodology ranks Van Gogh\u2019s \u201c Dr. Gachet \u201d as the most expensive artwork sold at auction in modern times.", "paragraph_sentence": "The $616,000 paid in 1958 by the banking heir Paul Mellon for C\u00e9zanne\u2019s \u201cBoy in a Red Waistcoat\u201d at Sotheby\u2019s sale of works from the Jakob Goldschmidt Collection \u2014 the first-ever \u201cblack tie\u201d evening sale \u2014 was hailed as an auction high for a modern work of art. But then Old Masters were still the dominant collecting taste. Also, as \u201cCapital in the 21st Century\u201d points out, at that time the richest 10 percent claimed less than 35 percent of America\u2019s national income, down from 50 percent in the 1920s, when Huntington was spending $20,000 on phone calls. It\u2019s worth noting that this income-adjusted methodology ranks Van Gogh\u2019s \u201c Dr. Gachet \u201d as the most expensive artwork sold at auction in modern times. That result was a direct product of Japan\u2019s late 1980s \u201cbubble\u201d economy. Now, as the auction houses never tire of telling us, there are a lot more players at the top end of the art market from a lot more countries. No fewer than five telephone bidders were prepared to spend more than $120 million on Picasso\u2019s \u201cFemmes d\u2019Alger\u201d in New York last month.", "paragraph_answer": "The $616,000 paid in 1958 by the banking heir Paul Mellon for C\u00e9zanne\u2019s \u201cBoy in a Red Waistcoat\u201d at Sotheby\u2019s sale of works from the Jakob Goldschmidt Collection \u2014 the first-ever \u201cblack tie\u201d evening sale \u2014 was hailed as an auction high for a modern work of art. But then Old Masters were still the dominant collecting taste. Also, as \u201cCapital in the 21st Century\u201d points out, at that time the richest 10 percent claimed less than 35 percent of America\u2019s national income, down from 50 percent in the 1920s, when Huntington was spending $20,000 on phone calls. It\u2019s worth noting that this income-adjusted methodology ranks Van Gogh\u2019s \u201c Dr. Gachet \u201d as the most expensive artwork sold at auction in modern times. That result was a direct product of Japan\u2019s late 1980s \u201cbubble\u201d economy. Now, as the auction houses never tire of telling us, there are a lot more players at the top end of the art market from a lot more countries. No fewer than five telephone bidders were prepared to spend more than $120 million on Picasso\u2019s \u201cFemmes d\u2019Alger\u201d in New York last month.", "sentence_answer": "It\u2019s worth noting that this income-adjusted methodology ranks Van Gogh\u2019s \u201c Dr. Gachet \u201d as the most expensive artwork sold at auction in modern times.", "paragraph_id": "5d7025a5c8e4820a9b66d1f7"} +{"question": "What do officials agree on about the subsidies?", "paragraph": "The problem, officials have concluded, is that the subsidies were much too small. In 2011, HUD started the Dallas experiment as a part of a settlement with housing activists. It has since added five smaller regions to the program. In Dallas, the maximum subsidy for a three-bedroom apartment is now just $850 in the cheapest ZIP codes, but as much as $1,840 in the most expensive ZIP codes. In 33 of the 50 largest metropolitan areas, the subsidy for the wealthiest ZIP code would be more than twice as high as the subsidy in the poorest ZIP code. In New York, San Diego and Washington, it would be more than three times as high.", "answer": "much too small", "sentence": "The problem, officials have concluded, is that the subsidies were much too small .", "paragraph_sentence": " The problem, officials have concluded, is that the subsidies were much too small . In 2011, HUD started the Dallas experiment as a part of a settlement with housing activists. It has since added five smaller regions to the program. In Dallas, the maximum subsidy for a three-bedroom apartment is now just $850 in the cheapest ZIP codes, but as much as $1,840 in the most expensive ZIP codes. In 33 of the 50 largest metropolitan areas, the subsidy for the wealthiest ZIP code would be more than twice as high as the subsidy in the poorest ZIP code. In New York, San Diego and Washington, it would be more than three times as high.", "paragraph_answer": "The problem, officials have concluded, is that the subsidies were much too small . In 2011, HUD started the Dallas experiment as a part of a settlement with housing activists. It has since added five smaller regions to the program. In Dallas, the maximum subsidy for a three-bedroom apartment is now just $850 in the cheapest ZIP codes, but as much as $1,840 in the most expensive ZIP codes. In 33 of the 50 largest metropolitan areas, the subsidy for the wealthiest ZIP code would be more than twice as high as the subsidy in the poorest ZIP code. In New York, San Diego and Washington, it would be more than three times as high.", "sentence_answer": "The problem, officials have concluded, is that the subsidies were much too small .", "paragraph_id": "5d7047fac8e4820a9b66e8c5"} +{"question": "Is Woods a public figure?", "paragraph": "Woods said he was able to joke after a round like Friday\u2019s because on the PGA Tour, bad days come with the picturesque scenery. \u201cWe all have days like this,\u201d he said. \u201cUnfortunately, you know, mine was in a public forum, in a public setting.\u201d Is it worrisome that Woods\u2019s worst day as a pro coincided with one of the best by his heir apparent, Rory McIlroy, who posted a 64 in the second round of the Dubai Desert Classic? Should Woods\u2019s galleries take anything from the fact that Jack Nicklaus, whose 18 career major victories Woods is targeting, won three of them after age 39? Are Woods\u2019s chipping yips and his recent spate of injuries the beginning of his demise or grist for a gripping comeback tale?", "answer": "public forum", "sentence": "\u201cUnfortunately, you know, mine was in a public forum , in a public setting.\u201d Is it worrisome that Woods\u2019s worst day as a pro coincided with one of the best by his heir apparent, Rory McIlroy, who posted a 64 in the second round of the Dubai Desert Classic?", "paragraph_sentence": "Woods said he was able to joke after a round like Friday\u2019s because on the PGA Tour, bad days come with the picturesque scenery. \u201cWe all have days like this,\u201d he said. \u201cUnfortunately, you know, mine was in a public forum , in a public setting.\u201d Is it worrisome that Woods\u2019s worst day as a pro coincided with one of the best by his heir apparent, Rory McIlroy, who posted a 64 in the second round of the Dubai Desert Classic? Should Woods\u2019s galleries take anything from the fact that Jack Nicklaus, whose 18 career major victories Woods is targeting, won three of them after age 39? Are Woods\u2019s chipping yips and his recent spate of injuries the beginning of his demise or grist for a gripping comeback tale?", "paragraph_answer": "Woods said he was able to joke after a round like Friday\u2019s because on the PGA Tour, bad days come with the picturesque scenery. \u201cWe all have days like this,\u201d he said. \u201cUnfortunately, you know, mine was in a public forum , in a public setting.\u201d Is it worrisome that Woods\u2019s worst day as a pro coincided with one of the best by his heir apparent, Rory McIlroy, who posted a 64 in the second round of the Dubai Desert Classic? Should Woods\u2019s galleries take anything from the fact that Jack Nicklaus, whose 18 career major victories Woods is targeting, won three of them after age 39? Are Woods\u2019s chipping yips and his recent spate of injuries the beginning of his demise or grist for a gripping comeback tale?", "sentence_answer": "\u201cUnfortunately, you know, mine was in a public forum , in a public setting.\u201d Is it worrisome that Woods\u2019s worst day as a pro coincided with one of the best by his heir apparent, Rory McIlroy, who posted a 64 in the second round of the Dubai Desert Classic?", "paragraph_id": "5d702420c8e4820a9b66d054"} +{"question": "What was the first Roman Catholic Cathedral in Brooklyn?", "paragraph": "For a Roman Catholic church, an organ is much more than an instrument. It has an almost sacramental power, resounding for godly glory. It sings hymns as another member of the congregation, a part of the community. It breathes new life as its community does. So Msgr. Kieran E. Harrington explained on Sunday afternoon, as the open doors of the Co-Cathedral of St. Joseph let the blare of Prospect Avenue into its sanctuary in Prospect Heights. This sanctuary, Brooklyn\u2019s second Roman Catholic cathedral (the first was the Cathedral Basilica of St. James), has recently undergone an $18.5 million renovation, and it glistens with a clean, golden sheen. Only now, however, has its organ been restored. At the dedication ceremony and concert this past weekend, the gifted young organist Christopher Houlihan proved that the family firm charged with the overhaul, Peragallo, has done an immaculate job.", "answer": "Cathedral Basilica of St. James", "sentence": "the Cathedral Basilica of St. James ), has recently undergone an $18.5 million renovation, and it glistens with a clean, golden sheen.", "paragraph_sentence": "For a Roman Catholic church, an organ is much more than an instrument. It has an almost sacramental power, resounding for godly glory. It sings hymns as another member of the congregation, a part of the community. It breathes new life as its community does. So Msgr. Kieran E. Harrington explained on Sunday afternoon, as the open doors of the Co-Cathedral of St. Joseph let the blare of Prospect Avenue into its sanctuary in Prospect Heights. This sanctuary, Brooklyn\u2019s second Roman Catholic cathedral (the first was the Cathedral Basilica of St. James ), has recently undergone an $18.5 million renovation, and it glistens with a clean, golden sheen. Only now, however, has its organ been restored. At the dedication ceremony and concert this past weekend, the gifted young organist Christopher Houlihan proved that the family firm charged with the overhaul, Peragallo, has done an immaculate job.", "paragraph_answer": "For a Roman Catholic church, an organ is much more than an instrument. It has an almost sacramental power, resounding for godly glory. It sings hymns as another member of the congregation, a part of the community. It breathes new life as its community does. So Msgr. Kieran E. Harrington explained on Sunday afternoon, as the open doors of the Co-Cathedral of St. Joseph let the blare of Prospect Avenue into its sanctuary in Prospect Heights. This sanctuary, Brooklyn\u2019s second Roman Catholic cathedral (the first was the Cathedral Basilica of St. James ), has recently undergone an $18.5 million renovation, and it glistens with a clean, golden sheen. Only now, however, has its organ been restored. At the dedication ceremony and concert this past weekend, the gifted young organist Christopher Houlihan proved that the family firm charged with the overhaul, Peragallo, has done an immaculate job.", "sentence_answer": "the Cathedral Basilica of St. James ), has recently undergone an $18.5 million renovation, and it glistens with a clean, golden sheen.", "paragraph_id": "5d703899c8e4820a9b66e145"} +{"question": "It was said Mr. Trump wanted to restrict who from entering the country?", "paragraph": "\u201cPut Hillary in jail!\u201d a man shouted. Mr. Cruz smiled. \u201cShe may already be there,\u201d he said. \u201cBut if so, I\u2019ll be sure to bake her a cake and send it to her.\u201d Several voters interviewed across three states on the trip so far said they admired Mr. Trump, and had previously considered supporting him, but had found themselves drifting toward Mr. Cruz. \u201cHe\u2019s a Southern guy,\u201d Frank Dolhan, 50, said of Mr. Cruz in Kennesaw. \u201cTrump\u2019s a Northern guy.\u201d Mike Homan, 35, of Dallas, Ga., attended the event with a Trump supporter, Howard Adkins, whom he hoped to flip. Mr. Adkins wondered if Mr. Cruz might be able to preserve the spirit of some of Mr. Trump\u2019s more explosive proposals, like restricting Muslim entry into the country, which he said had veered \u201cunconstitutional, a little.\u201d \u201cIt\u2019s a hard thing to do,\u201d Mr. Adkins said, \u201cto stay within our Constitution and keep people out.\u201d An event on Sunday in Trussville, Ala., included residents who had attended Mr. Trump\u2019s rally in nearby Birmingham last month. \u201cThey have very similar messages,\u201d said Steve McMunn, 63, who remains torn between the two.", "answer": "Muslim", "sentence": "Mr. Adkins wondered if Mr. Cruz might be able to preserve the spirit of some of Mr. Trump\u2019s more explosive proposals, like restricting Muslim entry into the country, which he said had veered \u201cunconstitutional, a little.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cPut Hillary in jail!\u201d a man shouted. Mr. Cruz smiled. \u201cShe may already be there,\u201d he said. \u201cBut if so, I\u2019ll be sure to bake her a cake and send it to her.\u201d Several voters interviewed across three states on the trip so far said they admired Mr. Trump, and had previously considered supporting him, but had found themselves drifting toward Mr. Cruz. \u201cHe\u2019s a Southern guy,\u201d Frank Dolhan, 50, said of Mr. Cruz in Kennesaw. \u201cTrump\u2019s a Northern guy.\u201d Mike Homan, 35, of Dallas, Ga., attended the event with a Trump supporter, Howard Adkins, whom he hoped to flip. Mr. Adkins wondered if Mr. Cruz might be able to preserve the spirit of some of Mr. Trump\u2019s more explosive proposals, like restricting Muslim entry into the country, which he said had veered \u201cunconstitutional, a little.\u201d \u201cIt\u2019s a hard thing to do,\u201d Mr. Adkins said, \u201cto stay within our Constitution and keep people out.\u201d An event on Sunday in Trussville, Ala., included residents who had attended Mr. Trump\u2019s rally in nearby Birmingham last month. \u201cThey have very similar messages,\u201d said Steve McMunn, 63, who remains torn between the two.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cPut Hillary in jail!\u201d a man shouted. Mr. Cruz smiled. \u201cShe may already be there,\u201d he said. \u201cBut if so, I\u2019ll be sure to bake her a cake and send it to her.\u201d Several voters interviewed across three states on the trip so far said they admired Mr. Trump, and had previously considered supporting him, but had found themselves drifting toward Mr. Cruz. \u201cHe\u2019s a Southern guy,\u201d Frank Dolhan, 50, said of Mr. Cruz in Kennesaw. \u201cTrump\u2019s a Northern guy.\u201d Mike Homan, 35, of Dallas, Ga., attended the event with a Trump supporter, Howard Adkins, whom he hoped to flip. Mr. Adkins wondered if Mr. Cruz might be able to preserve the spirit of some of Mr. Trump\u2019s more explosive proposals, like restricting Muslim entry into the country, which he said had veered \u201cunconstitutional, a little.\u201d \u201cIt\u2019s a hard thing to do,\u201d Mr. Adkins said, \u201cto stay within our Constitution and keep people out.\u201d An event on Sunday in Trussville, Ala., included residents who had attended Mr. Trump\u2019s rally in nearby Birmingham last month. \u201cThey have very similar messages,\u201d said Steve McMunn, 63, who remains torn between the two.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Adkins wondered if Mr. Cruz might be able to preserve the spirit of some of Mr. Trump\u2019s more explosive proposals, like restricting Muslim entry into the country, which he said had veered \u201cunconstitutional, a little.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d7037fbc8e4820a9b66e0f5"} +{"question": "What was Jame's rate in the playoffs?", "paragraph": "Counting all of the rounds, James\u2019s rate is 37.8 so far in the playoffs. Going back to the 1970s, when the statistic becomes available, one player who made the finals had a greater rate: In 1993, when he won the third of his first triumvirate of titles, Michael Jordan rated at 38.0, according to basketball-reference.com. With Irving out for the rest of the playoffs, James\u2019s rate may well climb past Jordan\u2019s before the series concludes. And Jordan\u2019s rate for the 1993 finals alone, 38.9, lags behind James\u2019s 44.0.", "answer": "37.8", "sentence": "Counting all of the rounds, James\u2019s rate is 37.8 so far in the playoffs.", "paragraph_sentence": " Counting all of the rounds, James\u2019s rate is 37.8 so far in the playoffs. Going back to the 1970s, when the statistic becomes available, one player who made the finals had a greater rate: In 1993, when he won the third of his first triumvirate of titles, Michael Jordan rated at 38.0, according to basketball-reference.com. With Irving out for the rest of the playoffs, James\u2019s rate may well climb past Jordan\u2019s before the series concludes. And Jordan\u2019s rate for the 1993 finals alone, 38.9, lags behind James\u2019s 44.0.", "paragraph_answer": "Counting all of the rounds, James\u2019s rate is 37.8 so far in the playoffs. Going back to the 1970s, when the statistic becomes available, one player who made the finals had a greater rate: In 1993, when he won the third of his first triumvirate of titles, Michael Jordan rated at 38.0, according to basketball-reference.com. With Irving out for the rest of the playoffs, James\u2019s rate may well climb past Jordan\u2019s before the series concludes. And Jordan\u2019s rate for the 1993 finals alone, 38.9, lags behind James\u2019s 44.0.", "sentence_answer": "Counting all of the rounds, James\u2019s rate is 37.8 so far in the playoffs.", "paragraph_id": "5d70095ec8e4820a9b66b1e7"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700cb3c8e4820a9b66b80f"} +{"question": "What player didn't receive the Most Valuable Player award, but probably should have?", "paragraph": "Persuade Tim Duncan not to retire? Check. Bring back Danny Green on a below-market contract? Check. Get the league\u2019s top free-agent prize in LaMarcus Aldridge? Check. Persuade David West to join the team practically as a volunteer? Check. Enter the season as one of the two or three teams most likely to win it all for roughly the 17th consecutive season? Check. The San Antonio Spurs have some sort of front-office cheat code. James Harden may have been robbed of a Most Valuable Player Award, regardless of how good Stephen Curry\u2019s team was, but the Houston Rockets were a bit of a mirage, offering little beyond the bearded bon vivant. Dwight Howard, once a league darling, has faded, but the team could play more well-rounded basketball this season after adding Ty Lawson.", "answer": "James Harden", "sentence": "James Harden may have been robbed of a Most Valuable Player Award, regardless of how good Stephen Curry\u2019s team was, but the Houston Rockets were a bit of a mirage, offering little beyond the bearded bon vivant.", "paragraph_sentence": "Persuade Tim Duncan not to retire? Check. Bring back Danny Green on a below-market contract? Check. Get the league\u2019s top free-agent prize in LaMarcus Aldridge? Check. Persuade David West to join the team practically as a volunteer? Check. Enter the season as one of the two or three teams most likely to win it all for roughly the 17th consecutive season? Check. The San Antonio Spurs have some sort of front-office cheat code. James Harden may have been robbed of a Most Valuable Player Award, regardless of how good Stephen Curry\u2019s team was, but the Houston Rockets were a bit of a mirage, offering little beyond the bearded bon vivant. Dwight Howard, once a league darling, has faded, but the team could play more well-rounded basketball this season after adding Ty Lawson.", "paragraph_answer": "Persuade Tim Duncan not to retire? Check. Bring back Danny Green on a below-market contract? Check. Get the league\u2019s top free-agent prize in LaMarcus Aldridge? Check. Persuade David West to join the team practically as a volunteer? Check. Enter the season as one of the two or three teams most likely to win it all for roughly the 17th consecutive season? Check. The San Antonio Spurs have some sort of front-office cheat code. James Harden may have been robbed of a Most Valuable Player Award, regardless of how good Stephen Curry\u2019s team was, but the Houston Rockets were a bit of a mirage, offering little beyond the bearded bon vivant. Dwight Howard, once a league darling, has faded, but the team could play more well-rounded basketball this season after adding Ty Lawson.", "sentence_answer": " James Harden may have been robbed of a Most Valuable Player Award, regardless of how good Stephen Curry\u2019s team was, but the Houston Rockets were a bit of a mirage, offering little beyond the bearded bon vivant.", "paragraph_id": "5d7052aac8e4820a9b66ebec"} +{"question": "Who worked on Love Never Dies?", "paragraph": "Glenn Slater, the \u201cSchool of Rock\u201d lyricist, said he thought Mr. Lloyd Webber \u201chad a little more self-doubt\u201d as he decided between writing in the mode of 1960s classic rock or 1970s heavy metal. Mr. Slater, who also worked on \u201cLove Never Dies,\u201d said that he suggested to Mr. Lloyd Webber, \u201cWe should think of it like Meat Loaf or Jim Steinman: huge, operatic, over-the-top rock.\u201d At that point, Mr. Slater said, \u201cHe perked up and said, \u2018Oh, I\u2019ve worked with Jim Steinman.\u2019\u201d (Together they wrote the musical \u201cWhistle Down the Wind.\u201d)", "answer": "Mr. Slater", "sentence": "Mr. Slater , who also worked on \u201cLove Never Dies,\u201d said that he suggested to Mr. Lloyd Webber, \u201cWe should think of it like Meat Loaf or Jim Steinman: huge, operatic, over-the-top rock.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Glenn Slater, the \u201cSchool of Rock\u201d lyricist, said he thought Mr. Lloyd Webber \u201chad a little more self-doubt\u201d as he decided between writing in the mode of 1960s classic rock or 1970s heavy metal. Mr. Slater , who also worked on \u201cLove Never Dies,\u201d said that he suggested to Mr. Lloyd Webber, \u201cWe should think of it like Meat Loaf or Jim Steinman: huge, operatic, over-the-top rock.\u201d At that point, Mr. Slater said, \u201cHe perked up and said, \u2018Oh, I\u2019ve worked with Jim Steinman.\u2019\u201d (Together they wrote the musical \u201cWhistle Down the Wind.\u201d)", "paragraph_answer": "Glenn Slater, the \u201cSchool of Rock\u201d lyricist, said he thought Mr. Lloyd Webber \u201chad a little more self-doubt\u201d as he decided between writing in the mode of 1960s classic rock or 1970s heavy metal. Mr. Slater , who also worked on \u201cLove Never Dies,\u201d said that he suggested to Mr. Lloyd Webber, \u201cWe should think of it like Meat Loaf or Jim Steinman: huge, operatic, over-the-top rock.\u201d At that point, Mr. Slater said, \u201cHe perked up and said, \u2018Oh, I\u2019ve worked with Jim Steinman.\u2019\u201d (Together they wrote the musical \u201cWhistle Down the Wind.\u201d)", "sentence_answer": " Mr. Slater , who also worked on \u201cLove Never Dies,\u201d said that he suggested to Mr. Lloyd Webber, \u201cWe should think of it like Meat Loaf or Jim Steinman: huge, operatic, over-the-top rock.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d704657c8e4820a9b66e837"} +{"question": "Which current is anti-Western?", "paragraph": "The other current has been the neo-Westernizer, which re-exerted itself strongly during the Mikhail Gorbachev years and gave rise to his world-transforming ideas and ideals. In contrast to the neo-Slavophile current that is anti-Western, this liberal rival outlook actually seeks integration with the West, which Mr. Gorbachev assiduously pursued during his tenure. Unimagined opportunities for cooperation to fashion a more peaceful world may have been possible if Mr. Gorbachev had been able to continue his revolution. Unfortunately, given the popularity of the neo-Slavophile current in today\u2019s Russia, the world is facing a new Cold War. Reza Fakhari, Brooklyn, N.Y.", "answer": "actually seeks integration with the West", "sentence": "In contrast to the neo-Slavophile current that is anti-Western, this liberal rival outlook actually seeks integration with the West , which Mr. Gorbachev assiduously pursued during his tenure.", "paragraph_sentence": "The other current has been the neo-Westernizer, which re-exerted itself strongly during the Mikhail Gorbachev years and gave rise to his world-transforming ideas and ideals. In contrast to the neo-Slavophile current that is anti-Western, this liberal rival outlook actually seeks integration with the West , which Mr. Gorbachev assiduously pursued during his tenure. Unimagined opportunities for cooperation to fashion a more peaceful world may have been possible if Mr. Gorbachev had been able to continue his revolution. Unfortunately, given the popularity of the neo-Slavophile current in today\u2019s Russia, the world is facing a new Cold War. Reza Fakhari, Brooklyn, N.Y.", "paragraph_answer": "The other current has been the neo-Westernizer, which re-exerted itself strongly during the Mikhail Gorbachev years and gave rise to his world-transforming ideas and ideals. In contrast to the neo-Slavophile current that is anti-Western, this liberal rival outlook actually seeks integration with the West , which Mr. Gorbachev assiduously pursued during his tenure. Unimagined opportunities for cooperation to fashion a more peaceful world may have been possible if Mr. Gorbachev had been able to continue his revolution. Unfortunately, given the popularity of the neo-Slavophile current in today\u2019s Russia, the world is facing a new Cold War. Reza Fakhari, Brooklyn, N.Y.", "sentence_answer": "In contrast to the neo-Slavophile current that is anti-Western, this liberal rival outlook actually seeks integration with the West , which Mr. Gorbachev assiduously pursued during his tenure.", "paragraph_id": "5d709b61c8e4820a9b66f623"} +{"question": "Where does W. McIntyre Burnham work?", "paragraph": "But their rigid opposition to animal research in particular may come at a steep price. \u201cThey don\u2019t want to play the game,\u201d said W. McIntyre Burnham, a neuropharmacologist at the University of Toronto, with whom Dr. Ohayon studied. \u201cThey may be the wave of the future, but I think they may also have trouble getting support.\u201d The two came to the idea of an alternative approach to neuroscience on a backpacking trip on Vancouver Island in 2011. Dr. Lam was ending a postdoctoral fellowship, and the two scientists were worried about the direction of neuroscience. As it turned out, they were not the only ones. Eventually they found a kindred spirit in the neuroscientist Jay S. Coggan. The Green Neuroscience Laboratory is affiliated with \u2014 and shares offices with \u2014 the NeuroLinx Research Institute, which he founded.", "answer": "University of Toronto", "sentence": "\u201cThey don\u2019t want to play the game,\u201d said W. McIntyre Burnham, a neuropharmacologist at the University of Toronto , with whom Dr. Ohayon studied.", "paragraph_sentence": "But their rigid opposition to animal research in particular may come at a steep price. \u201cThey don\u2019t want to play the game,\u201d said W. McIntyre Burnham, a neuropharmacologist at the University of Toronto , with whom Dr. Ohayon studied. \u201cThey may be the wave of the future, but I think they may also have trouble getting support.\u201d The two came to the idea of an alternative approach to neuroscience on a backpacking trip on Vancouver Island in 2011. Dr. Lam was ending a postdoctoral fellowship, and the two scientists were worried about the direction of neuroscience. As it turned out, they were not the only ones. Eventually they found a kindred spirit in the neuroscientist Jay S. Coggan. The Green Neuroscience Laboratory is affiliated with \u2014 and shares offices with \u2014 the NeuroLinx Research Institute, which he founded.", "paragraph_answer": "But their rigid opposition to animal research in particular may come at a steep price. \u201cThey don\u2019t want to play the game,\u201d said W. McIntyre Burnham, a neuropharmacologist at the University of Toronto , with whom Dr. Ohayon studied. \u201cThey may be the wave of the future, but I think they may also have trouble getting support.\u201d The two came to the idea of an alternative approach to neuroscience on a backpacking trip on Vancouver Island in 2011. Dr. Lam was ending a postdoctoral fellowship, and the two scientists were worried about the direction of neuroscience. As it turned out, they were not the only ones. Eventually they found a kindred spirit in the neuroscientist Jay S. Coggan. The Green Neuroscience Laboratory is affiliated with \u2014 and shares offices with \u2014 the NeuroLinx Research Institute, which he founded.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThey don\u2019t want to play the game,\u201d said W. McIntyre Burnham, a neuropharmacologist at the University of Toronto , with whom Dr. Ohayon studied.", "paragraph_id": "5d6f9488c8e4820a9b66a776"} +{"question": "Who is a partner at Khosla Ventures?", "paragraph": "\u201cOn a phone, the biggest intellectual difference is you don\u2019t go to your search box as your first resort,\u201d said Keith Rabois, a partner at the venture capital firm Khosla Ventures, who has invested in a search start-up called Relcy. \u201cOn a watch, it\u2019s inconceivable that you would go to a search box perhaps at all.\u201d John Lilly, a venture capitalist at Greylock Partners, said the real prize in mobile search was \u201cwhoever figures out what questions people really want to ask their phones while they are walking around, and how they will ask those questions.\u201d That is \u201cvery unlikely to look like it did five years ago, when you typed it into a box,\u201d he said.", "answer": "Keith Rabois", "sentence": "\u201cOn a phone, the biggest intellectual difference is you don\u2019t go to your search box as your first resort,\u201d said Keith Rabois , a partner at the venture capital firm Khosla Ventures, who has invested in a search start-up called Relcy.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cOn a phone, the biggest intellectual difference is you don\u2019t go to your search box as your first resort,\u201d said Keith Rabois , a partner at the venture capital firm Khosla Ventures, who has invested in a search start-up called Relcy. \u201cOn a watch, it\u2019s inconceivable that you would go to a search box perhaps at all.\u201d John Lilly, a venture capitalist at Greylock Partners, said the real prize in mobile search was \u201cwhoever figures out what questions people really want to ask their phones while they are walking around, and how they will ask those questions.\u201d That is \u201cvery unlikely to look like it did five years ago, when you typed it into a box,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cOn a phone, the biggest intellectual difference is you don\u2019t go to your search box as your first resort,\u201d said Keith Rabois , a partner at the venture capital firm Khosla Ventures, who has invested in a search start-up called Relcy. \u201cOn a watch, it\u2019s inconceivable that you would go to a search box perhaps at all.\u201d John Lilly, a venture capitalist at Greylock Partners, said the real prize in mobile search was \u201cwhoever figures out what questions people really want to ask their phones while they are walking around, and how they will ask those questions.\u201d That is \u201cvery unlikely to look like it did five years ago, when you typed it into a box,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cOn a phone, the biggest intellectual difference is you don\u2019t go to your search box as your first resort,\u201d said Keith Rabois , a partner at the venture capital firm Khosla Ventures, who has invested in a search start-up called Relcy.", "paragraph_id": "5d7033dec8e4820a9b66ded9"} +{"question": "Who scored the tie breaking goal", "paragraph": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "answer": "Cody McLeod", "sentence": "AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg.", "paragraph_sentence": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "paragraph_answer": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "sentence_answer": "AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg.", "paragraph_id": "5d70550bc8e4820a9b66ecbc"} +{"question": "In what year did the most homicides occur in New York Cities history?", "paragraph": "9 P.M. (NBC) DATELINE NBC: TIPPING POINT It was the case that pushed the public over the edge. In 1990 \u2014 the most violent year in New York City history, with 2,245 homicides \u2014 Brian Watkins, a tourist, was stabbed on a subway platform while trying to protect his family from muggers. This month, Johnny Hincapie, one of seven men convicted of felony murder in Mr. Watkins\u2019s death, was released after 25 years in prison, his conviction overturned by new evidence and his contention that his confession was coerced. Lester Holt interviews Mr. Hincapie, his family and New York City Police Commissioner William J. Bratton. 9 P.M. (CUNY) TIMESTALKS Robert Redford and Cate Blanchett discuss \u201cTruth,\u201d their film about the controversy over a CBS report that President George W. Bush received preferential treatment from the Air National Guard. When Mary Mapes, the producer, could not authenticate documents that supported the charges, she was fired, and Dan Rather later stepped down as anchorman. Also appearing: Ms. Mapes and Mr. Rather. (Image: Mr. Redford) 10 P.M. (Discovery) PACIFIC WARRIORS Some brave souls use ancient techniques and modern sea kayaks to chase monster fish in Hawaii. The high point: \u201cHawaiian sleigh rides,\u201d when they hook a behemoth that drags them out to sea 10 miles or more. 10 P.M. (Cinemax) THE KNICK Would you want a heroin addict operating on you? The board of the Knickerbocker Hospital doesn\u2019t think so and tries to prevent Dr. Thackery from returning.", "answer": "1990", "sentence": "In 1990 \u2014 the most violent year in New York City history, with 2,245 homicides \u2014 Brian Watkins, a tourist, was stabbed on a subway platform while trying to protect his family from muggers.", "paragraph_sentence": "9 P.M. (NBC) DATELINE NBC: TIPPING POINT It was the case that pushed the public over the edge. In 1990 \u2014 the most violent year in New York City history, with 2,245 homicides \u2014 Brian Watkins, a tourist, was stabbed on a subway platform while trying to protect his family from muggers. This month, Johnny Hincapie, one of seven men convicted of felony murder in Mr. Watkins\u2019s death, was released after 25 years in prison, his conviction overturned by new evidence and his contention that his confession was coerced. Lester Holt interviews Mr. Hincapie, his family and New York City Police Commissioner William J. Bratton. 9 P.M. (CUNY) TIMESTALKS Robert Redford and Cate Blanchett discuss \u201cTruth,\u201d their film about the controversy over a CBS report that President George W. Bush received preferential treatment from the Air National Guard. When Mary Mapes, the producer, could not authenticate documents that supported the charges, she was fired, and Dan Rather later stepped down as anchorman. Also appearing: Ms. Mapes and Mr. Rather. (Image: Mr. Redford) 10 P.M. (Discovery) PACIFIC WARRIORS Some brave souls use ancient techniques and modern sea kayaks to chase monster fish in Hawaii. The high point: \u201cHawaiian sleigh rides,\u201d when they hook a behemoth that drags them out to sea 10 miles or more. 10 P.M. (Cinemax) THE KNICK Would you want a heroin addict operating on you? The board of the Knickerbocker Hospital doesn\u2019t think so and tries to prevent Dr. Thackery from returning.", "paragraph_answer": "9 P.M. (NBC) DATELINE NBC: TIPPING POINT It was the case that pushed the public over the edge. In 1990 \u2014 the most violent year in New York City history, with 2,245 homicides \u2014 Brian Watkins, a tourist, was stabbed on a subway platform while trying to protect his family from muggers. This month, Johnny Hincapie, one of seven men convicted of felony murder in Mr. Watkins\u2019s death, was released after 25 years in prison, his conviction overturned by new evidence and his contention that his confession was coerced. Lester Holt interviews Mr. Hincapie, his family and New York City Police Commissioner William J. Bratton. 9 P.M. (CUNY) TIMESTALKS Robert Redford and Cate Blanchett discuss \u201cTruth,\u201d their film about the controversy over a CBS report that President George W. Bush received preferential treatment from the Air National Guard. When Mary Mapes, the producer, could not authenticate documents that supported the charges, she was fired, and Dan Rather later stepped down as anchorman. Also appearing: Ms. Mapes and Mr. Rather. (Image: Mr. Redford) 10 P.M. (Discovery) PACIFIC WARRIORS Some brave souls use ancient techniques and modern sea kayaks to chase monster fish in Hawaii. The high point: \u201cHawaiian sleigh rides,\u201d when they hook a behemoth that drags them out to sea 10 miles or more. 10 P.M. (Cinemax) THE KNICK Would you want a heroin addict operating on you? The board of the Knickerbocker Hospital doesn\u2019t think so and tries to prevent Dr. Thackery from returning.", "sentence_answer": "In 1990 \u2014 the most violent year in New York City history, with 2,245 homicides \u2014 Brian Watkins, a tourist, was stabbed on a subway platform while trying to protect his family from muggers.", "paragraph_id": "5d700a3ec8e4820a9b66b3c8"} +{"question": "What kind of competitions exists for the Navdy in the market?", "paragraph": "This technology is in its infancy. Navdy\u2019s device isn\u2019t shipping until later this year, and it\u2019s not clear if it will work as seamlessly as presented in the video when used in less perfect real-life conditions. But, broadly speaking, the Navdy device falls into a booming category of in-car gadgetry that might be fairly categorized as \u201cyou can have your cake and eat it too.\u201d Drive, get texts, talk on the phone, even interact on social media, and do it all without compromising safety, according to various makers of the so-called head-up displays, repeating a position taken by a growing number of automakers who sell monitors set into the dashboard or mounted on it. Some carmakers also display basic driving information, like speed and turn-by-turn directions, within a specialized windshield so a driver can remain looking ahead and not down at the instrument panel.", "answer": "growing number of automakers", "sentence": "a growing number of automakers who sell monitors set into the dashboard or mounted on it.", "paragraph_sentence": "This technology is in its infancy. Navdy\u2019s device isn\u2019t shipping until later this year, and it\u2019s not clear if it will work as seamlessly as presented in the video when used in less perfect real-life conditions. But, broadly speaking, the Navdy device falls into a booming category of in-car gadgetry that might be fairly categorized as \u201cyou can have your cake and eat it too.\u201d Drive, get texts, talk on the phone, even interact on social media, and do it all without compromising safety, according to various makers of the so-called head-up displays, repeating a position taken by a growing number of automakers who sell monitors set into the dashboard or mounted on it. Some carmakers also display basic driving information, like speed and turn-by-turn directions, within a specialized windshield so a driver can remain looking ahead and not down at the instrument panel.", "paragraph_answer": "This technology is in its infancy. Navdy\u2019s device isn\u2019t shipping until later this year, and it\u2019s not clear if it will work as seamlessly as presented in the video when used in less perfect real-life conditions. But, broadly speaking, the Navdy device falls into a booming category of in-car gadgetry that might be fairly categorized as \u201cyou can have your cake and eat it too.\u201d Drive, get texts, talk on the phone, even interact on social media, and do it all without compromising safety, according to various makers of the so-called head-up displays, repeating a position taken by a growing number of automakers who sell monitors set into the dashboard or mounted on it. Some carmakers also display basic driving information, like speed and turn-by-turn directions, within a specialized windshield so a driver can remain looking ahead and not down at the instrument panel.", "sentence_answer": "a growing number of automakers who sell monitors set into the dashboard or mounted on it.", "paragraph_id": "5d702669c8e4820a9b66d2a8"} +{"question": "What team shot well and controlled the scoreboard?", "paragraph": "St. John\u2019s did what it had not been doing most of the season \u2014 shoot well and control the boards \u2014 and the Red Storm delighted the Madison Square Garden crowd in beating Syracuse, 84-72. The matchup on Sunday was the programs\u2019 first since Jan. 19, 1977, in which Jim Boeheim was not coaching the Orange, a span of 63 games. This was the third game of his nine-game N.C.A.A. ban. The freshman Federico Mussini had 17 points, and four other players scored in double figures for the Red Storm (7-3), who won their third straight. The Orange had won nine of the previous 10 meetings; they lead the series by 51-39. St. John\u2019s had not beaten Syracuse at the Garden since 2007. \u201cThis was the best win of my life in the world\u2019s most famous arena,\u201d Mussini said. \u201cNothing better than this.\u201d Michael Gbinije\u2019s 21 points led Syracuse (7-3), which has lost three of four. The Red Storm shot 30 of 61, including 12 of 24 from 3-point range, well above their season averages. Syracuse shot 5 of 26 from beyond the arc.", "answer": "St. John\u2019s", "sentence": "St. John\u2019s did what it had not been doing most of the season \u2014 shoot well and control the boards \u2014 and the Red Storm delighted the Madison Square Garden crowd in beating Syracuse, 84-72.", "paragraph_sentence": " St. John\u2019s did what it had not been doing most of the season \u2014 shoot well and control the boards \u2014 and the Red Storm delighted the Madison Square Garden crowd in beating Syracuse, 84-72. The matchup on Sunday was the programs\u2019 first since Jan. 19, 1977, in which Jim Boeheim was not coaching the Orange, a span of 63 games. This was the third game of his nine-game N.C.A.A. ban. The freshman Federico Mussini had 17 points, and four other players scored in double figures for the Red Storm (7-3), who won their third straight. The Orange had won nine of the previous 10 meetings; they lead the series by 51-39. St. John\u2019s had not beaten Syracuse at the Garden since 2007. \u201cThis was the best win of my life in the world\u2019s most famous arena,\u201d Mussini said. \u201cNothing better than this.\u201d Michael Gbinije\u2019s 21 points led Syracuse (7-3), which has lost three of four. The Red Storm shot 30 of 61, including 12 of 24 from 3-point range, well above their season averages. Syracuse shot 5 of 26 from beyond the arc.", "paragraph_answer": " St. John\u2019s did what it had not been doing most of the season \u2014 shoot well and control the boards \u2014 and the Red Storm delighted the Madison Square Garden crowd in beating Syracuse, 84-72. The matchup on Sunday was the programs\u2019 first since Jan. 19, 1977, in which Jim Boeheim was not coaching the Orange, a span of 63 games. This was the third game of his nine-game N.C.A.A. ban. The freshman Federico Mussini had 17 points, and four other players scored in double figures for the Red Storm (7-3), who won their third straight. The Orange had won nine of the previous 10 meetings; they lead the series by 51-39. St. John\u2019s had not beaten Syracuse at the Garden since 2007. \u201cThis was the best win of my life in the world\u2019s most famous arena,\u201d Mussini said. \u201cNothing better than this.\u201d Michael Gbinije\u2019s 21 points led Syracuse (7-3), which has lost three of four. The Red Storm shot 30 of 61, including 12 of 24 from 3-point range, well above their season averages. Syracuse shot 5 of 26 from beyond the arc.", "sentence_answer": " St. John\u2019s did what it had not been doing most of the season \u2014 shoot well and control the boards \u2014 and the Red Storm delighted the Madison Square Garden crowd in beating Syracuse, 84-72.", "paragraph_id": "5d700db1c8e4820a9b66b94b"} +{"question": "He caught what sickness after surgery?", "paragraph": "After his 27th hole, Woods was 19 strokes off the leader\u2019s pace. Talk about disheartening. Asked what he had been thinking when he made the turn in 44, tying his worst nine-hole score as a pro, Woods said: \u201cJust keep fighting. Just keep grinding each and every shot. That\u2019s all I can do. It was not a very good day from the very start until the end, but I fought all day.\u201d In official tour events, Woods has not bettered par in his last six competitive rounds, dating to August. He missed nearly six months to recover from back surgery and in recent weeks was slowed by influenza. Golfers are like stage actors. They cannot be sure how well they will deliver their lines until the curtain comes up and they are performing in front of an audience. \u201cHitting golf balls is one thing, and playing golf at home is another,\u201d Woods said. \u201cPlaying tournament golf is entirely another. I have to continue with the process.\u201d", "answer": "influenza", "sentence": "He missed nearly six months to recover from back surgery and in recent weeks was slowed by influenza .", "paragraph_sentence": "After his 27th hole, Woods was 19 strokes off the leader\u2019s pace. Talk about disheartening. Asked what he had been thinking when he made the turn in 44, tying his worst nine-hole score as a pro, Woods said: \u201cJust keep fighting. Just keep grinding each and every shot. That\u2019s all I can do. It was not a very good day from the very start until the end, but I fought all day.\u201d In official tour events, Woods has not bettered par in his last six competitive rounds, dating to August. He missed nearly six months to recover from back surgery and in recent weeks was slowed by influenza . Golfers are like stage actors. They cannot be sure how well they will deliver their lines until the curtain comes up and they are performing in front of an audience. \u201cHitting golf balls is one thing, and playing golf at home is another,\u201d Woods said. \u201cPlaying tournament golf is entirely another. I have to continue with the process.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "After his 27th hole, Woods was 19 strokes off the leader\u2019s pace. Talk about disheartening. Asked what he had been thinking when he made the turn in 44, tying his worst nine-hole score as a pro, Woods said: \u201cJust keep fighting. Just keep grinding each and every shot. That\u2019s all I can do. It was not a very good day from the very start until the end, but I fought all day.\u201d In official tour events, Woods has not bettered par in his last six competitive rounds, dating to August. He missed nearly six months to recover from back surgery and in recent weeks was slowed by influenza . Golfers are like stage actors. They cannot be sure how well they will deliver their lines until the curtain comes up and they are performing in front of an audience. \u201cHitting golf balls is one thing, and playing golf at home is another,\u201d Woods said. \u201cPlaying tournament golf is entirely another. I have to continue with the process.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "He missed nearly six months to recover from back surgery and in recent weeks was slowed by influenza .", "paragraph_id": "5d702311c8e4820a9b66cf36"} +{"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", "paragraph_id": "5d700b31c8e4820a9b66b5a5"} +{"question": "What law in Mississippi is in jeopardy?", "paragraph": "JACKSON, Miss. \u2014 The Mississippi state epidemiologist, Dr. Thomas E. Dobbs III, stood in a crowded room at the State Capitol this week and waited for a legislative verdict on the law that fostered what he regards as a public health triumph in a place that has few of them: the country\u2019s highest immunization rate among kindergarten students. But in recent weeks, the nearly unbending nature of Mississippi\u2019s law requiring students to be vaccinated has been in jeopardy, with two dozen lawmakers publicly supporting an exemption for \u201cconscientious beliefs.\u201d The debate, coming as other states grappled with a measles outbreak, turned Mississippi into one more battleground between medical experts who champion vaccinations and parents who fear the government\u2019s role in medical decision-making.", "answer": "law requiring students to be vaccinated", "sentence": "But in recent weeks, the nearly unbending nature of Mississippi\u2019s law requiring students to be vaccinated has been in jeopardy, with two dozen lawmakers publicly supporting an exemption for \u201cconscientious beliefs.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "JACKSON, Miss. \u2014 The Mississippi state epidemiologist, Dr. Thomas E. Dobbs III, stood in a crowded room at the State Capitol this week and waited for a legislative verdict on the law that fostered what he regards as a public health triumph in a place that has few of them: the country\u2019s highest immunization rate among kindergarten students. But in recent weeks, the nearly unbending nature of Mississippi\u2019s law requiring students to be vaccinated has been in jeopardy, with two dozen lawmakers publicly supporting an exemption for \u201cconscientious beliefs.\u201d The debate, coming as other states grappled with a measles outbreak, turned Mississippi into one more battleground between medical experts who champion vaccinations and parents who fear the government\u2019s role in medical decision-making.", "paragraph_answer": "JACKSON, Miss. \u2014 The Mississippi state epidemiologist, Dr. Thomas E. Dobbs III, stood in a crowded room at the State Capitol this week and waited for a legislative verdict on the law that fostered what he regards as a public health triumph in a place that has few of them: the country\u2019s highest immunization rate among kindergarten students. But in recent weeks, the nearly unbending nature of Mississippi\u2019s law requiring students to be vaccinated has been in jeopardy, with two dozen lawmakers publicly supporting an exemption for \u201cconscientious beliefs.\u201d The debate, coming as other states grappled with a measles outbreak, turned Mississippi into one more battleground between medical experts who champion vaccinations and parents who fear the government\u2019s role in medical decision-making.", "sentence_answer": "But in recent weeks, the nearly unbending nature of Mississippi\u2019s law requiring students to be vaccinated has been in jeopardy, with two dozen lawmakers publicly supporting an exemption for \u201cconscientious beliefs.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d703296c8e4820a9b66dde3"} +{"question": "Who does Mr. Cardona want to attract?", "paragraph": "Mr. Cardona said it was \u201cunrealistic\u201d to expect applicants to spend too much time in Malta. As he walked through the halls of the former hospital building that houses his office, he passed one Chinese billionaire and his entourage in a small conference room. In another room, a Turkish magnate waited to get his photograph for a residence card. \u201cWe want to attract the real highfliers,\u201d Mr. Cardona said.", "answer": "the real highfliers", "sentence": "\u201cWe want to attract the real highfliers ,\u201d Mr. Cardona said.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Cardona said it was \u201cunrealistic\u201d to expect applicants to spend too much time in Malta. As he walked through the halls of the former hospital building that houses his office, he passed one Chinese billionaire and his entourage in a small conference room. In another room, a Turkish magnate waited to get his photograph for a residence card. \u201cWe want to attract the real highfliers ,\u201d Mr. Cardona said. ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Cardona said it was \u201cunrealistic\u201d to expect applicants to spend too much time in Malta. As he walked through the halls of the former hospital building that houses his office, he passed one Chinese billionaire and his entourage in a small conference room. In another room, a Turkish magnate waited to get his photograph for a residence card. \u201cWe want to attract the real highfliers ,\u201d Mr. Cardona said.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe want to attract the real highfliers ,\u201d Mr. Cardona said.", "paragraph_id": "5d7016cac8e4820a9b66c2e2"} +{"question": "What was the raffle raising money for?", "paragraph": "It had the ingredients of an all-American fund-raiser. Leaders in the small Iowa town of Van Meter, needing money for a new police car, decided to sell $5 raffle tickets, with the winner to be chosen at this summer\u2019s street dance. But the raffle prize \u2014 a chance to have a Taser stun gun used on a city official \u2014 raised eyebrows far beyond Van Meter, home to about 1,300 people and one full-time police officer. On Monday, after a bout of criticism and national attention, the town\u2019s police chief said that corporate donors had agreed to help buy a cruiser, and that no one would be stunned with a Taser at Saturday\u2019s street dance. \u201cWe\u2019re much better off,\u201d said the chief, William Daggett. \u201cWhat we wind up with is the ability to do more than we could to begin with.\u201d", "answer": "a new police car", "sentence": "Leaders in the small Iowa town of Van Meter, needing money for a new police car , decided to sell $5 raffle tickets, with the winner to be chosen at this summer\u2019s street dance.", "paragraph_sentence": "It had the ingredients of an all-American fund-raiser. Leaders in the small Iowa town of Van Meter, needing money for a new police car , decided to sell $5 raffle tickets, with the winner to be chosen at this summer\u2019s street dance. But the raffle prize \u2014 a chance to have a Taser stun gun used on a city official \u2014 raised eyebrows far beyond Van Meter, home to about 1,300 people and one full-time police officer. On Monday, after a bout of criticism and national attention, the town\u2019s police chief said that corporate donors had agreed to help buy a cruiser, and that no one would be stunned with a Taser at Saturday\u2019s street dance. \u201cWe\u2019re much better off,\u201d said the chief, William Daggett. \u201cWhat we wind up with is the ability to do more than we could to begin with.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "It had the ingredients of an all-American fund-raiser. Leaders in the small Iowa town of Van Meter, needing money for a new police car , decided to sell $5 raffle tickets, with the winner to be chosen at this summer\u2019s street dance. But the raffle prize \u2014 a chance to have a Taser stun gun used on a city official \u2014 raised eyebrows far beyond Van Meter, home to about 1,300 people and one full-time police officer. On Monday, after a bout of criticism and national attention, the town\u2019s police chief said that corporate donors had agreed to help buy a cruiser, and that no one would be stunned with a Taser at Saturday\u2019s street dance. \u201cWe\u2019re much better off,\u201d said the chief, William Daggett. \u201cWhat we wind up with is the ability to do more than we could to begin with.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Leaders in the small Iowa town of Van Meter, needing money for a new police car , decided to sell $5 raffle tickets, with the winner to be chosen at this summer\u2019s street dance.", "paragraph_id": "5d701b61c8e4820a9b66c6cb"} +{"question": "What is the most important part of going to see the games?", "paragraph": "Until his health began to fail, we traveled to see the Cubs in San Francisco and San Diego, and Arizona, where in 2007 we took my son, Alex, to the first round of the National League playoffs so he could be duly indoctrinated: two games against the Diamondbacks, two losses by the Cubs. In truth, as time passes, the results have mattered less than the time we had together. The Cubs have been, more than anything else, a shared experience. I will remember that this October, when they reach the World Series. I plan to take Alex with me. But first I will have to speak with his high school basketball coach. I do not imagine he will be happy about my son missing practice right before the start of the season, so I am prepared to explain that the Cubs do not play in a World Series every day. If necessary, there is a deal I am prepared to make.", "answer": "the time we had together", "sentence": "In truth, as time passes, the results have mattered less than the time we had together .", "paragraph_sentence": "Until his health began to fail, we traveled to see the Cubs in San Francisco and San Diego, and Arizona, where in 2007 we took my son, Alex, to the first round of the National League playoffs so he could be duly indoctrinated: two games against the Diamondbacks, two losses by the Cubs. In truth, as time passes, the results have mattered less than the time we had together . The Cubs have been, more than anything else, a shared experience. I will remember that this October, when they reach the World Series. I plan to take Alex with me. But first I will have to speak with his high school basketball coach. I do not imagine he will be happy about my son missing practice right before the start of the season, so I am prepared to explain that the Cubs do not play in a World Series every day. If necessary, there is a deal I am prepared to make.", "paragraph_answer": "Until his health began to fail, we traveled to see the Cubs in San Francisco and San Diego, and Arizona, where in 2007 we took my son, Alex, to the first round of the National League playoffs so he could be duly indoctrinated: two games against the Diamondbacks, two losses by the Cubs. In truth, as time passes, the results have mattered less than the time we had together . The Cubs have been, more than anything else, a shared experience. I will remember that this October, when they reach the World Series. I plan to take Alex with me. But first I will have to speak with his high school basketball coach. I do not imagine he will be happy about my son missing practice right before the start of the season, so I am prepared to explain that the Cubs do not play in a World Series every day. If necessary, there is a deal I am prepared to make.", "sentence_answer": "In truth, as time passes, the results have mattered less than the time we had together .", "paragraph_id": "5d700692c8e4820a9b66abca"} +{"question": "Whos departure was blamed on mercury poisoning from a sushi heavy diet?", "paragraph": "Does this also apply to Ms. Moss, whose marriage to the comedian Fred Armisen ended quickly and with acrimony? She wouldn\u2019t speak with much specificity, but said that if she knew why women make appalling choices in their personal lives: \u201cI would be a billionaire. I would write it down, and I would sell it.\u201d Ms. Moss, who began acting at the age of 6, was an eager theatergoer even as a child, but it was a performance of \u201cThe Heiress,\u201d starring Cherry Jones, which she saw in her early teens, that sold her on the stage \u2014 its power, its risk, its immediacy. \u201cOnce the lights go up, it\u2019s on you,\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s a huge amount of responsibility, that\u2019s the frightening part of it.\u201d And the \u201cexciting and thrilling\u201d part, too. Of course, this isn\u2019t Ms. Moss\u2019s first time onstage. She starred in a revival of Lillian Hellman\u2019s \u201cThe Children\u2019s Hour\u201d in London, opposite Keira Knightley, and as the scheming secretary in a Broadway revival of David Mamet\u2019s \u201cSpeed-the-Plow,\u201d perhaps best remembered for Jeremy Piven\u2019s abrupt departure, which he blamed on mercury poisoning from a sushi-heavy diet.", "answer": "Jeremy Piven\u2019s", "sentence": "She starred in a revival of Lillian Hellman\u2019s \u201cThe Children\u2019s Hour\u201d in London, opposite Keira Knightley, and as the scheming secretary in a Broadway revival of David Mamet\u2019s \u201cSpeed-the-Plow,\u201d perhaps best remembered for Jeremy Piven\u2019s abrupt departure, which he blamed on mercury poisoning from a sushi-heavy diet.", "paragraph_sentence": "Does this also apply to Ms. Moss, whose marriage to the comedian Fred Armisen ended quickly and with acrimony? She wouldn\u2019t speak with much specificity, but said that if she knew why women make appalling choices in their personal lives: \u201cI would be a billionaire. I would write it down, and I would sell it.\u201d Ms. Moss, who began acting at the age of 6, was an eager theatergoer even as a child, but it was a performance of \u201cThe Heiress,\u201d starring Cherry Jones, which she saw in her early teens, that sold her on the stage \u2014 its power, its risk, its immediacy. \u201cOnce the lights go up, it\u2019s on you,\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s a huge amount of responsibility, that\u2019s the frightening part of it.\u201d And the \u201cexciting and thrilling\u201d part, too. Of course, this isn\u2019t Ms. Moss\u2019s first time onstage. She starred in a revival of Lillian Hellman\u2019s \u201cThe Children\u2019s Hour\u201d in London, opposite Keira Knightley, and as the scheming secretary in a Broadway revival of David Mamet\u2019s \u201cSpeed-the-Plow,\u201d perhaps best remembered for Jeremy Piven\u2019s abrupt departure, which he blamed on mercury poisoning from a sushi-heavy diet. ", "paragraph_answer": "Does this also apply to Ms. Moss, whose marriage to the comedian Fred Armisen ended quickly and with acrimony? She wouldn\u2019t speak with much specificity, but said that if she knew why women make appalling choices in their personal lives: \u201cI would be a billionaire. I would write it down, and I would sell it.\u201d Ms. Moss, who began acting at the age of 6, was an eager theatergoer even as a child, but it was a performance of \u201cThe Heiress,\u201d starring Cherry Jones, which she saw in her early teens, that sold her on the stage \u2014 its power, its risk, its immediacy. \u201cOnce the lights go up, it\u2019s on you,\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s a huge amount of responsibility, that\u2019s the frightening part of it.\u201d And the \u201cexciting and thrilling\u201d part, too. Of course, this isn\u2019t Ms. Moss\u2019s first time onstage. She starred in a revival of Lillian Hellman\u2019s \u201cThe Children\u2019s Hour\u201d in London, opposite Keira Knightley, and as the scheming secretary in a Broadway revival of David Mamet\u2019s \u201cSpeed-the-Plow,\u201d perhaps best remembered for Jeremy Piven\u2019s abrupt departure, which he blamed on mercury poisoning from a sushi-heavy diet.", "sentence_answer": "She starred in a revival of Lillian Hellman\u2019s \u201cThe Children\u2019s Hour\u201d in London, opposite Keira Knightley, and as the scheming secretary in a Broadway revival of David Mamet\u2019s \u201cSpeed-the-Plow,\u201d perhaps best remembered for Jeremy Piven\u2019s abrupt departure, which he blamed on mercury poisoning from a sushi-heavy diet.", "paragraph_id": "5d701dc2c8e4820a9b66c932"} +{"question": "What did she talk about at every single meal?", "paragraph": "A. No. I think for women it wasn\u2019t expected in my family, even though my sister ended up studying gemology. She was a diamond grader in New York and eventually worked for our gemstones division. When I did look to enter the business, the idea wasn\u2019t rejected, but it was just not expected. Q. Why did you want to join? A. I think very innately I had a strong connection to the product and the business because I grew up in it. Every single meal conversation was about the company, and growing up as a child I was interested. But later on my first reaction was, \u201cI\u2019m not going to go into the business, I\u2019m going to find my own identity, and do my own thing,\u201d which is why I studied art history and languages and started working in the art world and then the fashion industry.", "answer": "the company", "sentence": "Every single meal conversation was about the company , and growing up as a child I was interested.", "paragraph_sentence": "A. No. I think for women it wasn\u2019t expected in my family, even though my sister ended up studying gemology. She was a diamond grader in New York and eventually worked for our gemstones division. When I did look to enter the business, the idea wasn\u2019t rejected, but it was just not expected. Q. Why did you want to join? A. I think very innately I had a strong connection to the product and the business because I grew up in it. Every single meal conversation was about the company , and growing up as a child I was interested. But later on my first reaction was, \u201cI\u2019m not going to go into the business, I\u2019m going to find my own identity, and do my own thing,\u201d which is why I studied art history and languages and started working in the art world and then the fashion industry.", "paragraph_answer": "A. No. I think for women it wasn\u2019t expected in my family, even though my sister ended up studying gemology. She was a diamond grader in New York and eventually worked for our gemstones division. When I did look to enter the business, the idea wasn\u2019t rejected, but it was just not expected. Q. Why did you want to join? A. I think very innately I had a strong connection to the product and the business because I grew up in it. Every single meal conversation was about the company , and growing up as a child I was interested. But later on my first reaction was, \u201cI\u2019m not going to go into the business, I\u2019m going to find my own identity, and do my own thing,\u201d which is why I studied art history and languages and started working in the art world and then the fashion industry.", "sentence_answer": "Every single meal conversation was about the company , and growing up as a child I was interested.", "paragraph_id": "5d70289ec8e4820a9b66d639"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700802c8e4820a9b66af1d"} +{"question": "Who directed \"My Neighbor Totoro\"?", "paragraph": "The Complete Studio Ghibli (through Dec. 31) IFC Center\u2019s retrospective of the complete works of Studio Ghibli, the beloved Japanese animation house, varies from the wistful and pleasant, like Hayao Miyazaki\u2019s \u201cMy Neighbor Totoro,\u201d to the crushingly sad, like Isao Takahata\u2019s \u201cGrave of the Fireflies,\u201d about childhood alienation, set in Kobe at the end of World War II.) It all leads up to Jan. 1, when \u201cOnly Yesterday,\u201d released in Japan in 1991, will have its United States theatrical premiere. 323 Avenue of the Americas, at Third Street, Greenwich Village, 212-924-7771, ifccenter.com. (Alec M. Priester)", "answer": "Hayao Miyazaki", "sentence": "The Complete Studio Ghibli (through Dec. 31) IFC Center\u2019s retrospective of the complete works of Studio Ghibli, the beloved Japanese animation house, varies from the wistful and pleasant, like Hayao Miyazaki \u2019s \u201cMy Neighbor Totoro,\u201d to the crushingly sad, like Isao Takahata\u2019s \u201cGrave of the Fireflies,\u201d about childhood alienation, set in Kobe at the end of World War II.)", "paragraph_sentence": " The Complete Studio Ghibli (through Dec. 31) IFC Center\u2019s retrospective of the complete works of Studio Ghibli, the beloved Japanese animation house, varies from the wistful and pleasant, like Hayao Miyazaki \u2019s \u201cMy Neighbor Totoro,\u201d to the crushingly sad, like Isao Takahata\u2019s \u201cGrave of the Fireflies,\u201d about childhood alienation, set in Kobe at the end of World War II.) It all leads up to Jan. 1, when \u201cOnly Yesterday,\u201d released in Japan in 1991, will have its United States theatrical premiere. 323 Avenue of the Americas, at Third Street, Greenwich Village, 212-924-7771, ifccenter.com. (Alec M. Priester)", "paragraph_answer": "The Complete Studio Ghibli (through Dec. 31) IFC Center\u2019s retrospective of the complete works of Studio Ghibli, the beloved Japanese animation house, varies from the wistful and pleasant, like Hayao Miyazaki \u2019s \u201cMy Neighbor Totoro,\u201d to the crushingly sad, like Isao Takahata\u2019s \u201cGrave of the Fireflies,\u201d about childhood alienation, set in Kobe at the end of World War II.) It all leads up to Jan. 1, when \u201cOnly Yesterday,\u201d released in Japan in 1991, will have its United States theatrical premiere. 323 Avenue of the Americas, at Third Street, Greenwich Village, 212-924-7771, ifccenter.com. (Alec M. Priester)", "sentence_answer": "The Complete Studio Ghibli (through Dec. 31) IFC Center\u2019s retrospective of the complete works of Studio Ghibli, the beloved Japanese animation house, varies from the wistful and pleasant, like Hayao Miyazaki \u2019s \u201cMy Neighbor Totoro,\u201d to the crushingly sad, like Isao Takahata\u2019s \u201cGrave of the Fireflies,\u201d about childhood alienation, set in Kobe at the end of World War II.)", "paragraph_id": "5d702c82c8e4820a9b66da0f"} +{"question": "when did Essid propose his cabinet?", "paragraph": "Prime Minister Habib Essid presented his second government in two weeks on Monday, this time including more parties and a position for Islamists. The cabinet he proposed on Jan. 23 consisted of just two parties and did not survive a no-confidence vote. It has now been expanded to involve five parties, including one post \u2014 that of employment minister \u2014 for the powerful Islamist party, Ennahda. Mr. Essid\u2019s Nida Tunis party won the most seats in October\u2019s election but still needed to form a coalition. The government faces a confidence vote in Parliament on Wednesday, which it is expected to pass.", "answer": "on Jan. 23", "sentence": "The cabinet he proposed on Jan. 23 consisted of just two parties and did not survive a no-confidence vote.", "paragraph_sentence": "Prime Minister Habib Essid presented his second government in two weeks on Monday, this time including more parties and a position for Islamists. The cabinet he proposed on Jan. 23 consisted of just two parties and did not survive a no-confidence vote. It has now been expanded to involve five parties, including one post \u2014 that of employment minister \u2014 for the powerful Islamist party, Ennahda. Mr. Essid\u2019s Nida Tunis party won the most seats in October\u2019s election but still needed to form a coalition. The government faces a confidence vote in Parliament on Wednesday, which it is expected to pass.", "paragraph_answer": "Prime Minister Habib Essid presented his second government in two weeks on Monday, this time including more parties and a position for Islamists. The cabinet he proposed on Jan. 23 consisted of just two parties and did not survive a no-confidence vote. It has now been expanded to involve five parties, including one post \u2014 that of employment minister \u2014 for the powerful Islamist party, Ennahda. Mr. Essid\u2019s Nida Tunis party won the most seats in October\u2019s election but still needed to form a coalition. The government faces a confidence vote in Parliament on Wednesday, which it is expected to pass.", "sentence_answer": "The cabinet he proposed on Jan. 23 consisted of just two parties and did not survive a no-confidence vote.", "paragraph_id": "5d700558c8e4820a9b66a8ae"} +{"question": "What would the games do for Boston?", "paragraph": "Their main pitch: The overhauled plan, updated from a widely panned version first offered in January, would generate millions of dollars in new tax revenue, create tens of thousands of new jobs and produce thousands of new housing units, parks and other neighborhood amenities that would provide a lasting legacy. And with taxpayer help, to the tune of more than $700 million, the Games would spur the much-needed upgrade of the transportation infrastructure, improving local roads as well as the beleaguered subway system. Officials argued that these were costs that taxpayers would have to bear regardless of whether Boston won the Olympics. The plan went into great detail on how the Games would transform two Boston neighborhoods: Widett Circle, the home of a temporary Olympic Stadium, and Columbia Point, home to the athletes\u2019 village.", "answer": "spur the much-needed upgrade of the transportation infrastructure, improving local roads as well as the beleaguered subway system", "sentence": "would spur the much-needed upgrade of the transportation infrastructure, improving local roads as well as the beleaguered subway system .", "paragraph_sentence": "Their main pitch: The overhauled plan, updated from a widely panned version first offered in January, would generate millions of dollars in new tax revenue, create tens of thousands of new jobs and produce thousands of new housing units, parks and other neighborhood amenities that would provide a lasting legacy. And with taxpayer help, to the tune of more than $700 million, the Games would spur the much-needed upgrade of the transportation infrastructure, improving local roads as well as the beleaguered subway system . Officials argued that these were costs that taxpayers would have to bear regardless of whether Boston won the Olympics. The plan went into great detail on how the Games would transform two Boston neighborhoods: Widett Circle, the home of a temporary Olympic Stadium, and Columbia Point, home to the athletes\u2019 village.", "paragraph_answer": "Their main pitch: The overhauled plan, updated from a widely panned version first offered in January, would generate millions of dollars in new tax revenue, create tens of thousands of new jobs and produce thousands of new housing units, parks and other neighborhood amenities that would provide a lasting legacy. And with taxpayer help, to the tune of more than $700 million, the Games would spur the much-needed upgrade of the transportation infrastructure, improving local roads as well as the beleaguered subway system . Officials argued that these were costs that taxpayers would have to bear regardless of whether Boston won the Olympics. The plan went into great detail on how the Games would transform two Boston neighborhoods: Widett Circle, the home of a temporary Olympic Stadium, and Columbia Point, home to the athletes\u2019 village.", "sentence_answer": "would spur the much-needed upgrade of the transportation infrastructure, improving local roads as well as the beleaguered subway system .", "paragraph_id": "5d705eb6c8e4820a9b66efe6"} +{"question": "What continent is the technical patch only available in?", "paragraph": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "answer": "Europe", "sentence": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with Europe an clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels.", "paragraph_sentence": " WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with Europe an clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "paragraph_answer": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with Europe an clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "sentence_answer": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with Europe an clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels.", "paragraph_id": "5d708d86c8e4820a9b66f53e"} +{"question": "What arena in Columbus do thy play NCAA?", "paragraph": "COLUMBUS, Ohio \u2014 To earn a spot in the main portion of the N.C.A.A. tournament, Dayton slipped by Boise State this week in a play-in contest that was a virtual home game for the Flyers. When the team traveled an hour east to Columbus, it was as if the Flyers had moved from their living room to their kitchen. In front of a friendly crowd Friday night, Dayton, the East Region\u2019s No. 11 seed, used a second-half to surge to defeat sixth-seeded Providence, 66-53, at Nationwide Arena. It was the tournament\u2019s only game of the day in which the lower-seeded team won.", "answer": "Nationwide Arena", "sentence": "In front of a friendly crowd Friday night, Dayton, the East Region\u2019s No. 11 seed, used a second-half to surge to defeat sixth-seeded Providence, 66-53, at Nationwide Arena .", "paragraph_sentence": "COLUMBUS, Ohio \u2014 To earn a spot in the main portion of the N.C.A.A. tournament, Dayton slipped by Boise State this week in a play-in contest that was a virtual home game for the Flyers. When the team traveled an hour east to Columbus, it was as if the Flyers had moved from their living room to their kitchen. In front of a friendly crowd Friday night, Dayton, the East Region\u2019s No. 11 seed, used a second-half to surge to defeat sixth-seeded Providence, 66-53, at Nationwide Arena . It was the tournament\u2019s only game of the day in which the lower-seeded team won.", "paragraph_answer": "COLUMBUS, Ohio \u2014 To earn a spot in the main portion of the N.C.A.A. tournament, Dayton slipped by Boise State this week in a play-in contest that was a virtual home game for the Flyers. When the team traveled an hour east to Columbus, it was as if the Flyers had moved from their living room to their kitchen. In front of a friendly crowd Friday night, Dayton, the East Region\u2019s No. 11 seed, used a second-half to surge to defeat sixth-seeded Providence, 66-53, at Nationwide Arena . It was the tournament\u2019s only game of the day in which the lower-seeded team won.", "sentence_answer": "In front of a friendly crowd Friday night, Dayton, the East Region\u2019s No. 11 seed, used a second-half to surge to defeat sixth-seeded Providence, 66-53, at Nationwide Arena .", "paragraph_id": "5d7004f2c8e4820a9b66a830"} +{"question": "Willie Horton escaped from the Massachusetts prison system during what?", "paragraph": "Mr. Atwater managed George Bush\u2019s 1988 campaign against Michael S. Dukakis, the Massachusetts governor, a race that featured one of the most devastating political ads in American history. It discussed Willie Horton, a black murderer who escaped from the Massachusetts prison system while on a weekend furlough and raped a white woman and stabbed her husband. Mr. Atwater denied having a role in the ad, which was sponsored by a political action committee. But he said part of his plan to defeat Mr. Dukakis was to \u201cmake Willie Horton his running mate.\u201d \u201cIt is certainly true the Bushes like to win, and have never kept their Lee Atwaters and their Karl Roves on a short leash, when anything and everything was required,\u201d Mr. Draper said. Jeb Bush\u2019s team, led by his pugnacious campaign manager, Danny Diaz, can also be feisty.", "answer": "a weekend furlough", "sentence": "It discussed Willie Horton, a black murderer who escaped from the Massachusetts prison system while on a weekend furlough and raped a white woman and stabbed her husband.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Atwater managed George Bush\u2019s 1988 campaign against Michael S. Dukakis, the Massachusetts governor, a race that featured one of the most devastating political ads in American history. It discussed Willie Horton, a black murderer who escaped from the Massachusetts prison system while on a weekend furlough and raped a white woman and stabbed her husband. Mr. Atwater denied having a role in the ad, which was sponsored by a political action committee. But he said part of his plan to defeat Mr. Dukakis was to \u201cmake Willie Horton his running mate.\u201d \u201cIt is certainly true the Bushes like to win, and have never kept their Lee Atwaters and their Karl Roves on a short leash, when anything and everything was required,\u201d Mr. Draper said. Jeb Bush\u2019s team, led by his pugnacious campaign manager, Danny Diaz, can also be feisty.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Atwater managed George Bush\u2019s 1988 campaign against Michael S. Dukakis, the Massachusetts governor, a race that featured one of the most devastating political ads in American history. It discussed Willie Horton, a black murderer who escaped from the Massachusetts prison system while on a weekend furlough and raped a white woman and stabbed her husband. Mr. Atwater denied having a role in the ad, which was sponsored by a political action committee. But he said part of his plan to defeat Mr. Dukakis was to \u201cmake Willie Horton his running mate.\u201d \u201cIt is certainly true the Bushes like to win, and have never kept their Lee Atwaters and their Karl Roves on a short leash, when anything and everything was required,\u201d Mr. Draper said. Jeb Bush\u2019s team, led by his pugnacious campaign manager, Danny Diaz, can also be feisty.", "sentence_answer": "It discussed Willie Horton, a black murderer who escaped from the Massachusetts prison system while on a weekend furlough and raped a white woman and stabbed her husband.", "paragraph_id": "5d700a90c8e4820a9b66b487"} +{"question": "What as Jame's rate in the finals alone?", "paragraph": "Counting all of the rounds, James\u2019s rate is 37.8 so far in the playoffs. Going back to the 1970s, when the statistic becomes available, one player who made the finals had a greater rate: In 1993, when he won the third of his first triumvirate of titles, Michael Jordan rated at 38.0, according to basketball-reference.com. With Irving out for the rest of the playoffs, James\u2019s rate may well climb past Jordan\u2019s before the series concludes. And Jordan\u2019s rate for the 1993 finals alone, 38.9, lags behind James\u2019s 44.0.", "answer": "44.0", "sentence": "And Jordan\u2019s rate for the 1993 finals alone, 38.9, lags behind James\u2019s 44.0 .", "paragraph_sentence": "Counting all of the rounds, James\u2019s rate is 37.8 so far in the playoffs. Going back to the 1970s, when the statistic becomes available, one player who made the finals had a greater rate: In 1993, when he won the third of his first triumvirate of titles, Michael Jordan rated at 38.0, according to basketball-reference.com. With Irving out for the rest of the playoffs, James\u2019s rate may well climb past Jordan\u2019s before the series concludes. And Jordan\u2019s rate for the 1993 finals alone, 38.9, lags behind James\u2019s 44.0 . ", "paragraph_answer": "Counting all of the rounds, James\u2019s rate is 37.8 so far in the playoffs. Going back to the 1970s, when the statistic becomes available, one player who made the finals had a greater rate: In 1993, when he won the third of his first triumvirate of titles, Michael Jordan rated at 38.0, according to basketball-reference.com. With Irving out for the rest of the playoffs, James\u2019s rate may well climb past Jordan\u2019s before the series concludes. And Jordan\u2019s rate for the 1993 finals alone, 38.9, lags behind James\u2019s 44.0 .", "sentence_answer": "And Jordan\u2019s rate for the 1993 finals alone, 38.9, lags behind James\u2019s 44.0 .", "paragraph_id": "5d70095ec8e4820a9b66b1eb"} +{"question": "Why do women avoid calling themselves gamers?", "paragraph": "Like men, about half of all women play video games. But men are far more likely to call themselves \u201cgamers.\u201d That\u2019s according to a new Pew Research Center survey that found 48 percent of women play video games, just shy of the 50 percent of men who play. The gamer identity was far less attractive to women, however, with 6 percent of them adopting the label compared with 15 percent of men. Video game experts said it was no surprise that women are shunning an association with gaming culture as the community of hard-core players has become increasingly identified with sexist attitudes among its fringe members.", "answer": "sexist attitudes", "sentence": "Video game experts said it was no surprise that women are shunning an association with gaming culture as the community of hard-core players has become increasingly identified with sexist attitudes among its fringe members.", "paragraph_sentence": "Like men, about half of all women play video games. But men are far more likely to call themselves \u201cgamers.\u201d That\u2019s according to a new Pew Research Center survey that found 48 percent of women play video games, just shy of the 50 percent of men who play. The gamer identity was far less attractive to women, however, with 6 percent of them adopting the label compared with 15 percent of men. Video game experts said it was no surprise that women are shunning an association with gaming culture as the community of hard-core players has become increasingly identified with sexist attitudes among its fringe members. ", "paragraph_answer": "Like men, about half of all women play video games. But men are far more likely to call themselves \u201cgamers.\u201d That\u2019s according to a new Pew Research Center survey that found 48 percent of women play video games, just shy of the 50 percent of men who play. The gamer identity was far less attractive to women, however, with 6 percent of them adopting the label compared with 15 percent of men. Video game experts said it was no surprise that women are shunning an association with gaming culture as the community of hard-core players has become increasingly identified with sexist attitudes among its fringe members.", "sentence_answer": "Video game experts said it was no surprise that women are shunning an association with gaming culture as the community of hard-core players has become increasingly identified with sexist attitudes among its fringe members.", "paragraph_id": "5d702e78c8e4820a9b66dbbd"} +{"question": "What is the contact number for Infinity Hall?", "paragraph": "FALLS VILLAGE Music Mountain Calidore String Quartet, classical. June 21 at 3 p.m. $30. Kim Kashkashian, viola. June 26 at 7:30 p.m. $30. Cantata Profana, classical. June 27 at 6:30 p.m. $27. Juilliard String Quartet, classical. June 28 at 3 p.m. $60. Music Mountain, 225 Music Mountain Road. 860-824-7126; musicmountain.org. HARTFORD Infinity Hall Hartford The Seldom Scene, bluegrass. June 25 at 8 p.m. $35 to $50. Jeff Pevar and Mo\u2019 Pleasure Allstars, blues and pop. June 27 at 8 p.m. $24 to $39. Tom Rush, folk. June 28 at 7:30 p.m. $39 to $59. Infinity Hall Hartford, 32 Front Street. infinityhall.com; 860-560-7757.", "answer": "860-560-7757", "sentence": "infinityhall.com; 860-560-7757 .", "paragraph_sentence": "FALLS VILLAGE Music Mountain Calidore String Quartet, classical. June 21 at 3 p.m. $30. Kim Kashkashian, viola. June 26 at 7:30 p.m. $30. Cantata Profana, classical. June 27 at 6:30 p.m. $27. Juilliard String Quartet, classical. June 28 at 3 p.m. $60. Music Mountain, 225 Music Mountain Road. 860-824-7126; musicmountain.org. HARTFORD Infinity Hall Hartford The Seldom Scene, bluegrass. June 25 at 8 p.m. $35 to $50. Jeff Pevar and Mo\u2019 Pleasure Allstars, blues and pop. June 27 at 8 p.m. $24 to $39. Tom Rush, folk. June 28 at 7:30 p.m. $39 to $59. Infinity Hall Hartford, 32 Front Street. infinityhall.com; 860-560-7757 . ", "paragraph_answer": "FALLS VILLAGE Music Mountain Calidore String Quartet, classical. June 21 at 3 p.m. $30. Kim Kashkashian, viola. June 26 at 7:30 p.m. $30. Cantata Profana, classical. June 27 at 6:30 p.m. $27. Juilliard String Quartet, classical. June 28 at 3 p.m. $60. Music Mountain, 225 Music Mountain Road. 860-824-7126; musicmountain.org. HARTFORD Infinity Hall Hartford The Seldom Scene, bluegrass. June 25 at 8 p.m. $35 to $50. Jeff Pevar and Mo\u2019 Pleasure Allstars, blues and pop. June 27 at 8 p.m. $24 to $39. Tom Rush, folk. June 28 at 7:30 p.m. $39 to $59. Infinity Hall Hartford, 32 Front Street. infinityhall.com; 860-560-7757 .", "sentence_answer": "infinityhall.com; 860-560-7757 .", "paragraph_id": "5d700e23c8e4820a9b66b9f7"} +{"question": "What players are injured for the Rangers?", "paragraph": "The Rangers (17-6-2) have lost three of their last four. Worse, center Derek Stepan is out four to six weeks with broken ribs, and Kevin Klein, their most consistent defenseman this season, will miss two to three weeks after sustaining a strained oblique Monday against Carolina. The Rangers head to Brooklyn for their first game at Barclays Center, playing the rival Islanders for the first time this season. The Islanders (13-8-4), who have won three of four, are expected to have their first sellout since opening night in October.", "answer": "Derek Stepan is out four to six weeks with broken ribs, and Kevin Klein,", "sentence": "Worse, center Derek Stepan is out four to six weeks with broken ribs, and Kevin Klein, their most consistent defenseman this season, will miss two to three weeks after sustaining a strained oblique Monday against Carolina.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Rangers (17-6-2) have lost three of their last four. Worse, center Derek Stepan is out four to six weeks with broken ribs, and Kevin Klein, their most consistent defenseman this season, will miss two to three weeks after sustaining a strained oblique Monday against Carolina. The Rangers head to Brooklyn for their first game at Barclays Center, playing the rival Islanders for the first time this season. The Islanders (13-8-4), who have won three of four, are expected to have their first sellout since opening night in October.", "paragraph_answer": "The Rangers (17-6-2) have lost three of their last four. Worse, center Derek Stepan is out four to six weeks with broken ribs, and Kevin Klein, their most consistent defenseman this season, will miss two to three weeks after sustaining a strained oblique Monday against Carolina. The Rangers head to Brooklyn for their first game at Barclays Center, playing the rival Islanders for the first time this season. The Islanders (13-8-4), who have won three of four, are expected to have their first sellout since opening night in October.", "sentence_answer": "Worse, center Derek Stepan is out four to six weeks with broken ribs, and Kevin Klein, their most consistent defenseman this season, will miss two to three weeks after sustaining a strained oblique Monday against Carolina.", "paragraph_id": "5d701fdac8e4820a9b66cb7d"} +{"question": "Who is Carpe Diem's jockey?", "paragraph": "J.D.: He twice finished a head behind my top choice, Dortmund, before winning the Sunland Derby in New Mexico. I\u2019m hoping he is overlooked on Derby Day. M.H.: This speedy and improving colt showed in the Sunland that he could win with ease once free of his shadow. Of course, that will not be the case in the Derby. 4. Carpe Diem Trainer: Todd Pletcher Jockey: John Velazquez Record: 5-4-1-0 Points: 164 Odds: 10-1 J.D.: Seemingly the only real threat from the East, this colt has won races without working up much of a sweat. He is going to like the Derby\u2019s mile-and-a-quarter distance. M.H.: He has shown that he deserves to be in the conversation with Baffert\u2019s big guns. Still, he did not pull away from the Blue Grass Stakes field as much as I expected; Dortmund looked more dominant that day in Santa Anita.", "answer": "John Velazquez", "sentence": "Carpe Diem Trainer: Todd Pletcher Jockey: John Velazquez Record: 5-4-1-0 Points: 164 Odds: 10-1 J.D.: Seemingly the only real threat from the East, this colt has won races without working up much of a sweat.", "paragraph_sentence": "J.D.: He twice finished a head behind my top choice, Dortmund, before winning the Sunland Derby in New Mexico. I\u2019m hoping he is overlooked on Derby Day. M.H.: This speedy and improving colt showed in the Sunland that he could win with ease once free of his shadow. Of course, that will not be the case in the Derby. 4. Carpe Diem Trainer: Todd Pletcher Jockey: John Velazquez Record: 5-4-1-0 Points: 164 Odds: 10-1 J.D.: Seemingly the only real threat from the East, this colt has won races without working up much of a sweat. He is going to like the Derby\u2019s mile-and-a-quarter distance. M.H.: He has shown that he deserves to be in the conversation with Baffert\u2019s big guns. Still, he did not pull away from the Blue Grass Stakes field as much as I expected; Dortmund looked more dominant that day in Santa Anita.", "paragraph_answer": "J.D.: He twice finished a head behind my top choice, Dortmund, before winning the Sunland Derby in New Mexico. I\u2019m hoping he is overlooked on Derby Day. M.H.: This speedy and improving colt showed in the Sunland that he could win with ease once free of his shadow. Of course, that will not be the case in the Derby. 4. Carpe Diem Trainer: Todd Pletcher Jockey: John Velazquez Record: 5-4-1-0 Points: 164 Odds: 10-1 J.D.: Seemingly the only real threat from the East, this colt has won races without working up much of a sweat. He is going to like the Derby\u2019s mile-and-a-quarter distance. M.H.: He has shown that he deserves to be in the conversation with Baffert\u2019s big guns. Still, he did not pull away from the Blue Grass Stakes field as much as I expected; Dortmund looked more dominant that day in Santa Anita.", "sentence_answer": "Carpe Diem Trainer: Todd Pletcher Jockey: John Velazquez Record: 5-4-1-0 Points: 164 Odds: 10-1 J.D.: Seemingly the only real threat from the East, this colt has won races without working up much of a sweat.", "paragraph_id": "5d702b18c8e4820a9b66d88e"} +{"question": "Who did the American instructors recommend to help with training the Ukrainian units?", "paragraph": "Capt. Andrii Syurkalo, a Ukrainian officer, said it was commendable that the trainers were willing to use the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal as an element in a class on the Geneva Conventions. American officers described the course work as equivalent to the latter months of basic training in the United States. The courses will train 705 Ukrainian soldiers at a cost of $19 million over six months. The Ukrainian National Guard is rotating from the front what units it can spare for the training. American instructors intend to recommend top performers to serve as trainers within other Ukrainian units, and in this way spread the instruction more broadly.", "answer": "top performers", "sentence": "American instructors intend to recommend top performers to serve as trainers within other Ukrainian units, and in this way spread the instruction more broadly.", "paragraph_sentence": "Capt. Andrii Syurkalo, a Ukrainian officer, said it was commendable that the trainers were willing to use the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal as an element in a class on the Geneva Conventions. American officers described the course work as equivalent to the latter months of basic training in the United States. The courses will train 705 Ukrainian soldiers at a cost of $19 million over six months. The Ukrainian National Guard is rotating from the front what units it can spare for the training. American instructors intend to recommend top performers to serve as trainers within other Ukrainian units, and in this way spread the instruction more broadly. ", "paragraph_answer": "Capt. Andrii Syurkalo, a Ukrainian officer, said it was commendable that the trainers were willing to use the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal as an element in a class on the Geneva Conventions. American officers described the course work as equivalent to the latter months of basic training in the United States. The courses will train 705 Ukrainian soldiers at a cost of $19 million over six months. The Ukrainian National Guard is rotating from the front what units it can spare for the training. American instructors intend to recommend top performers to serve as trainers within other Ukrainian units, and in this way spread the instruction more broadly.", "sentence_answer": "American instructors intend to recommend top performers to serve as trainers within other Ukrainian units, and in this way spread the instruction more broadly.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026f6c8e4820a9b66d46b"} +{"question": "What religious denomination does Mr. Carson follow?", "paragraph": "Bob Vander Plaats, the president and chief executive of the Family Leader, a social conservative group in Iowa, said his members had not yet expressed concern about Mr. Carson\u2019s religion. He cited the support that Mr. Romney received from evangelicals in 2012, saying he did not think the fact that Mr. Carson is a Seventh-day Adventist would be an issue unless theology became central to the political debate. \u201cI think Trump threw out the fleece to let people check it out,\u201d Mr. Vander Plaats said of why he thought Mr. Carson\u2019s religion suddenly became an issue. \u201cPeople of faith will be more interested in the fruit of leadership, policy and does it align with honoring God or dishonoring God.\u201d", "answer": "Seventh-day Adventist", "sentence": "He cited the support that Mr. Romney received from evangelicals in 2012, saying he did not think the fact that Mr. Carson is a Seventh-day Adventist would be an issue unless theology became central to the political debate.", "paragraph_sentence": "Bob Vander Plaats, the president and chief executive of the Family Leader, a social conservative group in Iowa, said his members had not yet expressed concern about Mr. Carson\u2019s religion. He cited the support that Mr. Romney received from evangelicals in 2012, saying he did not think the fact that Mr. Carson is a Seventh-day Adventist would be an issue unless theology became central to the political debate. \u201cI think Trump threw out the fleece to let people check it out,\u201d Mr. Vander Plaats said of why he thought Mr. Carson\u2019s religion suddenly became an issue. \u201cPeople of faith will be more interested in the fruit of leadership, policy and does it align with honoring God or dishonoring God.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Bob Vander Plaats, the president and chief executive of the Family Leader, a social conservative group in Iowa, said his members had not yet expressed concern about Mr. Carson\u2019s religion. He cited the support that Mr. Romney received from evangelicals in 2012, saying he did not think the fact that Mr. Carson is a Seventh-day Adventist would be an issue unless theology became central to the political debate. \u201cI think Trump threw out the fleece to let people check it out,\u201d Mr. Vander Plaats said of why he thought Mr. Carson\u2019s religion suddenly became an issue. \u201cPeople of faith will be more interested in the fruit of leadership, policy and does it align with honoring God or dishonoring God.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "He cited the support that Mr. Romney received from evangelicals in 2012, saying he did not think the fact that Mr. Carson is a Seventh-day Adventist would be an issue unless theology became central to the political debate.", "paragraph_id": "5d702c66c8e4820a9b66da09"} +{"question": "Which Russian currency does the article speak of?", "paragraph": "Second, it gives Mr. Putin the opportunity to play the statesman, too busy reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position in the world to get caught up in problems like recession, 16 percent inflation and a weak ruble. \u201cHe wants to keep the society consolidated and to present himself continuously as a high-profile leader who lives somewhere above everything in the country,\u201d Mr. Trudolyubov said, \u201cso you cannot connect anything that he is doing to what is happening with the ruble, or the hospitals or the schools or the roads. All that is beneath him.\u201d Third, there is a kind of \u201cbread and circus\u201d aspect to it all. In keeping with the paternalistic traditions of czarist Russia, Mr. Putin constantly assumes the role of national superhero.", "answer": "the ruble", "sentence": "\u201cHe wants to keep the society consolidated and to present himself continuously as a high-profile leader who lives somewhere above everything in the country,\u201d Mr. Trudolyubov said, \u201cso you cannot connect anything that he is doing to what is happening with the ruble , or the hospitals or the schools or the roads.", "paragraph_sentence": "Second, it gives Mr. Putin the opportunity to play the statesman, too busy reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position in the world to get caught up in problems like recession, 16 percent inflation and a weak ruble. \u201cHe wants to keep the society consolidated and to present himself continuously as a high-profile leader who lives somewhere above everything in the country,\u201d Mr. Trudolyubov said, \u201cso you cannot connect anything that he is doing to what is happening with the ruble , or the hospitals or the schools or the roads. All that is beneath him.\u201d Third, there is a kind of \u201cbread and circus\u201d aspect to it all. In keeping with the paternalistic traditions of czarist Russia, Mr. Putin constantly assumes the role of national superhero.", "paragraph_answer": "Second, it gives Mr. Putin the opportunity to play the statesman, too busy reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position in the world to get caught up in problems like recession, 16 percent inflation and a weak ruble. \u201cHe wants to keep the society consolidated and to present himself continuously as a high-profile leader who lives somewhere above everything in the country,\u201d Mr. Trudolyubov said, \u201cso you cannot connect anything that he is doing to what is happening with the ruble , or the hospitals or the schools or the roads. All that is beneath him.\u201d Third, there is a kind of \u201cbread and circus\u201d aspect to it all. In keeping with the paternalistic traditions of czarist Russia, Mr. Putin constantly assumes the role of national superhero.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cHe wants to keep the society consolidated and to present himself continuously as a high-profile leader who lives somewhere above everything in the country,\u201d Mr. Trudolyubov said, \u201cso you cannot connect anything that he is doing to what is happening with the ruble , or the hospitals or the schools or the roads.", "paragraph_id": "5d701816c8e4820a9b66c415"} +{"question": "when is the National Museum of Contemporary Art scheduled to open again?", "paragraph": "In a separate attraction, NEON is partnering with London\u2019s Whitechapel Gallery to bring together 25 Greek and foreign artists to explore myth, drama, metamorphoses and bioethics through outdoor art projects at the \u00c9cole Fran\u00e7aise d\u2019Ath\u00e8nes until July 26. Other contemporary and historic mash-ups include displays of the finalists for the Deste Prize, which recognizes young Greek artists, at the Museum of Cycladic Art, and the former Sonic Youth frontwoman Kim Gordon\u2019s multiplatform show of paintings and sculpture at the historic Benaki Museum until Aug. 30. Many of these attractions will fill a vacuum left by the absence of the National Museum of Contemporary Art, which has spent more than a decade in a period of restoration and flux but is not scheduled to reopen until the end of the year.", "answer": "the end of the year.", "sentence": "Many of these attractions will fill a vacuum left by the absence of the National Museum of Contemporary Art, which has spent more than a decade in a period of restoration and flux but is not scheduled to reopen until the end of the year.", "paragraph_sentence": "In a separate attraction, NEON is partnering with London\u2019s Whitechapel Gallery to bring together 25 Greek and foreign artists to explore myth, drama, metamorphoses and bioethics through outdoor art projects at the \u00c9cole Fran\u00e7aise d\u2019Ath\u00e8nes until July 26. Other contemporary and historic mash-ups include displays of the finalists for the Deste Prize, which recognizes young Greek artists, at the Museum of Cycladic Art, and the former Sonic Youth frontwoman Kim Gordon\u2019s multiplatform show of paintings and sculpture at the historic Benaki Museum until Aug. 30. Many of these attractions will fill a vacuum left by the absence of the National Museum of Contemporary Art, which has spent more than a decade in a period of restoration and flux but is not scheduled to reopen until the end of the year. ", "paragraph_answer": "In a separate attraction, NEON is partnering with London\u2019s Whitechapel Gallery to bring together 25 Greek and foreign artists to explore myth, drama, metamorphoses and bioethics through outdoor art projects at the \u00c9cole Fran\u00e7aise d\u2019Ath\u00e8nes until July 26. Other contemporary and historic mash-ups include displays of the finalists for the Deste Prize, which recognizes young Greek artists, at the Museum of Cycladic Art, and the former Sonic Youth frontwoman Kim Gordon\u2019s multiplatform show of paintings and sculpture at the historic Benaki Museum until Aug. 30. Many of these attractions will fill a vacuum left by the absence of the National Museum of Contemporary Art, which has spent more than a decade in a period of restoration and flux but is not scheduled to reopen until the end of the year. ", "sentence_answer": "Many of these attractions will fill a vacuum left by the absence of the National Museum of Contemporary Art, which has spent more than a decade in a period of restoration and flux but is not scheduled to reopen until the end of the year. ", "paragraph_id": "5d700dd3c8e4820a9b66b97f"} +{"question": "What does Rebecca Jean Duthie regularly gather with friends for?", "paragraph": "Surging demand caught Ms. Basford and her publisher off guard. Fan mail poured in from busy professionals and parents who confided to Ms. Basford that they found coloring in her books relaxing. More accolades flowed on social media, as people posted images from their coloring books. Hard-core fans often buy several copies of her books at a time, to experiment with different color combinations. Others have turned it into a social activity. Rebekah Jean Duthie, who lives in Queensland, Australia, and works for the Australian Red Cross, says she regularly gathers with friends for \u201ccoloring circles\u201d at cafes and in one another\u2019s homes. \u201cEach page can transport you back to a gentler time of life,\u201d she said of Ms. Basford\u2019s books in an email.", "answer": "coloring circles", "sentence": "Rebekah Jean Duthie, who lives in Queensland, Australia, and works for the Australian Red Cross, says she regularly gathers with friends for \u201c coloring circles \u201d at cafes and in one another\u2019s homes.", "paragraph_sentence": "Surging demand caught Ms. Basford and her publisher off guard. Fan mail poured in from busy professionals and parents who confided to Ms. Basford that they found coloring in her books relaxing. More accolades flowed on social media, as people posted images from their coloring books. Hard-core fans often buy several copies of her books at a time, to experiment with different color combinations. Others have turned it into a social activity. Rebekah Jean Duthie, who lives in Queensland, Australia, and works for the Australian Red Cross, says she regularly gathers with friends for \u201c coloring circles \u201d at cafes and in one another\u2019s homes. \u201cEach page can transport you back to a gentler time of life,\u201d she said of Ms. Basford\u2019s books in an email.", "paragraph_answer": "Surging demand caught Ms. Basford and her publisher off guard. Fan mail poured in from busy professionals and parents who confided to Ms. Basford that they found coloring in her books relaxing. More accolades flowed on social media, as people posted images from their coloring books. Hard-core fans often buy several copies of her books at a time, to experiment with different color combinations. Others have turned it into a social activity. Rebekah Jean Duthie, who lives in Queensland, Australia, and works for the Australian Red Cross, says she regularly gathers with friends for \u201c coloring circles \u201d at cafes and in one another\u2019s homes. \u201cEach page can transport you back to a gentler time of life,\u201d she said of Ms. Basford\u2019s books in an email.", "sentence_answer": "Rebekah Jean Duthie, who lives in Queensland, Australia, and works for the Australian Red Cross, says she regularly gathers with friends for \u201c coloring circles \u201d at cafes and in one another\u2019s homes.", "paragraph_id": "5d70221ec8e4820a9b66ce28"} +{"question": "Which areas have devoted more spending on state-of-the-art high-speed trains?", "paragraph": "The development of United States infrastructure, meanwhile, was centered on road transport. \u201cIn a way, it is a kind of historical accident,\u201d Mr. Perkins said. \u201cIf you have the lines there already from an earlier period, you can just carry on supporting and improving them. \u201cBut putting that kind of rail access in retroactively is very expensive.\u201d Their more consistent upkeep of rail systems has allowed European and Asian countries to devote a growing share of spending to state-of-the-art high-speed trains that run on dedicated rail lines fitted with sophisticated sensors and signal technology.", "answer": "European and Asian countries", "sentence": "Their more consistent upkeep of rail systems has allowed European and Asian countries to devote a growing share of spending to state-of-the-art high-speed trains that run on dedicated rail lines fitted with sophisticated sensors and signal technology.", "paragraph_sentence": "The development of United States infrastructure, meanwhile, was centered on road transport. \u201cIn a way, it is a kind of historical accident,\u201d Mr. Perkins said. \u201cIf you have the lines there already from an earlier period, you can just carry on supporting and improving them. \u201cBut putting that kind of rail access in retroactively is very expensive.\u201d Their more consistent upkeep of rail systems has allowed European and Asian countries to devote a growing share of spending to state-of-the-art high-speed trains that run on dedicated rail lines fitted with sophisticated sensors and signal technology. ", "paragraph_answer": "The development of United States infrastructure, meanwhile, was centered on road transport. \u201cIn a way, it is a kind of historical accident,\u201d Mr. Perkins said. \u201cIf you have the lines there already from an earlier period, you can just carry on supporting and improving them. \u201cBut putting that kind of rail access in retroactively is very expensive.\u201d Their more consistent upkeep of rail systems has allowed European and Asian countries to devote a growing share of spending to state-of-the-art high-speed trains that run on dedicated rail lines fitted with sophisticated sensors and signal technology.", "sentence_answer": "Their more consistent upkeep of rail systems has allowed European and Asian countries to devote a growing share of spending to state-of-the-art high-speed trains that run on dedicated rail lines fitted with sophisticated sensors and signal technology.", "paragraph_id": "5d703859c8e4820a9b66e108"} +{"question": "How long does the story of Alexanderm, Napoleon and Josephine span?", "paragraph": "With paintings, antiquities, historic garments, weapons, sculpture and porcelain, \u201cAlexander, Napoleon and Josephine\u201d tells a story that spans from 1807 to 1815, beginning with the friendship between Czar Alexander and Napoleon and ending with their estrangement. At the center of the exhibition is the notion that Josephine linked the two military rivals to create a kind of romantic and political triad, thanks to her cultivation, sophistication and diplomatic skills, which enhanced the status of both emperors.", "answer": "from 1807 to 1815", "sentence": "With paintings, antiquities, historic garments, weapons, sculpture and porcelain, \u201cAlexander, Napoleon and Josephine\u201d tells a story that spans from 1807 to 1815 , beginning with the friendship between Czar Alexander and Napoleon and ending with their estrangement.", "paragraph_sentence": " With paintings, antiquities, historic garments, weapons, sculpture and porcelain, \u201cAlexander, Napoleon and Josephine\u201d tells a story that spans from 1807 to 1815 , beginning with the friendship between Czar Alexander and Napoleon and ending with their estrangement. At the center of the exhibition is the notion that Josephine linked the two military rivals to create a kind of romantic and political triad, thanks to her cultivation, sophistication and diplomatic skills, which enhanced the status of both emperors.", "paragraph_answer": "With paintings, antiquities, historic garments, weapons, sculpture and porcelain, \u201cAlexander, Napoleon and Josephine\u201d tells a story that spans from 1807 to 1815 , beginning with the friendship between Czar Alexander and Napoleon and ending with their estrangement. At the center of the exhibition is the notion that Josephine linked the two military rivals to create a kind of romantic and political triad, thanks to her cultivation, sophistication and diplomatic skills, which enhanced the status of both emperors.", "sentence_answer": "With paintings, antiquities, historic garments, weapons, sculpture and porcelain, \u201cAlexander, Napoleon and Josephine\u201d tells a story that spans from 1807 to 1815 , beginning with the friendship between Czar Alexander and Napoleon and ending with their estrangement.", "paragraph_id": "5d700b01c8e4820a9b66b535"} +{"question": "did Harris enjoy the tests?", "paragraph": "\u201cI played 27 more tests than I ever thought I would,\u201d Harris said Saturday. \u201cI relished every single moment of them.\u201d His departure robs Australia of its one bowler who has proved effective in English conditions, as he was its leading wicket-taker in England in 2013. Harris, 35, was a subtle craftsmen among a clutch of flamethrowers, relying on control and variation. rather than sheer speed. His loss increases Australia\u2019s likely reliance on its two fearsome left-armers, Mitchell Starc and Mitchell Johnson, and it is also a reminder of one potential vulnerability of the defending champion \u2014 its age. Brad Haddin, the wicketkeeper, and Chris Rogers, an opening batsman, are both 37. Middle-order batsman Adam Voges is a 35-year-old test rookie. Johnson is 33, while captain Michael Clarke is 34 and has a history of back trouble. Much will depend on Clarke\u2019s heir apparent as captain, Steve Smith. The 26-year-old was once regarded as a \u201cbits and pieces\u201d player who was not quite good enough in any of his roles, but he has developed into a batting specialist who now tops the world rankings.", "answer": "relished every single moment of them", "sentence": "\u201cI relished every single moment of them .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI played 27 more tests than I ever thought I would,\u201d Harris said Saturday. \u201cI relished every single moment of them .\u201d His departure robs Australia of its one bowler who has proved effective in English conditions, as he was its leading wicket-taker in England in 2013. Harris, 35, was a subtle craftsmen among a clutch of flamethrowers, relying on control and variation. rather than sheer speed. His loss increases Australia\u2019s likely reliance on its two fearsome left-armers, Mitchell Starc and Mitchell Johnson, and it is also a reminder of one potential vulnerability of the defending champion \u2014 its age. Brad Haddin, the wicketkeeper, and Chris Rogers, an opening batsman, are both 37. Middle-order batsman Adam Voges is a 35-year-old test rookie. Johnson is 33, while captain Michael Clarke is 34 and has a history of back trouble. Much will depend on Clarke\u2019s heir apparent as captain, Steve Smith. The 26-year-old was once regarded as a \u201cbits and pieces\u201d player who was not quite good enough in any of his roles, but he has developed into a batting specialist who now tops the world rankings.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI played 27 more tests than I ever thought I would,\u201d Harris said Saturday. \u201cI relished every single moment of them .\u201d His departure robs Australia of its one bowler who has proved effective in English conditions, as he was its leading wicket-taker in England in 2013. Harris, 35, was a subtle craftsmen among a clutch of flamethrowers, relying on control and variation. rather than sheer speed. His loss increases Australia\u2019s likely reliance on its two fearsome left-armers, Mitchell Starc and Mitchell Johnson, and it is also a reminder of one potential vulnerability of the defending champion \u2014 its age. Brad Haddin, the wicketkeeper, and Chris Rogers, an opening batsman, are both 37. Middle-order batsman Adam Voges is a 35-year-old test rookie. Johnson is 33, while captain Michael Clarke is 34 and has a history of back trouble. Much will depend on Clarke\u2019s heir apparent as captain, Steve Smith. The 26-year-old was once regarded as a \u201cbits and pieces\u201d player who was not quite good enough in any of his roles, but he has developed into a batting specialist who now tops the world rankings.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI relished every single moment of them .\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d701032c8e4820a9b66bc56"} +{"question": "What was Towns' stat line against the Lakers on Wednesday?", "paragraph": "\u201cI was like, \u2018Where did you buy that jump shot?\u2019 \u201d Muhammad said. \u201cAnd he was kind of like: \u2018I always had one! Coach Cal wouldn\u2019t let me shoot it!\u2019 And I was like: \u2018Man, that\u2019s pretty good. You\u2019re the No. 1 pick, and you didn\u2019t even show some parts of your game.\u2019 \u201d Muhammad, a third-year wing and a part of the Timberwolves\u2019 well-publicized kiddie corps, paused and considered the possibilities. \u201cHis ceiling,\u201d Muhammad said, \u201cis high.\u201d Towns, who recently turned 20, has made an easy transition to life in the N.B.A., averaging 15.2 points and 9.3 rebounds a game for the Timberwolves (9-13), who will visit the Knicks on Wednesday. It will be a homecoming of sorts for Towns, who grew up in Piscataway, N.J., and attended St. Joseph High School, a preparatory school in Metuchen, N.J. Towns\u2019s teammates have watched him improve week by week \u2014 perhaps even day by day. On Wednesday, amid the hoopla of Kobe Bryant\u2019s final game in Minneapolis, Towns clogged the box score in a 123-122 overtime victory over the Lakers, collecting 26 points and 14 rebounds while shooting 11 of 19 from the field. One of his most impressive feats did not even count \u2014 cradling the ball up from his ankles for a dunk that came after the whistle. \u201cThat was nasty,\u201d Muhammad said.", "answer": "26 points and 14 rebounds while shooting 11 of 19 from the field", "sentence": "On Wednesday, amid the hoopla of Kobe Bryant\u2019s final game in Minneapolis, Towns clogged the box score in a 123-122 overtime victory over the Lakers, collecting 26 points and 14 rebounds while shooting 11 of 19 from the field .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI was like, \u2018Where did you buy that jump shot?\u2019 \u201d Muhammad said. \u201cAnd he was kind of like: \u2018I always had one! Coach Cal wouldn\u2019t let me shoot it!\u2019 And I was like: \u2018Man, that\u2019s pretty good. You\u2019re the No. 1 pick, and you didn\u2019t even show some parts of your game.\u2019 \u201d Muhammad, a third-year wing and a part of the Timberwolves\u2019 well-publicized kiddie corps, paused and considered the possibilities. \u201cHis ceiling,\u201d Muhammad said, \u201cis high.\u201d Towns, who recently turned 20, has made an easy transition to life in the N.B.A., averaging 15.2 points and 9.3 rebounds a game for the Timberwolves (9-13), who will visit the Knicks on Wednesday. It will be a homecoming of sorts for Towns, who grew up in Piscataway, N.J., and attended St. Joseph High School, a preparatory school in Metuchen, N.J. Towns\u2019s teammates have watched him improve week by week \u2014 perhaps even day by day. On Wednesday, amid the hoopla of Kobe Bryant\u2019s final game in Minneapolis, Towns clogged the box score in a 123-122 overtime victory over the Lakers, collecting 26 points and 14 rebounds while shooting 11 of 19 from the field . One of his most impressive feats did not even count \u2014 cradling the ball up from his ankles for a dunk that came after the whistle. \u201cThat was nasty,\u201d Muhammad said.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI was like, \u2018Where did you buy that jump shot?\u2019 \u201d Muhammad said. \u201cAnd he was kind of like: \u2018I always had one! Coach Cal wouldn\u2019t let me shoot it!\u2019 And I was like: \u2018Man, that\u2019s pretty good. You\u2019re the No. 1 pick, and you didn\u2019t even show some parts of your game.\u2019 \u201d Muhammad, a third-year wing and a part of the Timberwolves\u2019 well-publicized kiddie corps, paused and considered the possibilities. \u201cHis ceiling,\u201d Muhammad said, \u201cis high.\u201d Towns, who recently turned 20, has made an easy transition to life in the N.B.A., averaging 15.2 points and 9.3 rebounds a game for the Timberwolves (9-13), who will visit the Knicks on Wednesday. It will be a homecoming of sorts for Towns, who grew up in Piscataway, N.J., and attended St. Joseph High School, a preparatory school in Metuchen, N.J. Towns\u2019s teammates have watched him improve week by week \u2014 perhaps even day by day. On Wednesday, amid the hoopla of Kobe Bryant\u2019s final game in Minneapolis, Towns clogged the box score in a 123-122 overtime victory over the Lakers, collecting 26 points and 14 rebounds while shooting 11 of 19 from the field . One of his most impressive feats did not even count \u2014 cradling the ball up from his ankles for a dunk that came after the whistle. \u201cThat was nasty,\u201d Muhammad said.", "sentence_answer": "On Wednesday, amid the hoopla of Kobe Bryant\u2019s final game in Minneapolis, Towns clogged the box score in a 123-122 overtime victory over the Lakers, collecting 26 points and 14 rebounds while shooting 11 of 19 from the field .", "paragraph_id": "5d700715c8e4820a9b66accd"} +{"question": "How many guards were present at the beating of Patrick Alexander?", "paragraph": "Night had fallen at the Clinton Correctional Facility in far northern New York when the prison guards came for Patrick Alexander. They handcuffed him and took him into a broom closet for questioning. Then, Mr. Alexander said in an interview last week, the beatings began. As the three guards, who wore no name badges, punched him and slammed his head against the wall, he said they shouted questions: \u201cWhere are they going? What did you hear? How much are they paying you to keep your mouth shut?\u201d One of the guards put a plastic bag over his head, Mr. Alexander said, and threatened to waterboard him.", "answer": "three", "sentence": "As the three guards, who wore no name badges, punched him and slammed his head against the wall, he said they shouted questions: \u201cWhere are they going?", "paragraph_sentence": "Night had fallen at the Clinton Correctional Facility in far northern New York when the prison guards came for Patrick Alexander. They handcuffed him and took him into a broom closet for questioning. Then, Mr. Alexander said in an interview last week, the beatings began. As the three guards, who wore no name badges, punched him and slammed his head against the wall, he said they shouted questions: \u201cWhere are they going? What did you hear? How much are they paying you to keep your mouth shut?\u201d One of the guards put a plastic bag over his head, Mr. Alexander said, and threatened to waterboard him.", "paragraph_answer": "Night had fallen at the Clinton Correctional Facility in far northern New York when the prison guards came for Patrick Alexander. They handcuffed him and took him into a broom closet for questioning. Then, Mr. Alexander said in an interview last week, the beatings began. As the three guards, who wore no name badges, punched him and slammed his head against the wall, he said they shouted questions: \u201cWhere are they going? What did you hear? How much are they paying you to keep your mouth shut?\u201d One of the guards put a plastic bag over his head, Mr. Alexander said, and threatened to waterboard him.", "sentence_answer": "As the three guards, who wore no name badges, punched him and slammed his head against the wall, he said they shouted questions: \u201cWhere are they going?", "paragraph_id": "5d707760c8e4820a9b66f29e"} +{"question": "Where did the interview take place?", "paragraph": "During an interview last week at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Westchester County, Mr. Nu\u00f1ez showed reporters purple scars around his right ankle that he said were the result of CERT officers\u2019 intentionally shackling him too tightly. Some of the former honor block residents have lost privileges that had taken years to earn at Clinton. Mr. Edwards, who had supervised 50 inmates at the prison tailor shop, had been able to earn as much as $45 a week. Since being moved to Sing Sing, he has been working as a porter making $3 a week. \u201cThey took everything from me,\u201d he said. \u201cThey did everything they could to blame the ones who stayed.\u201d", "answer": "Sing Sing Correctional Facility", "sentence": "During an interview last week at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Westchester County, Mr. Nu\u00f1ez showed reporters purple scars around his right ankle that he said were the result of CERT officers\u2019 intentionally shackling him too tightly.", "paragraph_sentence": " During an interview last week at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Westchester County, Mr. Nu\u00f1ez showed reporters purple scars around his right ankle that he said were the result of CERT officers\u2019 intentionally shackling him too tightly. Some of the former honor block residents have lost privileges that had taken years to earn at Clinton. Mr. Edwards, who had supervised 50 inmates at the prison tailor shop, had been able to earn as much as $45 a week. Since being moved to Sing Sing, he has been working as a porter making $3 a week. \u201cThey took everything from me,\u201d he said. \u201cThey did everything they could to blame the ones who stayed.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "During an interview last week at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Westchester County, Mr. Nu\u00f1ez showed reporters purple scars around his right ankle that he said were the result of CERT officers\u2019 intentionally shackling him too tightly. Some of the former honor block residents have lost privileges that had taken years to earn at Clinton. Mr. Edwards, who had supervised 50 inmates at the prison tailor shop, had been able to earn as much as $45 a week. Since being moved to Sing Sing, he has been working as a porter making $3 a week. \u201cThey took everything from me,\u201d he said. \u201cThey did everything they could to blame the ones who stayed.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "During an interview last week at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Westchester County, Mr. Nu\u00f1ez showed reporters purple scars around his right ankle that he said were the result of CERT officers\u2019 intentionally shackling him too tightly.", "paragraph_id": "5d707bffc8e4820a9b66f338"} +{"question": "Who is suspected of stabbing the soldier?", "paragraph": "The N.D.S. arrested a number of men in the crowd, including the butcher believed to have stabbed the soldier, said Mr. Khan and other witnesses. That seemed to provoke further anger, with the crowd demanding that Afghan security forces on the scene release their countrymen who had stood up against the foreign soldiers. A spokesman for the American-led coalition, Col. Brian Tribus, said the episode was under investigation. He added that two service members in the convoy had minor injuries. The suicide bombing wounded at least 22 people and killed one, said a spokesman for the Interior Ministry, Sediq Sediqqi. But witnesses said the death toll was probably higher.", "answer": "butcher", "sentence": "The N.D.S. arrested a number of men in the crowd, including the butcher believed to have stabbed the soldier, said Mr. Khan and other witnesses.", "paragraph_sentence": " The N.D.S. arrested a number of men in the crowd, including the butcher believed to have stabbed the soldier, said Mr. Khan and other witnesses. That seemed to provoke further anger, with the crowd demanding that Afghan security forces on the scene release their countrymen who had stood up against the foreign soldiers. A spokesman for the American-led coalition, Col. Brian Tribus, said the episode was under investigation. He added that two service members in the convoy had minor injuries. The suicide bombing wounded at least 22 people and killed one, said a spokesman for the Interior Ministry, Sediq Sediqqi. But witnesses said the death toll was probably higher.", "paragraph_answer": "The N.D.S. arrested a number of men in the crowd, including the butcher believed to have stabbed the soldier, said Mr. Khan and other witnesses. That seemed to provoke further anger, with the crowd demanding that Afghan security forces on the scene release their countrymen who had stood up against the foreign soldiers. A spokesman for the American-led coalition, Col. Brian Tribus, said the episode was under investigation. He added that two service members in the convoy had minor injuries. The suicide bombing wounded at least 22 people and killed one, said a spokesman for the Interior Ministry, Sediq Sediqqi. But witnesses said the death toll was probably higher.", "sentence_answer": "The N.D.S. arrested a number of men in the crowd, including the butcher believed to have stabbed the soldier, said Mr. Khan and other witnesses.", "paragraph_id": "5d700e9cc8e4820a9b66ba72"} +{"question": "Who isn't a mom and pop but is a chain?", "paragraph": "Though Zaro\u2019s is also a chain and not a mom-and-pop operation, it has survived in a changing part of the Bronx \u2014 a place where stromboli and red velvet cupcakes coexist with challah and hamantaschen, even as the neighborhood has transformed from heavily Jewish to one predominately of black and Hispanic residents. \u201cThe Bronx has been our home since 1927 \u2014 a long, long time ago in a galaxy far, far away,\u201d Mr. Zaro said. \u201cThe Bronx has been good to us, and we love the Bronx,\u201d he added. \u201cI was always proud to tell people that we still had a branch in Parkchester.\u201d", "answer": "Zaro\u2019s", "sentence": "Though Zaro\u2019s is also a chain and not a mom-and-pop operation, it has survived in a changing part of the Bronx \u2014 a place where stromboli and red velvet cupcakes coexist with challah and hamantaschen, even as the neighborhood has transformed from heavily Jewish to one predominately of black and Hispanic residents.", "paragraph_sentence": " Though Zaro\u2019s is also a chain and not a mom-and-pop operation, it has survived in a changing part of the Bronx \u2014 a place where stromboli and red velvet cupcakes coexist with challah and hamantaschen, even as the neighborhood has transformed from heavily Jewish to one predominately of black and Hispanic residents. \u201cThe Bronx has been our home since 1927 \u2014 a long, long time ago in a galaxy far, far away,\u201d Mr. Zaro said. \u201cThe Bronx has been good to us, and we love the Bronx,\u201d he added. \u201cI was always proud to tell people that we still had a branch in Parkchester.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Though Zaro\u2019s is also a chain and not a mom-and-pop operation, it has survived in a changing part of the Bronx \u2014 a place where stromboli and red velvet cupcakes coexist with challah and hamantaschen, even as the neighborhood has transformed from heavily Jewish to one predominately of black and Hispanic residents. \u201cThe Bronx has been our home since 1927 \u2014 a long, long time ago in a galaxy far, far away,\u201d Mr. Zaro said. \u201cThe Bronx has been good to us, and we love the Bronx,\u201d he added. \u201cI was always proud to tell people that we still had a branch in Parkchester.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Though Zaro\u2019s is also a chain and not a mom-and-pop operation, it has survived in a changing part of the Bronx \u2014 a place where stromboli and red velvet cupcakes coexist with challah and hamantaschen, even as the neighborhood has transformed from heavily Jewish to one predominately of black and Hispanic residents.", "paragraph_id": "5d7032c2c8e4820a9b66ddfb"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d702b66c8e4820a9b66d8f6"} +{"question": "Who is harassing the locals?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe militias also beat and kill people; they ask for a share,\u201d Mr. Qul said. \u201cThey have taken up weapons to bring security, but they are doing the looting themselves.\u201d A senior security official acknowledged that the militias were harassing the locals, but said they had been warned \u201cnot to touch people\u2019s property.\u201d \u201cIt was a tradition here: when the Taliban raided a village, they would loot and burn houses,\u201d the official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss the trouble. \u201cAnd when the government took back the area, the militias would do the same, they would be so happy to come with us on the operation.\u201d", "answer": "the militias", "sentence": "A senior security official acknowledged that the militias were harassing the locals, but said they had been warned \u201cnot to touch people\u2019s property.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe militias also beat and kill people; they ask for a share,\u201d Mr. Qul said. \u201cThey have taken up weapons to bring security, but they are doing the looting themselves.\u201d A senior security official acknowledged that the militias were harassing the locals, but said they had been warned \u201cnot to touch people\u2019s property.\u201d \u201cIt was a tradition here: when the Taliban raided a village, they would loot and burn houses,\u201d the official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss the trouble. \u201cAnd when the government took back the area, the militias would do the same, they would be so happy to come with us on the operation.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe militias also beat and kill people; they ask for a share,\u201d Mr. Qul said. \u201cThey have taken up weapons to bring security, but they are doing the looting themselves.\u201d A senior security official acknowledged that the militias were harassing the locals, but said they had been warned \u201cnot to touch people\u2019s property.\u201d \u201cIt was a tradition here: when the Taliban raided a village, they would loot and burn houses,\u201d the official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss the trouble. \u201cAnd when the government took back the area, the militias would do the same, they would be so happy to come with us on the operation.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "A senior security official acknowledged that the militias were harassing the locals, but said they had been warned \u201cnot to touch people\u2019s property.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d70363ac8e4820a9b66e004"} +{"question": "Mr. Heastie was considered one of the most influential people in what city?", "paragraph": "Ms. Miner noted that she had spoken to Mr. Heastie many times in the past; Mr. Heastie served for 14 years in the Assembly before becoming speaker. But in many cases Tuesday, Mr. Heastie, now one of the most powerful men in Albany, seemed to be introducing himself to members of the public. In his first five months on the job, Mr. Heastie has established himself as a quiet presence in the Capitol, with terse answers to reporters\u2019 questions and a sedate, often dispassionate way of delivering speeches.", "answer": "Albany", "sentence": "But in many cases Tuesday, Mr. Heastie, now one of the most powerful men in Albany , seemed to be introducing himself to members of the public.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Miner noted that she had spoken to Mr. Heastie many times in the past; Mr. Heastie served for 14 years in the Assembly before becoming speaker. But in many cases Tuesday, Mr. Heastie, now one of the most powerful men in Albany , seemed to be introducing himself to members of the public. In his first five months on the job, Mr. Heastie has established himself as a quiet presence in the Capitol, with terse answers to reporters\u2019 questions and a sedate, often dispassionate way of delivering speeches.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Miner noted that she had spoken to Mr. Heastie many times in the past; Mr. Heastie served for 14 years in the Assembly before becoming speaker. But in many cases Tuesday, Mr. Heastie, now one of the most powerful men in Albany , seemed to be introducing himself to members of the public. In his first five months on the job, Mr. Heastie has established himself as a quiet presence in the Capitol, with terse answers to reporters\u2019 questions and a sedate, often dispassionate way of delivering speeches.", "sentence_answer": "But in many cases Tuesday, Mr. Heastie, now one of the most powerful men in Albany , seemed to be introducing himself to members of the public.", "paragraph_id": "5d70662bc8e4820a9b66f0aa"} +{"question": "How many samples of photographs did the writer look at?", "paragraph": "The photograph that Markisha McClenton posted on Instagram is a self-portrait, a close-up that is muted in dim light. She might be on her way to work. She might be coming home. Her workdays begin and end in the dark, and they are dark in between. She\u2019s a lab technician in Jacksonville, Fla. Her specialty is blood. She has worked these dark hours since her son was 7. \u201cFreedom,\u201d she told me over the phone from her lab. That\u2019s why she works these hours: The freedom to work at night and to raise her children during the days. To her, this is good fortune. She is smiling in this photo. But her eyes are midnight eyes, 3 a.m. eyes. Why take a photo at that hour? \u201cPeople forget about us, the night shift,\u201d she said. The #nightshift. That\u2019s the hashtag she used. It\u2019s how I found her. I\u2019ve been working at night myself for a long time now. Once it was out of choice, a preference for the quiet hours. More recently it was because I had no choice. Insomnia. One night, I was drinking my third cup of coffee \u2014 because when you can\u2019t sleep, you might as well stop trying \u2014 and ignoring the deadline looming the next morning. Instead, I stared at the matrix on my phone, my own red eyes scanning a tiny sample of some 670,000 photographs under #nightshift. Most of them were people like me, awake when they didn\u2019t want to be awake. And like me, they were looking at the screen in their hands, held up by the one in mine.", "answer": "670,000", "sentence": "Instead, I stared at the matrix on my phone, my own red eyes scanning a tiny sample of some 670,000 photographs under #nightshift.", "paragraph_sentence": "The photograph that Markisha McClenton posted on Instagram is a self-portrait, a close-up that is muted in dim light. She might be on her way to work. She might be coming home. Her workdays begin and end in the dark, and they are dark in between. She\u2019s a lab technician in Jacksonville, Fla. Her specialty is blood. She has worked these dark hours since her son was 7. \u201cFreedom,\u201d she told me over the phone from her lab. That\u2019s why she works these hours: The freedom to work at night and to raise her children during the days. To her, this is good fortune. She is smiling in this photo. But her eyes are midnight eyes, 3 a.m. eyes. Why take a photo at that hour? \u201cPeople forget about us, the night shift,\u201d she said. The #nightshift. That\u2019s the hashtag she used. It\u2019s how I found her. I\u2019ve been working at night myself for a long time now. Once it was out of choice, a preference for the quiet hours. More recently it was because I had no choice. Insomnia. One night, I was drinking my third cup of coffee \u2014 because when you can\u2019t sleep, you might as well stop trying \u2014 and ignoring the deadline looming the next morning. Instead, I stared at the matrix on my phone, my own red eyes scanning a tiny sample of some 670,000 photographs under #nightshift. Most of them were people like me, awake when they didn\u2019t want to be awake. And like me, they were looking at the screen in their hands, held up by the one in mine.", "paragraph_answer": "The photograph that Markisha McClenton posted on Instagram is a self-portrait, a close-up that is muted in dim light. She might be on her way to work. She might be coming home. Her workdays begin and end in the dark, and they are dark in between. She\u2019s a lab technician in Jacksonville, Fla. Her specialty is blood. She has worked these dark hours since her son was 7. \u201cFreedom,\u201d she told me over the phone from her lab. That\u2019s why she works these hours: The freedom to work at night and to raise her children during the days. To her, this is good fortune. She is smiling in this photo. But her eyes are midnight eyes, 3 a.m. eyes. Why take a photo at that hour? \u201cPeople forget about us, the night shift,\u201d she said. The #nightshift. That\u2019s the hashtag she used. It\u2019s how I found her. I\u2019ve been working at night myself for a long time now. Once it was out of choice, a preference for the quiet hours. More recently it was because I had no choice. Insomnia. One night, I was drinking my third cup of coffee \u2014 because when you can\u2019t sleep, you might as well stop trying \u2014 and ignoring the deadline looming the next morning. Instead, I stared at the matrix on my phone, my own red eyes scanning a tiny sample of some 670,000 photographs under #nightshift. Most of them were people like me, awake when they didn\u2019t want to be awake. And like me, they were looking at the screen in their hands, held up by the one in mine.", "sentence_answer": "Instead, I stared at the matrix on my phone, my own red eyes scanning a tiny sample of some 670,000 photographs under #nightshift.", "paragraph_id": "5d703192c8e4820a9b66dd61"} +{"question": "When will Mr. Fox leave the government?", "paragraph": "Instead, the statement said that Mr. Fox would \u201cmake his anticipated transition back to the private sector by the end of the month.\u201d Mr. Christie said that Joseph Bertoni, the department\u2019s deputy commissioner, would take over as acting commissioner. In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund. He said that serving as transportation commissioner twice had been \u201cthe best job I have ever had.\u201d He did not mention the federal investigation.", "answer": "by the end of the month", "sentence": "Instead, the statement said that Mr. Fox would \u201cmake his anticipated transition back to the private sector by the end of the month .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Instead, the statement said that Mr. Fox would \u201cmake his anticipated transition back to the private sector by the end of the month .\u201d Mr. Christie said that Joseph Bertoni, the department\u2019s deputy commissioner, would take over as acting commissioner. In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund. He said that serving as transportation commissioner twice had been \u201cthe best job I have ever had.\u201d He did not mention the federal investigation.", "paragraph_answer": "Instead, the statement said that Mr. Fox would \u201cmake his anticipated transition back to the private sector by the end of the month .\u201d Mr. Christie said that Joseph Bertoni, the department\u2019s deputy commissioner, would take over as acting commissioner. In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund. He said that serving as transportation commissioner twice had been \u201cthe best job I have ever had.\u201d He did not mention the federal investigation.", "sentence_answer": "Instead, the statement said that Mr. Fox would \u201cmake his anticipated transition back to the private sector by the end of the month .\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d701d8ec8e4820a9b66c8ff"} +{"question": "How was the series against the Capital described?", "paragraph": "When practice started, Lundqvist took his place in the same goal he always does, and Talbot took his place at the opposite end. The Rangers began to scrimmage, but much of the action seemed to gravitate toward Talbot\u2019s end. Lundqvist knelt down, waiting. He started stretching again. He looked bored. But the purpose of this practice was mostly to get the players moving around, their blood flowing on their day off, and Lundqvist would probably be better served saving his energy. The series against the Capitals has been grueling.", "answer": "grueling.", "sentence": "The series against the Capitals has been grueling.", "paragraph_sentence": "When practice started, Lundqvist took his place in the same goal he always does, and Talbot took his place at the opposite end. The Rangers began to scrimmage, but much of the action seemed to gravitate toward Talbot\u2019s end. Lundqvist knelt down, waiting. He started stretching again. He looked bored. But the purpose of this practice was mostly to get the players moving around, their blood flowing on their day off, and Lundqvist would probably be better served saving his energy. The series against the Capitals has been grueling. ", "paragraph_answer": "When practice started, Lundqvist took his place in the same goal he always does, and Talbot took his place at the opposite end. The Rangers began to scrimmage, but much of the action seemed to gravitate toward Talbot\u2019s end. Lundqvist knelt down, waiting. He started stretching again. He looked bored. But the purpose of this practice was mostly to get the players moving around, their blood flowing on their day off, and Lundqvist would probably be better served saving his energy. The series against the Capitals has been grueling. ", "sentence_answer": "The series against the Capitals has been grueling. ", "paragraph_id": "5d707d98c8e4820a9b66f375"} +{"question": "What organization is now involved because two of the detainees are gay?", "paragraph": "\u201cIf China is committed to advancing the rights of women, then it should be working to address the issues raised by these women\u2019s rights activists \u2014 not silencing them,\u201d said Samantha Power, the American ambassador to the United Nations. From Morocco to India to New York, supporters have been posting images of themselves wearing masks that bear the photos of the jailed women. Because two of the detainees are lesbian and another is bisexual, overseas gay rights organizations like All Out have jumped into the fray, collecting more than 85,000 signatures and popularizing the hashtag #freethefive on Twitter.", "answer": "All Out", "sentence": "Because two of the detainees are lesbian and another is bisexual, overseas gay rights organizations like All Out have jumped into the fray, collecting more than 85,000 signatures and popularizing the hashtag #freethefive on Twitter.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIf China is committed to advancing the rights of women, then it should be working to address the issues raised by these women\u2019s rights activists \u2014 not silencing them,\u201d said Samantha Power, the American ambassador to the United Nations. From Morocco to India to New York, supporters have been posting images of themselves wearing masks that bear the photos of the jailed women. Because two of the detainees are lesbian and another is bisexual, overseas gay rights organizations like All Out have jumped into the fray, collecting more than 85,000 signatures and popularizing the hashtag #freethefive on Twitter. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIf China is committed to advancing the rights of women, then it should be working to address the issues raised by these women\u2019s rights activists \u2014 not silencing them,\u201d said Samantha Power, the American ambassador to the United Nations. From Morocco to India to New York, supporters have been posting images of themselves wearing masks that bear the photos of the jailed women. Because two of the detainees are lesbian and another is bisexual, overseas gay rights organizations like All Out have jumped into the fray, collecting more than 85,000 signatures and popularizing the hashtag #freethefive on Twitter.", "sentence_answer": "Because two of the detainees are lesbian and another is bisexual, overseas gay rights organizations like All Out have jumped into the fray, collecting more than 85,000 signatures and popularizing the hashtag #freethefive on Twitter.", "paragraph_id": "5d7019a0c8e4820a9b66c5a7"} +{"question": "What genre of music does the photo book focus on?", "paragraph": "The new photo book \u201cRap Tees: A Collection of Hip-Hop T-Shirts 1980-1999\u201d by DJ Ross One documents 500 shirts, from hip-hop\u2019s dawn \u2014 the first item is a Sugar Hill Gang shirt from 1980, a year after that group released \u201cRapper\u2019s Delight,\u201d widely considered the first commercial hip-hop single \u2014 to its turn-of-the-millennium ubiquity. All the shirts are advertisements, but they go about their job in vastly different ways: Some emphasize logos, others favor slogans or let photos do the talking; a rare few let artists have their way.", "answer": "Hip-Hop", "sentence": "The new photo book \u201cRap Tees: A Collection of Hip-Hop T-Shirts 1980-1999\u201d by DJ Ross One documents 500 shirts, from hip-hop\u2019s dawn \u2014 the first item is a Sugar Hill Gang shirt from 1980, a year after that group released \u201cRapper\u2019s Delight,\u201d widely considered the first commercial hip-hop single \u2014 to its turn-of-the-millennium ubiquity.", "paragraph_sentence": " The new photo book \u201cRap Tees: A Collection of Hip-Hop T-Shirts 1980-1999\u201d by DJ Ross One documents 500 shirts, from hip-hop\u2019s dawn \u2014 the first item is a Sugar Hill Gang shirt from 1980, a year after that group released \u201cRapper\u2019s Delight,\u201d widely considered the first commercial hip-hop single \u2014 to its turn-of-the-millennium ubiquity. All the shirts are advertisements, but they go about their job in vastly different ways: Some emphasize logos, others favor slogans or let photos do the talking; a rare few let artists have their way.", "paragraph_answer": "The new photo book \u201cRap Tees: A Collection of Hip-Hop T-Shirts 1980-1999\u201d by DJ Ross One documents 500 shirts, from hip-hop\u2019s dawn \u2014 the first item is a Sugar Hill Gang shirt from 1980, a year after that group released \u201cRapper\u2019s Delight,\u201d widely considered the first commercial hip-hop single \u2014 to its turn-of-the-millennium ubiquity. All the shirts are advertisements, but they go about their job in vastly different ways: Some emphasize logos, others favor slogans or let photos do the talking; a rare few let artists have their way.", "sentence_answer": "The new photo book \u201cRap Tees: A Collection of Hip-Hop T-Shirts 1980-1999\u201d by DJ Ross One documents 500 shirts, from hip-hop\u2019s dawn \u2014 the first item is a Sugar Hill Gang shirt from 1980, a year after that group released \u201cRapper\u2019s Delight,\u201d widely considered the first commercial hip-hop single \u2014 to its turn-of-the-millennium ubiquity.", "paragraph_id": "5d702392c8e4820a9b66cfaf"} +{"question": "Although it was a great investment, what made it impossible?", "paragraph": "A. They are easier to buy. We did start our business in the B office building, and we found ourselves in that niche and felt very, very comfortable there. B buildings are very management-intensive, because there are many, many tenants involved. But we find that we do that very well and we can create value. We like to give our tenants a high-quality office environment. We don\u2019t want them to think that they\u2019re in a low-quality, traditional, old-fashioned B building, where they feel like they\u2019re giving something up. Q. Would you ever consider investing in Class A buildings? A. Absolutely, but right now it would not be possible given the competition.", "answer": "the competition", "sentence": " A. Absolutely, but right now it would not be possible given the competition .", "paragraph_sentence": "A. They are easier to buy. We did start our business in the B office building, and we found ourselves in that niche and felt very, very comfortable there. B buildings are very management-intensive, because there are many, many tenants involved. But we find that we do that very well and we can create value. We like to give our tenants a high-quality office environment. We don\u2019t want them to think that they\u2019re in a low-quality, traditional, old-fashioned B building, where they feel like they\u2019re giving something up. Q. Would you ever consider investing in Class A buildings? A. Absolutely, but right now it would not be possible given the competition . ", "paragraph_answer": "A. They are easier to buy. We did start our business in the B office building, and we found ourselves in that niche and felt very, very comfortable there. B buildings are very management-intensive, because there are many, many tenants involved. But we find that we do that very well and we can create value. We like to give our tenants a high-quality office environment. We don\u2019t want them to think that they\u2019re in a low-quality, traditional, old-fashioned B building, where they feel like they\u2019re giving something up. Q. Would you ever consider investing in Class A buildings? A. Absolutely, but right now it would not be possible given the competition .", "sentence_answer": " A. Absolutely, but right now it would not be possible given the competition .", "paragraph_id": "5d703b2bc8e4820a9b66e287"} +{"question": "What is Pierre-Paul's first name?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe actually saw tape that showed him working. He\u2019s done a lot of conditioning-type work. So I don\u2019t think there\u2019s anything to worry about there. We\u2019ll monitor that.\u201d But in the end, an impasse remained. No date for Pierre-Paul to rejoin the team. No contract. No timetable of any kind. The season begins Sunday night. \u201cNothing\u2019s changed,\u201d Coughlin said. \u201cWe\u2019ve taken this path and we\u2019re on it, and we\u2019ll stay on it. Hopefully at some point in time, Jason will be ready to play, and we\u2019ll get the green light. If that doesn\u2019t happen, we\u2019ll stay where we are.\u201d The rest is up to Pierre-Paul, the Giants\u2019 doctors and the team\u2019s trainers.", "answer": "Jason", "sentence": "Hopefully at some point in time, Jason will be ready to play, and we\u2019ll get the green light.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe actually saw tape that showed him working. He\u2019s done a lot of conditioning-type work. So I don\u2019t think there\u2019s anything to worry about there. We\u2019ll monitor that.\u201d But in the end, an impasse remained. No date for Pierre-Paul to rejoin the team. No contract. No timetable of any kind. The season begins Sunday night. \u201cNothing\u2019s changed,\u201d Coughlin said. \u201cWe\u2019ve taken this path and we\u2019re on it, and we\u2019ll stay on it. Hopefully at some point in time, Jason will be ready to play, and we\u2019ll get the green light. If that doesn\u2019t happen, we\u2019ll stay where we are.\u201d The rest is up to Pierre-Paul, the Giants\u2019 doctors and the team\u2019s trainers.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe actually saw tape that showed him working. He\u2019s done a lot of conditioning-type work. So I don\u2019t think there\u2019s anything to worry about there. We\u2019ll monitor that.\u201d But in the end, an impasse remained. No date for Pierre-Paul to rejoin the team. No contract. No timetable of any kind. The season begins Sunday night. \u201cNothing\u2019s changed,\u201d Coughlin said. \u201cWe\u2019ve taken this path and we\u2019re on it, and we\u2019ll stay on it. Hopefully at some point in time, Jason will be ready to play, and we\u2019ll get the green light. If that doesn\u2019t happen, we\u2019ll stay where we are.\u201d The rest is up to Pierre-Paul, the Giants\u2019 doctors and the team\u2019s trainers.", "sentence_answer": "Hopefully at some point in time, Jason will be ready to play, and we\u2019ll get the green light.", "paragraph_id": "5d702b7cc8e4820a9b66d912"} +{"question": "Sometimes Marcelo does a double, what does that mean to him?", "paragraph": "The #nightshift hashtag is especially well populated by the armed professions and the healing ones. Sometimes they are almost one and the same, as in the case of @armedmedic3153, a.k.a. Marcelo Aguirre, a paramedic in Newark and suburban New Jersey. He owns an AR-15, a \u00ad9-millimeter\u00ad and a shotgun, but the only thing he shoots on the night shift is his camera. He works nights so he can study days; he wants to be a doctor. Nights are good preparation for that: You get more serious cases. You learn on the job. A 12-hour course each night you\u2019re on. Twenty-four hours if you take a double. After a while, the adrenaline that juices you when you\u2019re new \u2014 when you\u2019re still keeping a tally of the lives you\u2019ve saved \u2014 disappears. You just do the job. \u201cHigh speed and low drag,\u201d Aguirre told me when I called. \u201cPlease ignore the siren,\u201d he said. \u201cWe\u2019re going to a call.\u201d A stroke. Nothing to get excited about. Coffee sustains him. He stays clean. Some guys, he said, use Provigil, but that\u2019s prescribed. \u201cFor shift-work disorder,\u201d he said.", "answer": "Twenty-four hours", "sentence": "Twenty-four hours if you take a double.", "paragraph_sentence": "The #nightshift hashtag is especially well populated by the armed professions and the healing ones. Sometimes they are almost one and the same, as in the case of @armedmedic3153, a.k.a. Marcelo Aguirre, a paramedic in Newark and suburban New Jersey. He owns an AR-15, a \u00ad9-millimeter\u00ad and a shotgun, but the only thing he shoots on the night shift is his camera. He works nights so he can study days; he wants to be a doctor. Nights are good preparation for that: You get more serious cases. You learn on the job. A 12-hour course each night you\u2019re on. Twenty-four hours if you take a double. After a while, the adrenaline that juices you when you\u2019re new \u2014 when you\u2019re still keeping a tally of the lives you\u2019ve saved \u2014 disappears. You just do the job. \u201cHigh speed and low drag,\u201d Aguirre told me when I called. \u201cPlease ignore the siren,\u201d he said. \u201cWe\u2019re going to a call.\u201d A stroke. Nothing to get excited about. Coffee sustains him. He stays clean. Some guys, he said, use Provigil, but that\u2019s prescribed. \u201cFor shift-work disorder,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "The #nightshift hashtag is especially well populated by the armed professions and the healing ones. Sometimes they are almost one and the same, as in the case of @armedmedic3153, a.k.a. Marcelo Aguirre, a paramedic in Newark and suburban New Jersey. He owns an AR-15, a \u00ad9-millimeter\u00ad and a shotgun, but the only thing he shoots on the night shift is his camera. He works nights so he can study days; he wants to be a doctor. Nights are good preparation for that: You get more serious cases. You learn on the job. A 12-hour course each night you\u2019re on. Twenty-four hours if you take a double. After a while, the adrenaline that juices you when you\u2019re new \u2014 when you\u2019re still keeping a tally of the lives you\u2019ve saved \u2014 disappears. You just do the job. \u201cHigh speed and low drag,\u201d Aguirre told me when I called. \u201cPlease ignore the siren,\u201d he said. \u201cWe\u2019re going to a call.\u201d A stroke. Nothing to get excited about. Coffee sustains him. He stays clean. Some guys, he said, use Provigil, but that\u2019s prescribed. \u201cFor shift-work disorder,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": " Twenty-four hours if you take a double.", "paragraph_id": "5d703385c8e4820a9b66de98"} +{"question": "Mr. Hutchinson is part of which political party?", "paragraph": "Some critics of the bill welcomed Mr. Hutchinson\u2019s plan. Walmart, which had denounced the law, commended the governor in a brief statement, while Chad Griffin, the president of the Human Rights Campaign, who was at the Capitol on Wednesday, expressed \u201ccautious optimism.\u201d Proponents of the bill were less positive. In the immediate aftermath of Mr. Hutchinson\u2019s statement, Jerry Cox, the president of the Arkansas-based Family Council, a conservative lobbing group, was more succinct: \u201cNo bill or no amendment, that\u2019s our position right now.\u201d Already in his young term, Mr. Hutchinson, who was previously a United States representative and a federal official, has navigated such partisan topics as Medicaid expansion and Common Core and arrived at solutions that, at least in the short term, left most people satisfied. \u201cHe\u2019s the MacGyver of American politics,\u201d said Bill Vickery, a lobbyist in Little Rock, referring to the television character famous for his ability to defuse bombs. The governor was flanked at the news conference by Jonathan Dismang, the president pro tem of the Senate, and Jeremy Gillam, the House speaker, both Republicans who have reputations for moderate pragmatism. Both expressed support for the governor but acknowledged the work it would take for the members of their chambers, which have Republican majorities, to go along.", "answer": "Republicans", "sentence": "The governor was flanked at the news conference by Jonathan Dismang, the president pro tem of the Senate, and Jeremy Gillam, the House speaker, both Republicans who have reputations for moderate pragmatism.", "paragraph_sentence": "Some critics of the bill welcomed Mr. Hutchinson\u2019s plan. Walmart, which had denounced the law, commended the governor in a brief statement, while Chad Griffin, the president of the Human Rights Campaign, who was at the Capitol on Wednesday, expressed \u201ccautious optimism.\u201d Proponents of the bill were less positive. In the immediate aftermath of Mr. Hutchinson\u2019s statement, Jerry Cox, the president of the Arkansas-based Family Council, a conservative lobbing group, was more succinct: \u201cNo bill or no amendment, that\u2019s our position right now.\u201d Already in his young term, Mr. Hutchinson, who was previously a United States representative and a federal official, has navigated such partisan topics as Medicaid expansion and Common Core and arrived at solutions that, at least in the short term, left most people satisfied. \u201cHe\u2019s the MacGyver of American politics,\u201d said Bill Vickery, a lobbyist in Little Rock, referring to the television character famous for his ability to defuse bombs. The governor was flanked at the news conference by Jonathan Dismang, the president pro tem of the Senate, and Jeremy Gillam, the House speaker, both Republicans who have reputations for moderate pragmatism. Both expressed support for the governor but acknowledged the work it would take for the members of their chambers, which have Republican majorities, to go along.", "paragraph_answer": "Some critics of the bill welcomed Mr. Hutchinson\u2019s plan. Walmart, which had denounced the law, commended the governor in a brief statement, while Chad Griffin, the president of the Human Rights Campaign, who was at the Capitol on Wednesday, expressed \u201ccautious optimism.\u201d Proponents of the bill were less positive. In the immediate aftermath of Mr. Hutchinson\u2019s statement, Jerry Cox, the president of the Arkansas-based Family Council, a conservative lobbing group, was more succinct: \u201cNo bill or no amendment, that\u2019s our position right now.\u201d Already in his young term, Mr. Hutchinson, who was previously a United States representative and a federal official, has navigated such partisan topics as Medicaid expansion and Common Core and arrived at solutions that, at least in the short term, left most people satisfied. \u201cHe\u2019s the MacGyver of American politics,\u201d said Bill Vickery, a lobbyist in Little Rock, referring to the television character famous for his ability to defuse bombs. The governor was flanked at the news conference by Jonathan Dismang, the president pro tem of the Senate, and Jeremy Gillam, the House speaker, both Republicans who have reputations for moderate pragmatism. Both expressed support for the governor but acknowledged the work it would take for the members of their chambers, which have Republican majorities, to go along.", "sentence_answer": "The governor was flanked at the news conference by Jonathan Dismang, the president pro tem of the Senate, and Jeremy Gillam, the House speaker, both Republicans who have reputations for moderate pragmatism.", "paragraph_id": "5d700d16c8e4820a9b66b8ab"} +{"question": "What is the lifetime wage difference between a worker with a bachelor's degree and one with only a high school diploma?", "paragraph": "Today\u2019s economy leaves little doubt about the value of college. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, in 2014 the median worker with a bachelor\u2019s degree (and no advanced degree) earned $69,260, compared with $34,540 for the median worker with only a high school diploma. Over a lifetime, that difference accumulates to about $1.5 million. Increasing educational attainment is also the best way to combat growing income inequality. Over the last 40 years, the wages of skilled workers have increased substantially compared with the wages of the unskilled. Most economists agree that a leading cause is skill-biased technological change \u2014 the tendency of new technologies to increase the relative demand for skilled workers. College is the main institution that can offset this trend by turning unskilled individuals into skilled ones. Even those who do not attend college benefit when more of their fellow citizens do so. A person who becomes educated leaves the pool of the unskilled. Those left behind face fewer competitors. With fewer unskilled workers vying for the available jobs, wages at the bottom of the economic ladder are bid up. Although increasing college attendance makes a lot of sense, both for individuals and for the nation, the financial hurdle to doing so is higher than ever. The College Board reports that published tuition and fees at a typical private, nonprofit college, adjusted for overall inflation, have increased by 70 percent over the last 20 years. What gives?", "answer": "$1.5 million", "sentence": "Over a lifetime, that difference accumulates to about $1.5 million .", "paragraph_sentence": "Today\u2019s economy leaves little doubt about the value of college. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, in 2014 the median worker with a bachelor\u2019s degree (and no advanced degree) earned $69,260, compared with $34,540 for the median worker with only a high school diploma. Over a lifetime, that difference accumulates to about $1.5 million . Increasing educational attainment is also the best way to combat growing income inequality. Over the last 40 years, the wages of skilled workers have increased substantially compared with the wages of the unskilled. Most economists agree that a leading cause is skill-biased technological change \u2014 the tendency of new technologies to increase the relative demand for skilled workers. College is the main institution that can offset this trend by turning unskilled individuals into skilled ones. Even those who do not attend college benefit when more of their fellow citizens do so. A person who becomes educated leaves the pool of the unskilled. Those left behind face fewer competitors. With fewer unskilled workers vying for the available jobs, wages at the bottom of the economic ladder are bid up. Although increasing college attendance makes a lot of sense, both for individuals and for the nation, the financial hurdle to doing so is higher than ever. The College Board reports that published tuition and fees at a typical private, nonprofit college, adjusted for overall inflation, have increased by 70 percent over the last 20 years. What gives?", "paragraph_answer": "Today\u2019s economy leaves little doubt about the value of college. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, in 2014 the median worker with a bachelor\u2019s degree (and no advanced degree) earned $69,260, compared with $34,540 for the median worker with only a high school diploma. Over a lifetime, that difference accumulates to about $1.5 million . Increasing educational attainment is also the best way to combat growing income inequality. Over the last 40 years, the wages of skilled workers have increased substantially compared with the wages of the unskilled. Most economists agree that a leading cause is skill-biased technological change \u2014 the tendency of new technologies to increase the relative demand for skilled workers. College is the main institution that can offset this trend by turning unskilled individuals into skilled ones. Even those who do not attend college benefit when more of their fellow citizens do so. A person who becomes educated leaves the pool of the unskilled. Those left behind face fewer competitors. With fewer unskilled workers vying for the available jobs, wages at the bottom of the economic ladder are bid up. Although increasing college attendance makes a lot of sense, both for individuals and for the nation, the financial hurdle to doing so is higher than ever. The College Board reports that published tuition and fees at a typical private, nonprofit college, adjusted for overall inflation, have increased by 70 percent over the last 20 years. What gives?", "sentence_answer": "Over a lifetime, that difference accumulates to about $1.5 million .", "paragraph_id": "5d7006a1c8e4820a9b66abdb"} +{"question": "Who sent a memo to clients about lessons from the DuPont conflict?", "paragraph": "Such a report may suggest that I.S.S. is biased in favor of the activist hedge funds, but this statistic may not be truly surprising because hedge funds tend to pick struggling targets. And every contest is unique. What is unusual about the recommendation is something I.S.S. acknowledged in its report: that DuPont is \u201cnot a broken company.\u201d The significance of the I.S.S. decision was perhaps best put by Martin Lipton of the law firm Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz. In a memo to clients on the lessons in the DuPont fight, Mr. Lipton stated that I.S.S. and major shareholders would \u201cbe responsive to and support well-presented attacks on business strategy and operations\u201d even if the company was run by \u201can outstanding C.E.O. and board of directors.\u201d", "answer": "Martin Lipton", "sentence": "The significance of the I.S.S. decision was perhaps best put by Martin Lipton of the law firm Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz.", "paragraph_sentence": "Such a report may suggest that I.S.S. is biased in favor of the activist hedge funds, but this statistic may not be truly surprising because hedge funds tend to pick struggling targets. And every contest is unique. What is unusual about the recommendation is something I.S.S. acknowledged in its report: that DuPont is \u201cnot a broken company.\u201d The significance of the I.S.S. decision was perhaps best put by Martin Lipton of the law firm Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz. In a memo to clients on the lessons in the DuPont fight, Mr. Lipton stated that I.S.S. and major shareholders would \u201cbe responsive to and support well-presented attacks on business strategy and operations\u201d even if the company was run by \u201can outstanding C.E.O. and board of directors.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Such a report may suggest that I.S.S. is biased in favor of the activist hedge funds, but this statistic may not be truly surprising because hedge funds tend to pick struggling targets. And every contest is unique. What is unusual about the recommendation is something I.S.S. acknowledged in its report: that DuPont is \u201cnot a broken company.\u201d The significance of the I.S.S. decision was perhaps best put by Martin Lipton of the law firm Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz. In a memo to clients on the lessons in the DuPont fight, Mr. Lipton stated that I.S.S. and major shareholders would \u201cbe responsive to and support well-presented attacks on business strategy and operations\u201d even if the company was run by \u201can outstanding C.E.O. and board of directors.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The significance of the I.S.S. decision was perhaps best put by Martin Lipton of the law firm Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz.", "paragraph_id": "5d704fa6c8e4820a9b66eaf5"} +{"question": "How many people were on wait list for commercial drone flight exception list in May?", "paragraph": "Currently, the F.A.A. permits farmers and others to apply for exemptions to the rule prohibiting commercial drone flight. About 300 exemptions have been granted to people in many industries. Ms. Hediger and Mr. Jacobs, the farmers, both said they planned to apply \u2014 once their busy growing seasons were over. But the line for a permit is lengthy. In early May, there were nearly 1,000 people on the wait list. Penalties for drone-flying farmers range from a stiff email urging compliance all the way to a fine of $27,500. No growers, however, have been fined to date, according to Les Dorr, an F.A.A. spokesman. \u201cWe recognize that unmanned aircraft have an enormous potential for monitoring crops,\u201d Mr. Dorr said. But he urged eager drone fliers to be patient as the administration weighed safety concerns. \u201cRule-making,\u201d he said, \u201ccan take time.\u201d", "answer": "1,000", "sentence": "In early May, there were nearly 1,000 people on the wait list.", "paragraph_sentence": "Currently, the F.A.A. permits farmers and others to apply for exemptions to the rule prohibiting commercial drone flight. About 300 exemptions have been granted to people in many industries. Ms. Hediger and Mr. Jacobs, the farmers, both said they planned to apply \u2014 once their busy growing seasons were over. But the line for a permit is lengthy. In early May, there were nearly 1,000 people on the wait list. Penalties for drone-flying farmers range from a stiff email urging compliance all the way to a fine of $27,500. No growers, however, have been fined to date, according to Les Dorr, an F.A.A. spokesman. \u201cWe recognize that unmanned aircraft have an enormous potential for monitoring crops,\u201d Mr. Dorr said. But he urged eager drone fliers to be patient as the administration weighed safety concerns. \u201cRule-making,\u201d he said, \u201ccan take time.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Currently, the F.A.A. permits farmers and others to apply for exemptions to the rule prohibiting commercial drone flight. About 300 exemptions have been granted to people in many industries. Ms. Hediger and Mr. Jacobs, the farmers, both said they planned to apply \u2014 once their busy growing seasons were over. But the line for a permit is lengthy. In early May, there were nearly 1,000 people on the wait list. Penalties for drone-flying farmers range from a stiff email urging compliance all the way to a fine of $27,500. No growers, however, have been fined to date, according to Les Dorr, an F.A.A. spokesman. \u201cWe recognize that unmanned aircraft have an enormous potential for monitoring crops,\u201d Mr. Dorr said. But he urged eager drone fliers to be patient as the administration weighed safety concerns. \u201cRule-making,\u201d he said, \u201ccan take time.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In early May, there were nearly 1,000 people on the wait list.", "paragraph_id": "5d701ee6c8e4820a9b66ca8c"} +{"question": "Who is the director of the American Tap Dance Foundation?", "paragraph": "This week, Tony Waag, the perpetually cheerful director of the American Tap Dance Foundation, presides over Tap City, a festival now in its 15th year. On Wednesday in \u201cTap Forward,\u201d a program highlighting contemporary tappers at the intimate Duke on 42nd Street, there was even a flash from the past: The veteran Brenda Bufalino showed off her polished finish as she quietly blended in and out of a groove in \u201cStrayhorn Medley.\u201d Several \u201cTap Forward\u201d offerings, despite the progressive-sounding title, ran toward the conservative. When Mr. Waag\u2019s lineup did step out of the box, as with \u201cShiva\u2019s Dance Yoga,\u201d a kathak performance by Rachna Nivas, who sang, played the finger symbols and danced, the inclusion felt random \u2014 it wasn\u2019t tap \u2014 and her execution uneven. There were musical theater numbers with pasted-on smiles, and a sand dance in Susan Hebach\u2019s \u201cNica\u2019s Dream,\u201d in which performers shuffle their feet on grains of sand. Here, three sand dancers were accompanied by four tap dancers; but they needed more variety, not backup dancers.", "answer": "Tony Waag", "sentence": "This week, Tony Waag , the perpetually cheerful director of the American Tap Dance Foundation, presides over Tap City, a festival now in its 15th year.", "paragraph_sentence": " This week, Tony Waag , the perpetually cheerful director of the American Tap Dance Foundation, presides over Tap City, a festival now in its 15th year. On Wednesday in \u201cTap Forward,\u201d a program highlighting contemporary tappers at the intimate Duke on 42nd Street, there was even a flash from the past: The veteran Brenda Bufalino showed off her polished finish as she quietly blended in and out of a groove in \u201cStrayhorn Medley.\u201d Several \u201cTap Forward\u201d offerings, despite the progressive-sounding title, ran toward the conservative. When Mr. Waag\u2019s lineup did step out of the box, as with \u201cShiva\u2019s Dance Yoga,\u201d a kathak performance by Rachna Nivas, who sang, played the finger symbols and danced, the inclusion felt random \u2014 it wasn\u2019t tap \u2014 and her execution uneven. There were musical theater numbers with pasted-on smiles, and a sand dance in Susan Hebach\u2019s \u201cNica\u2019s Dream,\u201d in which performers shuffle their feet on grains of sand. Here, three sand dancers were accompanied by four tap dancers; but they needed more variety, not backup dancers.", "paragraph_answer": "This week, Tony Waag , the perpetually cheerful director of the American Tap Dance Foundation, presides over Tap City, a festival now in its 15th year. On Wednesday in \u201cTap Forward,\u201d a program highlighting contemporary tappers at the intimate Duke on 42nd Street, there was even a flash from the past: The veteran Brenda Bufalino showed off her polished finish as she quietly blended in and out of a groove in \u201cStrayhorn Medley.\u201d Several \u201cTap Forward\u201d offerings, despite the progressive-sounding title, ran toward the conservative. When Mr. Waag\u2019s lineup did step out of the box, as with \u201cShiva\u2019s Dance Yoga,\u201d a kathak performance by Rachna Nivas, who sang, played the finger symbols and danced, the inclusion felt random \u2014 it wasn\u2019t tap \u2014 and her execution uneven. There were musical theater numbers with pasted-on smiles, and a sand dance in Susan Hebach\u2019s \u201cNica\u2019s Dream,\u201d in which performers shuffle their feet on grains of sand. Here, three sand dancers were accompanied by four tap dancers; but they needed more variety, not backup dancers.", "sentence_answer": "This week, Tony Waag , the perpetually cheerful director of the American Tap Dance Foundation, presides over Tap City, a festival now in its 15th year.", "paragraph_id": "5d704609c8e4820a9b66e819"} +{"question": "What borough is this church in?", "paragraph": "After a newborn was abandoned by his mother and discovered in the cr\u00e8che of a Roman Catholic church in Queens last month, calls and emails offering help poured into the parish and to New York City\u2019s child welfare agency. Many people, including members of the church\u2019s own congregation, asked whether they might be able to adopt the child. Officials from the agency, the Administration for Children\u2019s Services, visited the church on Sunday to thank its parishioners for their part in rescuing the boy and to let them know he was healthy and being cared for in a foster home.", "answer": "Queens", "sentence": "After a newborn was abandoned by his mother and discovered in the cr\u00e8che of a Roman Catholic church in Queens last month, calls and emails offering help poured into the parish and to New York City\u2019s child welfare agency.", "paragraph_sentence": " After a newborn was abandoned by his mother and discovered in the cr\u00e8che of a Roman Catholic church in Queens last month, calls and emails offering help poured into the parish and to New York City\u2019s child welfare agency. Many people, including members of the church\u2019s own congregation, asked whether they might be able to adopt the child. Officials from the agency, the Administration for Children\u2019s Services, visited the church on Sunday to thank its parishioners for their part in rescuing the boy and to let them know he was healthy and being cared for in a foster home.", "paragraph_answer": "After a newborn was abandoned by his mother and discovered in the cr\u00e8che of a Roman Catholic church in Queens last month, calls and emails offering help poured into the parish and to New York City\u2019s child welfare agency. Many people, including members of the church\u2019s own congregation, asked whether they might be able to adopt the child. Officials from the agency, the Administration for Children\u2019s Services, visited the church on Sunday to thank its parishioners for their part in rescuing the boy and to let them know he was healthy and being cared for in a foster home.", "sentence_answer": "After a newborn was abandoned by his mother and discovered in the cr\u00e8che of a Roman Catholic church in Queens last month, calls and emails offering help poured into the parish and to New York City\u2019s child welfare agency.", "paragraph_id": "5d701e4ac8e4820a9b66c9cc"} +{"question": "Where were Sandy's treatments located?", "paragraph": "Over the next months, Sandy and Daryl boarded a bus early in the morning every few weeks and rode down to Manhattan for the treatments. \u201cI still feel as though I\u2019m me,\u201d she told him on one ride. \u201cDo you agree?\u201d He did, sort of. In fact, he was surprised by how much herself Sandy could still be, even as she became less and less the formidable thinker he had always known. He was surprised too to discover that it didn\u2019t matter to him. \u201cI realized how little of the fact that she was an intellectual played into my feelings for her,\u201d he said. \u201cThey were feelings for her, not her intelligence. And they were still all there.\u201d", "answer": "Manhattan", "sentence": "Over the next months, Sandy and Daryl boarded a bus early in the morning every few weeks and rode down to Manhattan for the treatments.", "paragraph_sentence": " Over the next months, Sandy and Daryl boarded a bus early in the morning every few weeks and rode down to Manhattan for the treatments. \u201cI still feel as though I\u2019m me,\u201d she told him on one ride. \u201cDo you agree?\u201d He did, sort of. In fact, he was surprised by how much herself Sandy could still be, even as she became less and less the formidable thinker he had always known. He was surprised too to discover that it didn\u2019t matter to him. \u201cI realized how little of the fact that she was an intellectual played into my feelings for her,\u201d he said. \u201cThey were feelings for her, not her intelligence. And they were still all there.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Over the next months, Sandy and Daryl boarded a bus early in the morning every few weeks and rode down to Manhattan for the treatments. \u201cI still feel as though I\u2019m me,\u201d she told him on one ride. \u201cDo you agree?\u201d He did, sort of. In fact, he was surprised by how much herself Sandy could still be, even as she became less and less the formidable thinker he had always known. He was surprised too to discover that it didn\u2019t matter to him. \u201cI realized how little of the fact that she was an intellectual played into my feelings for her,\u201d he said. \u201cThey were feelings for her, not her intelligence. And they were still all there.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Over the next months, Sandy and Daryl boarded a bus early in the morning every few weeks and rode down to Manhattan for the treatments.", "paragraph_id": "5d7041bec8e4820a9b66e5cd"} +{"question": "How old is Steward Johnson?", "paragraph": "Steward Johnson, 25, a consultant who lives in Midtown Manhattan, was more concerned with the name appearing alongside the image: \u201cBill de Blasio, Mayor.\u201d The ad promoted the city\u2019s \u201cMade in NY\u201d effort supporting local film production. \u201cIt probably isn\u2019t smart for the mayor to have his name plastered on an advertisement such as this,\u201d Mr. Johnson said with a laugh. In another car, there were ads in English and Spanish for free \u201cKyng\u201d size condoms from the city\u2019s health department, part of a continuing public service campaign to promote safe sex. Mr. Rachmany of Dumbo Moving argues that those ads are more explicit than his because they refer directly to sex.", "answer": "25", "sentence": "Steward Johnson, 25 , a consultant who lives in Midtown Manhattan, was more concerned with the name appearing alongside the image: \u201cBill de Blasio, Mayor.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Steward Johnson, 25 , a consultant who lives in Midtown Manhattan, was more concerned with the name appearing alongside the image: \u201cBill de Blasio, Mayor.\u201d The ad promoted the city\u2019s \u201cMade in NY\u201d effort supporting local film production. \u201cIt probably isn\u2019t smart for the mayor to have his name plastered on an advertisement such as this,\u201d Mr. Johnson said with a laugh. In another car, there were ads in English and Spanish for free \u201cKyng\u201d size condoms from the city\u2019s health department, part of a continuing public service campaign to promote safe sex. Mr. Rachmany of Dumbo Moving argues that those ads are more explicit than his because they refer directly to sex.", "paragraph_answer": "Steward Johnson, 25 , a consultant who lives in Midtown Manhattan, was more concerned with the name appearing alongside the image: \u201cBill de Blasio, Mayor.\u201d The ad promoted the city\u2019s \u201cMade in NY\u201d effort supporting local film production. \u201cIt probably isn\u2019t smart for the mayor to have his name plastered on an advertisement such as this,\u201d Mr. Johnson said with a laugh. In another car, there were ads in English and Spanish for free \u201cKyng\u201d size condoms from the city\u2019s health department, part of a continuing public service campaign to promote safe sex. Mr. Rachmany of Dumbo Moving argues that those ads are more explicit than his because they refer directly to sex.", "sentence_answer": "Steward Johnson, 25 , a consultant who lives in Midtown Manhattan, was more concerned with the name appearing alongside the image: \u201cBill de Blasio, Mayor.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d701b37c8e4820a9b66c6b7"} +{"question": "Consumers might find the same information in catalogs where?", "paragraph": "Asked if it might consider reviving a catalog, Sears declined to comment. Some consumers feel that retailers should ease off on sending catalogs. \u201cThey\u2019re a nuisance,\u201d said Lee Wright, who works in sales for a software company in Arlington, Va. While Mr. Wright nostalgically remembered poring over the Sears catalog in the 1980s and dog-earing pages, he said he now sought to discontinue mailings to his house. \u201cToday, catalogs are a waste of paper,\u201d he said. \u201cIt\u2019s the same information that\u2019s online.\u201d He said he didn\u2019t like to shop without reading product reviews, something often embedded in e-commerce platforms.", "answer": "online", "sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s the same information that\u2019s online .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Asked if it might consider reviving a catalog, Sears declined to comment. Some consumers feel that retailers should ease off on sending catalogs. \u201cThey\u2019re a nuisance,\u201d said Lee Wright, who works in sales for a software company in Arlington, Va. While Mr. Wright nostalgically remembered poring over the Sears catalog in the 1980s and dog-earing pages, he said he now sought to discontinue mailings to his house. \u201cToday, catalogs are a waste of paper,\u201d he said. \u201cIt\u2019s the same information that\u2019s online .\u201d He said he didn\u2019t like to shop without reading product reviews, something often embedded in e-commerce platforms.", "paragraph_answer": "Asked if it might consider reviving a catalog, Sears declined to comment. Some consumers feel that retailers should ease off on sending catalogs. \u201cThey\u2019re a nuisance,\u201d said Lee Wright, who works in sales for a software company in Arlington, Va. While Mr. Wright nostalgically remembered poring over the Sears catalog in the 1980s and dog-earing pages, he said he now sought to discontinue mailings to his house. \u201cToday, catalogs are a waste of paper,\u201d he said. \u201cIt\u2019s the same information that\u2019s online .\u201d He said he didn\u2019t like to shop without reading product reviews, something often embedded in e-commerce platforms.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s the same information that\u2019s online .\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d702a81c8e4820a9b66d827"} +{"question": "What did Mr. Dostum turn his palace into?", "paragraph": "Back in his home province of Jowzjan, Mr. Dostum turned his pink palace into a command center and announced that he was coordinating the war efforts there and in the neighboring provinces of Faryab and Sar-i-Pul. Local officials and militia commanders, many of them with fully armed forces despite a costly disarmament campaign, began rallying to his call. Mr. Dostum\u2019s actions have been publicized here as the bravery of a battle-hardened general. But in what is supposed to be a year that tests the ability of the Afghan security forces to fend off enemy threats on their own, his moves have also raised a serious question: Amid a territory-gobbling insurgent offensive, will the strongmen and former warlords prominent in the Afghan government honor the national security system, or will they remobilize militias that in the 1990s caused the chaos that gave rise to the Taliban in the first place?", "answer": "command center", "sentence": "Back in his home province of Jowzjan, Mr. Dostum turned his pink palace into a command center and announced that he was coordinating the war efforts there and in the neighboring provinces of Faryab and Sar-i-Pul.", "paragraph_sentence": " Back in his home province of Jowzjan, Mr. Dostum turned his pink palace into a command center and announced that he was coordinating the war efforts there and in the neighboring provinces of Faryab and Sar-i-Pul. Local officials and militia commanders, many of them with fully armed forces despite a costly disarmament campaign, began rallying to his call. Mr. Dostum\u2019s actions have been publicized here as the bravery of a battle-hardened general. But in what is supposed to be a year that tests the ability of the Afghan security forces to fend off enemy threats on their own, his moves have also raised a serious question: Amid a territory-gobbling insurgent offensive, will the strongmen and former warlords prominent in the Afghan government honor the national security system, or will they remobilize militias that in the 1990s caused the chaos that gave rise to the Taliban in the first place?", "paragraph_answer": "Back in his home province of Jowzjan, Mr. Dostum turned his pink palace into a command center and announced that he was coordinating the war efforts there and in the neighboring provinces of Faryab and Sar-i-Pul. Local officials and militia commanders, many of them with fully armed forces despite a costly disarmament campaign, began rallying to his call. Mr. Dostum\u2019s actions have been publicized here as the bravery of a battle-hardened general. But in what is supposed to be a year that tests the ability of the Afghan security forces to fend off enemy threats on their own, his moves have also raised a serious question: Amid a territory-gobbling insurgent offensive, will the strongmen and former warlords prominent in the Afghan government honor the national security system, or will they remobilize militias that in the 1990s caused the chaos that gave rise to the Taliban in the first place?", "sentence_answer": "Back in his home province of Jowzjan, Mr. Dostum turned his pink palace into a command center and announced that he was coordinating the war efforts there and in the neighboring provinces of Faryab and Sar-i-Pul.", "paragraph_id": "5d703561c8e4820a9b66df9a"} +{"question": "What didn't he want to repeat in the country?", "paragraph": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "answer": "mistakes", "sentence": "He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "sentence_answer": "He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d7012ecc8e4820a9b66bf62"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700981c8e4820a9b66b22b"} +{"question": "How many dangerous crossings are in Long Island?", "paragraph": "The metric is not a perfect measurement of danger. (The agency cautions that it does not take into account other factors, like local topography and traffic congestion.) But the 10 crossings, four in New Jersey and six on Long Island, examined by The Times are easily among the most hazardous in the country. Out of almost 130,000 public crossings in the nation, only 112 others have accident-prediction values as high as these 10. The Midland Avenue crossing currently has the eighth highest likelihood of a crash in the country.", "answer": "six", "sentence": "But the 10 crossings, four in New Jersey and six on Long Island, examined by The Times are easily among the most hazardous in the country.", "paragraph_sentence": "The metric is not a perfect measurement of danger. (The agency cautions that it does not take into account other factors, like local topography and traffic congestion.) But the 10 crossings, four in New Jersey and six on Long Island, examined by The Times are easily among the most hazardous in the country. Out of almost 130,000 public crossings in the nation, only 112 others have accident-prediction values as high as these 10. The Midland Avenue crossing currently has the eighth highest likelihood of a crash in the country.", "paragraph_answer": "The metric is not a perfect measurement of danger. (The agency cautions that it does not take into account other factors, like local topography and traffic congestion.) But the 10 crossings, four in New Jersey and six on Long Island, examined by The Times are easily among the most hazardous in the country. Out of almost 130,000 public crossings in the nation, only 112 others have accident-prediction values as high as these 10. The Midland Avenue crossing currently has the eighth highest likelihood of a crash in the country.", "sentence_answer": "But the 10 crossings, four in New Jersey and six on Long Island, examined by The Times are easily among the most hazardous in the country.", "paragraph_id": "5d704cc1c8e4820a9b66ea12"} +{"question": "What funding does the departments use to replace their aging fleet?", "paragraph": "Fireboats have also responded to smoldering garbage barges, houseboat blazes and, a few years ago, a coal ship fire in Connecticut. Because the department used federal funding to replace much of its aging fleet, \u201cthat makes them regional assets,\u201d said Chief Ferro. \u201cIt used to be like \u2018The Flintstones,\u2019\u201d he said of the boats from the middle of the last century. \u201cNow it\u2019s like \u2018The Jetsons.\u2019\u201d During the Brooklyn blaze, Chief Ferro said that in addition to dealing with heavy current, strong winds and shallow water, the pilot of the Firefighter II had to contend with the sheer force of the front cannon, known as a monitor, pushing the unanchored boat backward. \u201cHe did an amazing job,\u201d the chief said.", "answer": "federal funding", "sentence": "Because the department used federal funding to replace much of its aging fleet, \u201cthat makes them regional assets,\u201d said Chief Ferro.", "paragraph_sentence": "Fireboats have also responded to smoldering garbage barges, houseboat blazes and, a few years ago, a coal ship fire in Connecticut. Because the department used federal funding to replace much of its aging fleet, \u201cthat makes them regional assets,\u201d said Chief Ferro. \u201cIt used to be like \u2018The Flintstones,\u2019\u201d he said of the boats from the middle of the last century. \u201cNow it\u2019s like \u2018The Jetsons.\u2019\u201d During the Brooklyn blaze, Chief Ferro said that in addition to dealing with heavy current, strong winds and shallow water, the pilot of the Firefighter II had to contend with the sheer force of the front cannon, known as a monitor, pushing the unanchored boat backward. \u201cHe did an amazing job,\u201d the chief said.", "paragraph_answer": "Fireboats have also responded to smoldering garbage barges, houseboat blazes and, a few years ago, a coal ship fire in Connecticut. Because the department used federal funding to replace much of its aging fleet, \u201cthat makes them regional assets,\u201d said Chief Ferro. \u201cIt used to be like \u2018The Flintstones,\u2019\u201d he said of the boats from the middle of the last century. \u201cNow it\u2019s like \u2018The Jetsons.\u2019\u201d During the Brooklyn blaze, Chief Ferro said that in addition to dealing with heavy current, strong winds and shallow water, the pilot of the Firefighter II had to contend with the sheer force of the front cannon, known as a monitor, pushing the unanchored boat backward. \u201cHe did an amazing job,\u201d the chief said.", "sentence_answer": "Because the department used federal funding to replace much of its aging fleet, \u201cthat makes them regional assets,\u201d said Chief Ferro.", "paragraph_id": "5d701693c8e4820a9b66c2a4"} +{"question": "Who spends more money on medical care than people without health insurance?", "paragraph": "This argument for the cost savings from universal health coverage makes some intuitive sense, but it\u2019s wrong. There\u2019s strong evidence from a variety of sources that people who have health insurance spend more on medical care than people who don\u2019t. It also turns out that almost all preventive health care costs more than it saves. Those facts don\u2019t mean that giving people health insurance is a waste of money, since those dollars spent may improve their health and financial security. But there are only a few situations in which giving someone more health care will actually end up saving money.", "answer": "people who have health insurance", "sentence": "that people who have health insurance spend more on medical care than people who don\u2019t.", "paragraph_sentence": "This argument for the cost savings from universal health coverage makes some intuitive sense, but it\u2019s wrong. There\u2019s strong evidence from a variety of sources that people who have health insurance spend more on medical care than people who don\u2019t. It also turns out that almost all preventive health care costs more than it saves. Those facts don\u2019t mean that giving people health insurance is a waste of money, since those dollars spent may improve their health and financial security. But there are only a few situations in which giving someone more health care will actually end up saving money.", "paragraph_answer": "This argument for the cost savings from universal health coverage makes some intuitive sense, but it\u2019s wrong. There\u2019s strong evidence from a variety of sources that people who have health insurance spend more on medical care than people who don\u2019t. It also turns out that almost all preventive health care costs more than it saves. Those facts don\u2019t mean that giving people health insurance is a waste of money, since those dollars spent may improve their health and financial security. But there are only a few situations in which giving someone more health care will actually end up saving money.", "sentence_answer": "that people who have health insurance spend more on medical care than people who don\u2019t.", "paragraph_id": "5d705705c8e4820a9b66ed4b"} +{"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", "paragraph_id": "5d7009a0c8e4820a9b66b28c"} +{"question": "Where is Mr. Saleh going to?", "paragraph": "Mr. Atassi scrutinizes Mr. Saleh\u2019s ordinary side, filming him asleep, legs poking from under a comforter, or flinching at the sound of shelling, when he is not giving interviews over Skype to a Western journalist who tells him, \u201cYour voice is very important.\u201d He also Skypes with his wife, now unexpectedly trapped back in Douma by a government siege. Mr. Saleh tells the camera, presciently, that if anything happens to her, \u201cit would break me more than anything else.\u201d Finally, realizing that he can contribute nothing in Raqqa, Mr. Saleh departs for Turkey. There, he appears diminished, an old man on his first subway ride, just after his first airplane flight, stuck at a turnstile, trying to work the electronic fare card. \u201cLike an extraterrestrial,\u201d Mr. Atassi said in an interview.", "answer": "Turkey.", "sentence": "Finally, realizing that he can contribute nothing in Raqqa, Mr. Saleh departs for Turkey. There, he appears diminished, an old man on his first subway ride, just after his first airplane flight, stuck at a turnstile, trying to work the electronic fare card.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Atassi scrutinizes Mr. Saleh\u2019s ordinary side, filming him asleep, legs poking from under a comforter, or flinching at the sound of shelling, when he is not giving interviews over Skype to a Western journalist who tells him, \u201cYour voice is very important.\u201d He also Skypes with his wife, now unexpectedly trapped back in Douma by a government siege. Mr. Saleh tells the camera, presciently, that if anything happens to her, \u201cit would break me more than anything else.\u201d Finally, realizing that he can contribute nothing in Raqqa, Mr. Saleh departs for Turkey. There, he appears diminished, an old man on his first subway ride, just after his first airplane flight, stuck at a turnstile, trying to work the electronic fare card. \u201cLike an extraterrestrial,\u201d Mr. Atassi said in an interview.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Atassi scrutinizes Mr. Saleh\u2019s ordinary side, filming him asleep, legs poking from under a comforter, or flinching at the sound of shelling, when he is not giving interviews over Skype to a Western journalist who tells him, \u201cYour voice is very important.\u201d He also Skypes with his wife, now unexpectedly trapped back in Douma by a government siege. Mr. Saleh tells the camera, presciently, that if anything happens to her, \u201cit would break me more than anything else.\u201d Finally, realizing that he can contribute nothing in Raqqa, Mr. Saleh departs for Turkey. There, he appears diminished, an old man on his first subway ride, just after his first airplane flight, stuck at a turnstile, trying to work the electronic fare card. \u201cLike an extraterrestrial,\u201d Mr. Atassi said in an interview.", "sentence_answer": "Finally, realizing that he can contribute nothing in Raqqa, Mr. Saleh departs for Turkey. There, he appears diminished, an old man on his first subway ride, just after his first airplane flight, stuck at a turnstile, trying to work the electronic fare card.", "paragraph_id": "5d7041bfc8e4820a9b66e5d9"} +{"question": "What did Mr. Callander envisage once he read the book(Wolf Hall)?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt\u2019s an extraordinary job for me,\u201d Mr. Rylance said after shooting multiple takes of a confrontation with an ailing Catherine of Aragon (Joanne Whalley). \u201cThere are about 70 or 80 scenes per episode, and I\u2019m in most of them. The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking. So you can\u2019t compromise his expressionlessness, but you have to convey what might be going on for him.\u201d Although the series has arrived after the plays, Colin Callender, a former president of HBO films whose production company Playground produced the series (with Company Pictures, \u201cMasterpiece\u201d and BBC Two), began negotiations to secure the rights in 2012. Mr. Callender said that as soon as he read the books, he envisaged a television production.", "answer": "a television production", "sentence": "Mr. Callender said that as soon as he read the books, he envisaged a television production .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s an extraordinary job for me,\u201d Mr. Rylance said after shooting multiple takes of a confrontation with an ailing Catherine of Aragon (Joanne Whalley). \u201cThere are about 70 or 80 scenes per episode, and I\u2019m in most of them. The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking. So you can\u2019t compromise his expressionlessness, but you have to convey what might be going on for him.\u201d Although the series has arrived after the plays, Colin Callender, a former president of HBO films whose production company Playground produced the series (with Company Pictures, \u201cMasterpiece\u201d and BBC Two), began negotiations to secure the rights in 2012. Mr. Callender said that as soon as he read the books, he envisaged a television production . ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s an extraordinary job for me,\u201d Mr. Rylance said after shooting multiple takes of a confrontation with an ailing Catherine of Aragon (Joanne Whalley). \u201cThere are about 70 or 80 scenes per episode, and I\u2019m in most of them. The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking. So you can\u2019t compromise his expressionlessness, but you have to convey what might be going on for him.\u201d Although the series has arrived after the plays, Colin Callender, a former president of HBO films whose production company Playground produced the series (with Company Pictures, \u201cMasterpiece\u201d and BBC Two), began negotiations to secure the rights in 2012. Mr. Callender said that as soon as he read the books, he envisaged a television production .", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Callender said that as soon as he read the books, he envisaged a television production .", "paragraph_id": "5d70734ec8e4820a9b66f20e"} +{"question": "What year was Poconos branded?", "paragraph": "During the post-World War II marriage boom, when gas shortages persuaded honeymooners from New York and Philadelphia to stay closer to home, hoteliers began luring newlyweds to the Poconos instead of to Niagara Falls. But it wasn\u2019t until 1968 that those northeastern Pennsylvania mountains would be unblushingly branded the libidinous Land of Love. That was when Morris Wilkins, a former electrician and submariner, in the unlikely guise of Cupid, sparked a romantic reformation in his own Poconos hotel, the nondescript lakeside Cove Haven resort. Mr. Wilkins, by all accounts, designed and installed the Poconos\u2019 first heart-shaped bathtub.", "answer": "1968", "sentence": "But it wasn\u2019t until 1968 that those northeastern Pennsylvania mountains would be unblushingly branded the libidinous Land of Love.", "paragraph_sentence": "During the post-World War II marriage boom, when gas shortages persuaded honeymooners from New York and Philadelphia to stay closer to home, hoteliers began luring newlyweds to the Poconos instead of to Niagara Falls. But it wasn\u2019t until 1968 that those northeastern Pennsylvania mountains would be unblushingly branded the libidinous Land of Love. That was when Morris Wilkins, a former electrician and submariner, in the unlikely guise of Cupid, sparked a romantic reformation in his own Poconos hotel, the nondescript lakeside Cove Haven resort. Mr. Wilkins, by all accounts, designed and installed the Poconos\u2019 first heart-shaped bathtub.", "paragraph_answer": "During the post-World War II marriage boom, when gas shortages persuaded honeymooners from New York and Philadelphia to stay closer to home, hoteliers began luring newlyweds to the Poconos instead of to Niagara Falls. But it wasn\u2019t until 1968 that those northeastern Pennsylvania mountains would be unblushingly branded the libidinous Land of Love. That was when Morris Wilkins, a former electrician and submariner, in the unlikely guise of Cupid, sparked a romantic reformation in his own Poconos hotel, the nondescript lakeside Cove Haven resort. Mr. Wilkins, by all accounts, designed and installed the Poconos\u2019 first heart-shaped bathtub.", "sentence_answer": "But it wasn\u2019t until 1968 that those northeastern Pennsylvania mountains would be unblushingly branded the libidinous Land of Love.", "paragraph_id": "5d700789c8e4820a9b66adf8"} +{"question": "Who is the president of Blue Rider?", "paragraph": "David Rosenthal, the president and publisher of Blue Rider, a division of Penguin Random House, said, \u201cIf he had gone into remission, it would have been a wonderful miracle.\u201d But Scott died on Jan. 4. Seventeen days later, ESPN\u2019s website carried an excerpt from the book, the existence of which was not widely known, even among some of Scott\u2019s closest associates. \u201cI had no idea \u2014 no idea,\u201d said Sage Steele, a friend of Scott\u2019s and the host of ESPN\u2019s \u201cNBA Countdown\u201d show. \u201cThen I kept racking my brain, asking, \u2018Did he tell me anything about it?\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "David Rosenthal", "sentence": "David Rosenthal , the president and publisher of Blue Rider, a division of Penguin Random House, said, \u201cIf he had gone into remission, it would have been a wonderful miracle.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " David Rosenthal , the president and publisher of Blue Rider, a division of Penguin Random House, said, \u201cIf he had gone into remission, it would have been a wonderful miracle.\u201d But Scott died on Jan. 4. Seventeen days later, ESPN\u2019s website carried an excerpt from the book, the existence of which was not widely known, even among some of Scott\u2019s closest associates. \u201cI had no idea \u2014 no idea,\u201d said Sage Steele, a friend of Scott\u2019s and the host of ESPN\u2019s \u201cNBA Countdown\u201d show. \u201cThen I kept racking my brain, asking, \u2018Did he tell me anything about it?\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": " David Rosenthal , the president and publisher of Blue Rider, a division of Penguin Random House, said, \u201cIf he had gone into remission, it would have been a wonderful miracle.\u201d But Scott died on Jan. 4. Seventeen days later, ESPN\u2019s website carried an excerpt from the book, the existence of which was not widely known, even among some of Scott\u2019s closest associates. \u201cI had no idea \u2014 no idea,\u201d said Sage Steele, a friend of Scott\u2019s and the host of ESPN\u2019s \u201cNBA Countdown\u201d show. \u201cThen I kept racking my brain, asking, \u2018Did he tell me anything about it?\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": " David Rosenthal , the president and publisher of Blue Rider, a division of Penguin Random House, said, \u201cIf he had gone into remission, it would have been a wonderful miracle.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d704881c8e4820a9b66e8e9"} +{"question": "What did Ms. Harper teach the young woman?", "paragraph": "The young woman\u2019s mother, who immigrated from the Philippines, said that she had shared Filipino meals with Ms. Harper, and that Ms. Harper had taught her how to drive. She wrote a letter of support when Ms. Harper was applying for a $1,500 scholarship to continue her nursing studies. The family still has Ms. Harper\u2019s thank you card. \u201cOnce again, thank you so very much for helping me with my scholarship application,\u201d the note says. \u201cNow I can attend the nursing program without having to stress out about tuition!\u201d", "answer": "how to drive", "sentence": "The young woman\u2019s mother, who immigrated from the Philippines, said that she had shared Filipino meals with Ms. Harper, and that Ms. Harper had taught her how to drive .", "paragraph_sentence": " The young woman\u2019s mother, who immigrated from the Philippines, said that she had shared Filipino meals with Ms. Harper, and that Ms. Harper had taught her how to drive . She wrote a letter of support when Ms. Harper was applying for a $1,500 scholarship to continue her nursing studies. The family still has Ms. Harper\u2019s thank you card. \u201cOnce again, thank you so very much for helping me with my scholarship application,\u201d the note says. \u201cNow I can attend the nursing program without having to stress out about tuition!\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The young woman\u2019s mother, who immigrated from the Philippines, said that she had shared Filipino meals with Ms. Harper, and that Ms. Harper had taught her how to drive . She wrote a letter of support when Ms. Harper was applying for a $1,500 scholarship to continue her nursing studies. The family still has Ms. Harper\u2019s thank you card. \u201cOnce again, thank you so very much for helping me with my scholarship application,\u201d the note says. \u201cNow I can attend the nursing program without having to stress out about tuition!\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The young woman\u2019s mother, who immigrated from the Philippines, said that she had shared Filipino meals with Ms. Harper, and that Ms. Harper had taught her how to drive .", "paragraph_id": "5d70449bc8e4820a9b66e78f"} +{"question": "Refugees from what country are having problems with accessing food?", "paragraph": "Cuts in food aid are leading Syrian refugees to take desperate measures (\u201cChild Labor Rises Sharply in Syria Unrest,\u201d news article, July 2). This is a terrible situation for Syrian children to be forced to beg and work just to get a meal. But we can do something about it. After World War II, Gens. Douglas MacArthur and Lucius Clay set up school feeding for millions of children in Japan and Germany, respectively. These meals saved a whole generation of children. The school feeding gives children nutrition, but it also gets them in school and learning. It gets them away from child labor. The United Nations World Food Program has some limited school feeding for Syrian refugee children, but it needs a big expansion in funding and support.", "answer": "Syria", "sentence": "Cuts in food aid are leading Syria n refugees to take desperate measures (\u201cChild Labor Rises Sharply in Syria Unrest,\u201d news article, July 2).", "paragraph_sentence": " Cuts in food aid are leading Syria n refugees to take desperate measures (\u201cChild Labor Rises Sharply in Syria Unrest,\u201d news article, July 2). This is a terrible situation for Syrian children to be forced to beg and work just to get a meal. But we can do something about it. After World War II, Gens. Douglas MacArthur and Lucius Clay set up school feeding for millions of children in Japan and Germany, respectively. These meals saved a whole generation of children. The school feeding gives children nutrition, but it also gets them in school and learning. It gets them away from child labor. The United Nations World Food Program has some limited school feeding for Syrian refugee children, but it needs a big expansion in funding and support.", "paragraph_answer": "Cuts in food aid are leading Syria n refugees to take desperate measures (\u201cChild Labor Rises Sharply in Syria Unrest,\u201d news article, July 2). This is a terrible situation for Syrian children to be forced to beg and work just to get a meal. But we can do something about it. After World War II, Gens. Douglas MacArthur and Lucius Clay set up school feeding for millions of children in Japan and Germany, respectively. These meals saved a whole generation of children. The school feeding gives children nutrition, but it also gets them in school and learning. It gets them away from child labor. The United Nations World Food Program has some limited school feeding for Syrian refugee children, but it needs a big expansion in funding and support.", "sentence_answer": "Cuts in food aid are leading Syria n refugees to take desperate measures (\u201cChild Labor Rises Sharply in Syria Unrest,\u201d news article, July 2).", "paragraph_id": "5d700c5dc8e4820a9b66b761"} +{"question": "When was \"Three Inventions for Chamber Orchestra\" completed?", "paragraph": "The concert, led by Mr. Milarsky, opened with Mr. Ad\u00e8s\u2019s \u201cOrigin of the Harp,\u201d whose glittering surfaces were dulled to an ambiguous hue in this tentative reading. An early work inspired by a painting of the same name by the Irish artist Daniel Maclise, this enigmatic chamber tone poem is scored for clarinets, violas and cellos, instruments whose dark sonorities combine to luminous effect, along with percussion, including a rainstick. George Benjamin\u2019s \u201cThree Inventions for Chamber Orchestra,\u201d a glistening, texturally rich work, fared better, its complexity revealed in clear detail here. Completed in 1995 as a tribute to Messiaen and Alexander Goehr, Mr. Benjamin\u2019s mentors, it features colorful use of winds and brass (including contrabass clarinet, fluegelhorn and euphonium) and harp (an instrument conspicuously absent from Mr. Ad\u00e8s\u2019s piece), with low rumbling sonorities and jittery fragments in the strings, punctuated by gongs.", "answer": "1995", "sentence": "Completed in 1995 as a tribute to Messiaen and Alexander Goehr, Mr. Benjamin\u2019s mentors, it features colorful use of winds and brass (including contrabass clarinet, fluegelhorn and euphonium) and harp (an instrument conspicuously absent from Mr. Ad\u00e8s\u2019s piece), with low rumbling sonorities and jittery fragments in the strings, punctuated by gongs.", "paragraph_sentence": "The concert, led by Mr. Milarsky, opened with Mr. Ad\u00e8s\u2019s \u201cOrigin of the Harp,\u201d whose glittering surfaces were dulled to an ambiguous hue in this tentative reading. An early work inspired by a painting of the same name by the Irish artist Daniel Maclise, this enigmatic chamber tone poem is scored for clarinets, violas and cellos, instruments whose dark sonorities combine to luminous effect, along with percussion, including a rainstick. George Benjamin\u2019s \u201cThree Inventions for Chamber Orchestra,\u201d a glistening, texturally rich work, fared better, its complexity revealed in clear detail here. Completed in 1995 as a tribute to Messiaen and Alexander Goehr, Mr. Benjamin\u2019s mentors, it features colorful use of winds and brass (including contrabass clarinet, fluegelhorn and euphonium) and harp (an instrument conspicuously absent from Mr. Ad\u00e8s\u2019s piece), with low rumbling sonorities and jittery fragments in the strings, punctuated by gongs. ", "paragraph_answer": "The concert, led by Mr. Milarsky, opened with Mr. Ad\u00e8s\u2019s \u201cOrigin of the Harp,\u201d whose glittering surfaces were dulled to an ambiguous hue in this tentative reading. An early work inspired by a painting of the same name by the Irish artist Daniel Maclise, this enigmatic chamber tone poem is scored for clarinets, violas and cellos, instruments whose dark sonorities combine to luminous effect, along with percussion, including a rainstick. George Benjamin\u2019s \u201cThree Inventions for Chamber Orchestra,\u201d a glistening, texturally rich work, fared better, its complexity revealed in clear detail here. Completed in 1995 as a tribute to Messiaen and Alexander Goehr, Mr. Benjamin\u2019s mentors, it features colorful use of winds and brass (including contrabass clarinet, fluegelhorn and euphonium) and harp (an instrument conspicuously absent from Mr. Ad\u00e8s\u2019s piece), with low rumbling sonorities and jittery fragments in the strings, punctuated by gongs.", "sentence_answer": "Completed in 1995 as a tribute to Messiaen and Alexander Goehr, Mr. Benjamin\u2019s mentors, it features colorful use of winds and brass (including contrabass clarinet, fluegelhorn and euphonium) and harp (an instrument conspicuously absent from Mr. Ad\u00e8s\u2019s piece), with low rumbling sonorities and jittery fragments in the strings, punctuated by gongs.", "paragraph_id": "5d700728c8e4820a9b66ad00"} +{"question": "What's the reason for skepticism against the fight against Google?", "paragraph": "The antitrust case against Google filed by European Union regulators on Wednesday will inevitably draw comparisons to the long-running prosecution of Microsoft, in which regulators on both sides of the Atlantic pursued the software giant for anticompetitive behavior. But Margrethe Vestager, the European Union\u2019s competition commissioner, may not find the comparison entirely flattering. With more than a decade of hindsight, the theories supporting the case against Microsoft have all but fallen apart, and the pursuit of the company that makes Windows may suggest a reason for skepticism about this fight against Google: The tech marketplace is fluid and unpredictable. The giants that look most unbeatable today could falter in ways that may once have seemed unthinkable \u2014 and without a lot of help from the government.", "answer": "The tech marketplace is fluid and unpredictable", "sentence": "With more than a decade of hindsight, the theories supporting the case against Microsoft have all but fallen apart, and the pursuit of the company that makes Windows may suggest a reason for skepticism about this fight against Google: The tech marketplace is fluid and unpredictable .", "paragraph_sentence": "The antitrust case against Google filed by European Union regulators on Wednesday will inevitably draw comparisons to the long-running prosecution of Microsoft, in which regulators on both sides of the Atlantic pursued the software giant for anticompetitive behavior. But Margrethe Vestager, the European Union\u2019s competition commissioner, may not find the comparison entirely flattering. With more than a decade of hindsight, the theories supporting the case against Microsoft have all but fallen apart, and the pursuit of the company that makes Windows may suggest a reason for skepticism about this fight against Google: The tech marketplace is fluid and unpredictable . The giants that look most unbeatable today could falter in ways that may once have seemed unthinkable \u2014 and without a lot of help from the government.", "paragraph_answer": "The antitrust case against Google filed by European Union regulators on Wednesday will inevitably draw comparisons to the long-running prosecution of Microsoft, in which regulators on both sides of the Atlantic pursued the software giant for anticompetitive behavior. But Margrethe Vestager, the European Union\u2019s competition commissioner, may not find the comparison entirely flattering. With more than a decade of hindsight, the theories supporting the case against Microsoft have all but fallen apart, and the pursuit of the company that makes Windows may suggest a reason for skepticism about this fight against Google: The tech marketplace is fluid and unpredictable . The giants that look most unbeatable today could falter in ways that may once have seemed unthinkable \u2014 and without a lot of help from the government.", "sentence_answer": "With more than a decade of hindsight, the theories supporting the case against Microsoft have all but fallen apart, and the pursuit of the company that makes Windows may suggest a reason for skepticism about this fight against Google: The tech marketplace is fluid and unpredictable .", "paragraph_id": "5d703c99c8e4820a9b66e355"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700a01c8e4820a9b66b344"} +{"question": "State Senator Liz Krueger belongs to what political party?", "paragraph": "Currently, the state has a \u201cmansion tax\u201d of 1 percent on the sales of homes over $1 million. The de Blasio administration is calling for an additional 1 percent tax on the sale of homes in New York City over $1.75 million, which would rise to 1.5 percent tax on sales over $5 million. State Senator Liz Krueger, a Democrat from Manhattan, said there may be a \u201cwindow of opportunity\u201d in Albany right now, where no one wants to be seen to be favoring programs that are viewed as giveaways to real estate interests. \u201cEverything is very fluid right now,\u201d she said. Ms. Krueger supports the de Blasio administration\u2019s push to strengthen rent regulations, but she said the 421-a tax abatement program should be scrapped. \u201cWhy not keep the money and spend it on programs that work,\u201d she said.", "answer": "Democrat", "sentence": "State Senator Liz Krueger, a Democrat from Manhattan, said there may be a \u201cwindow of opportunity\u201d in Albany right now, where no one wants to be seen to be favoring programs that are viewed as giveaways to real estate interests.", "paragraph_sentence": "Currently, the state has a \u201cmansion tax\u201d of 1 percent on the sales of homes over $1 million. The de Blasio administration is calling for an additional 1 percent tax on the sale of homes in New York City over $1.75 million, which would rise to 1.5 percent tax on sales over $5 million. State Senator Liz Krueger, a Democrat from Manhattan, said there may be a \u201cwindow of opportunity\u201d in Albany right now, where no one wants to be seen to be favoring programs that are viewed as giveaways to real estate interests. \u201cEverything is very fluid right now,\u201d she said. Ms. Krueger supports the de Blasio administration\u2019s push to strengthen rent regulations, but she said the 421-a tax abatement program should be scrapped. \u201cWhy not keep the money and spend it on programs that work,\u201d she said.", "paragraph_answer": "Currently, the state has a \u201cmansion tax\u201d of 1 percent on the sales of homes over $1 million. The de Blasio administration is calling for an additional 1 percent tax on the sale of homes in New York City over $1.75 million, which would rise to 1.5 percent tax on sales over $5 million. State Senator Liz Krueger, a Democrat from Manhattan, said there may be a \u201cwindow of opportunity\u201d in Albany right now, where no one wants to be seen to be favoring programs that are viewed as giveaways to real estate interests. \u201cEverything is very fluid right now,\u201d she said. Ms. Krueger supports the de Blasio administration\u2019s push to strengthen rent regulations, but she said the 421-a tax abatement program should be scrapped. \u201cWhy not keep the money and spend it on programs that work,\u201d she said.", "sentence_answer": "State Senator Liz Krueger, a Democrat from Manhattan, said there may be a \u201cwindow of opportunity\u201d in Albany right now, where no one wants to be seen to be favoring programs that are viewed as giveaways to real estate interests.", "paragraph_id": "5d702362c8e4820a9b66cf8b"} +{"question": "Who wanted Mr. Neto to be ousted?", "paragraph": "Manuel Leite de Ara\u00fajo, the president of a union representing prison employees, said some guards oppose Mr. Silva Neto\u2019s \u201csentimental,\u201d friendly approach with inmates, noting that a committee of guards asked the union to support ousting him from his position. Although many Brazilian evangelicals support tough-on-crime political movements, Mr. Silva Neto\u2019s approach puts him closer to human rights activists on the left. He criticizes incarceration policies that he says target the poor for nonviolent drug charges.", "answer": "a committee of guards", "sentence": "Manuel Leite de Ara\u00fajo, the president of a union representing prison employees, said some guards oppose Mr. Silva Neto\u2019s \u201csentimental,\u201d friendly approach with inmates, noting that a committee of guards asked the union to support ousting him from his position.", "paragraph_sentence": " Manuel Leite de Ara\u00fajo, the president of a union representing prison employees, said some guards oppose Mr. Silva Neto\u2019s \u201csentimental,\u201d friendly approach with inmates, noting that a committee of guards asked the union to support ousting him from his position. Although many Brazilian evangelicals support tough-on-crime political movements, Mr. Silva Neto\u2019s approach puts him closer to human rights activists on the left. He criticizes incarceration policies that he says target the poor for nonviolent drug charges.", "paragraph_answer": "Manuel Leite de Ara\u00fajo, the president of a union representing prison employees, said some guards oppose Mr. Silva Neto\u2019s \u201csentimental,\u201d friendly approach with inmates, noting that a committee of guards asked the union to support ousting him from his position. Although many Brazilian evangelicals support tough-on-crime political movements, Mr. Silva Neto\u2019s approach puts him closer to human rights activists on the left. He criticizes incarceration policies that he says target the poor for nonviolent drug charges.", "sentence_answer": "Manuel Leite de Ara\u00fajo, the president of a union representing prison employees, said some guards oppose Mr. Silva Neto\u2019s \u201csentimental,\u201d friendly approach with inmates, noting that a committee of guards asked the union to support ousting him from his position.", "paragraph_id": "5d7027a5c8e4820a9b66d570"} +{"question": "Where was Songs in the Key of life added to in 2005?", "paragraph": "\u2605 Stevie Wonder (Sunday) \u201cSir Duke\u201d will ride again when the venerable Mr. Wonder visits Barclays Center, continuing his first national tour since 2009. He will perform his quintessential 1976 record, \u201cSongs in the Key of Life,\u201d the double album that has inspired scores of R&B dreamers; in 2005, the Library of Congress added it to the National Recording Registry. The fortunate audiences of his recent festival performances \u2014 including sets at the Global Citizen Festival and Bonnaroo \u2014 can assert to his charisma, still broad onstage. At 8 p.m., 620 Atlantic Avenue, at Flatbush Avenue, Brooklyn, 800-745-3000, ticketmaster.com. (Anderson)", "answer": "the National Recording Registry", "sentence": "He will perform his quintessential 1976 record, \u201cSongs in the Key of Life,\u201d the double album that has inspired scores of R&B dreamers; in 2005, the Library of Congress added it to the National Recording Registry .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2605 Stevie Wonder (Sunday) \u201cSir Duke\u201d will ride again when the venerable Mr. Wonder visits Barclays Center, continuing his first national tour since 2009. He will perform his quintessential 1976 record, \u201cSongs in the Key of Life,\u201d the double album that has inspired scores of R&B dreamers; in 2005, the Library of Congress added it to the National Recording Registry . The fortunate audiences of his recent festival performances \u2014 including sets at the Global Citizen Festival and Bonnaroo \u2014 can assert to his charisma, still broad onstage. At 8 p.m., 620 Atlantic Avenue, at Flatbush Avenue, Brooklyn, 800-745-3000, ticketmaster.com. (Anderson)", "paragraph_answer": "\u2605 Stevie Wonder (Sunday) \u201cSir Duke\u201d will ride again when the venerable Mr. Wonder visits Barclays Center, continuing his first national tour since 2009. He will perform his quintessential 1976 record, \u201cSongs in the Key of Life,\u201d the double album that has inspired scores of R&B dreamers; in 2005, the Library of Congress added it to the National Recording Registry . The fortunate audiences of his recent festival performances \u2014 including sets at the Global Citizen Festival and Bonnaroo \u2014 can assert to his charisma, still broad onstage. At 8 p.m., 620 Atlantic Avenue, at Flatbush Avenue, Brooklyn, 800-745-3000, ticketmaster.com. (Anderson)", "sentence_answer": "He will perform his quintessential 1976 record, \u201cSongs in the Key of Life,\u201d the double album that has inspired scores of R&B dreamers; in 2005, the Library of Congress added it to the National Recording Registry .", "paragraph_id": "5d7026cdc8e4820a9b66d340"} +{"question": "Do Muslims agree on most things, or disagree?", "paragraph": "They tell the world that though the mass murderer was quoting from the Quran, he got the Quran wrong. Some of the gutsy ones don\u2019t forget to add: What about your own secular mass murderers? They are suggesting that Muslim mass murderers should be treated like non-Muslim mass murderers, like those shooters on American college campuses or the invaders of Iraq. Should we thank them for striving for parity among mass killers? Did someone say peace? They say that Islam teaches us to respect all religions. They again point to the Holy Book: Look, here\u2019s Jesus; he is our prophet, too. But they don\u2019t explain the point of having a religion if its god and its prophet are no bigger or better or faster than yours. We are encouraged to look at Sufi Islam as a model of moderation. Yet Sufi Muslims, brandishing Rumi and whirling like couplets in a bad poem, don\u2019t even pretend to offer any solution. When asked about Islam they say, let\u2019s listen to some music. At least they are more honest than our spokesmen. And thank you, our spokesmen, for reminding the world that Muslims are not a race. Some of us speak Chinese, others Swahili. Some of us are gay, painters, lawyers, prostitutes, pimps or drummers, and of course mass murderers. Muslims disagree over most things, about this life and the afterlife as well. I have a household of six and can never get us to agree on anything, even though one is an infant and two are dogs.", "answer": "Muslims disagree over most things", "sentence": "Muslims disagree over most things , about this life and the afterlife as well.", "paragraph_sentence": "They tell the world that though the mass murderer was quoting from the Quran, he got the Quran wrong. Some of the gutsy ones don\u2019t forget to add: What about your own secular mass murderers? They are suggesting that Muslim mass murderers should be treated like non-Muslim mass murderers, like those shooters on American college campuses or the invaders of Iraq. Should we thank them for striving for parity among mass killers? Did someone say peace? They say that Islam teaches us to respect all religions. They again point to the Holy Book: Look, here\u2019s Jesus; he is our prophet, too. But they don\u2019t explain the point of having a religion if its god and its prophet are no bigger or better or faster than yours. We are encouraged to look at Sufi Islam as a model of moderation. Yet Sufi Muslims, brandishing Rumi and whirling like couplets in a bad poem, don\u2019t even pretend to offer any solution. When asked about Islam they say, let\u2019s listen to some music. At least they are more honest than our spokesmen. And thank you, our spokesmen, for reminding the world that Muslims are not a race. Some of us speak Chinese, others Swahili. Some of us are gay, painters, lawyers, prostitutes, pimps or drummers, and of course mass murderers. Muslims disagree over most things , about this life and the afterlife as well. I have a household of six and can never get us to agree on anything, even though one is an infant and two are dogs.", "paragraph_answer": "They tell the world that though the mass murderer was quoting from the Quran, he got the Quran wrong. Some of the gutsy ones don\u2019t forget to add: What about your own secular mass murderers? They are suggesting that Muslim mass murderers should be treated like non-Muslim mass murderers, like those shooters on American college campuses or the invaders of Iraq. Should we thank them for striving for parity among mass killers? Did someone say peace? They say that Islam teaches us to respect all religions. They again point to the Holy Book: Look, here\u2019s Jesus; he is our prophet, too. But they don\u2019t explain the point of having a religion if its god and its prophet are no bigger or better or faster than yours. We are encouraged to look at Sufi Islam as a model of moderation. Yet Sufi Muslims, brandishing Rumi and whirling like couplets in a bad poem, don\u2019t even pretend to offer any solution. When asked about Islam they say, let\u2019s listen to some music. At least they are more honest than our spokesmen. And thank you, our spokesmen, for reminding the world that Muslims are not a race. Some of us speak Chinese, others Swahili. Some of us are gay, painters, lawyers, prostitutes, pimps or drummers, and of course mass murderers. Muslims disagree over most things , about this life and the afterlife as well. I have a household of six and can never get us to agree on anything, even though one is an infant and two are dogs.", "sentence_answer": " Muslims disagree over most things , about this life and the afterlife as well.", "paragraph_id": "5d70087bc8e4820a9b66b005"} +{"question": "Who was Googled a lot because people were surprised he was not more popular?", "paragraph": "The stage was strangely denuded, like a forest after overzealous logging. There were eight contenders where there had once been 11 \u2014 back in the glory days of Scott Walker. Even so, Bush couldn\u2019t and didn\u2019t stand out the way he, more than anyone else, really needed to. He can take some solace though, in the No. 1 questions about two rivals that were trending on Google. \u201cWho is Rand Paul?\u201d was one. And the other, my favorite: \u201cWhy do Republicans hate Ted Cruz?\u201d", "answer": "Ted Cruz", "sentence": "And the other, my favorite: \u201cWhy do Republicans hate Ted Cruz ?\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "The stage was strangely denuded, like a forest after overzealous logging. There were eight contenders where there had once been 11 \u2014 back in the glory days of Scott Walker. Even so, Bush couldn\u2019t and didn\u2019t stand out the way he, more than anyone else, really needed to. He can take some solace though, in the No. 1 questions about two rivals that were trending on Google. \u201cWho is Rand Paul?\u201d was one. And the other, my favorite: \u201cWhy do Republicans hate Ted Cruz ?\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "The stage was strangely denuded, like a forest after overzealous logging. There were eight contenders where there had once been 11 \u2014 back in the glory days of Scott Walker. Even so, Bush couldn\u2019t and didn\u2019t stand out the way he, more than anyone else, really needed to. He can take some solace though, in the No. 1 questions about two rivals that were trending on Google. \u201cWho is Rand Paul?\u201d was one. And the other, my favorite: \u201cWhy do Republicans hate Ted Cruz ?\u201d", "sentence_answer": "And the other, my favorite: \u201cWhy do Republicans hate Ted Cruz ?\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d708d91c8e4820a9b66f547"} +{"question": "What was the reporter asked to ignore when talking to Marcelo?", "paragraph": "The #nightshift hashtag is especially well populated by the armed professions and the healing ones. Sometimes they are almost one and the same, as in the case of @armedmedic3153, a.k.a. Marcelo Aguirre, a paramedic in Newark and suburban New Jersey. He owns an AR-15, a \u00ad9-millimeter\u00ad and a shotgun, but the only thing he shoots on the night shift is his camera. He works nights so he can study days; he wants to be a doctor. Nights are good preparation for that: You get more serious cases. You learn on the job. A 12-hour course each night you\u2019re on. Twenty-four hours if you take a double. After a while, the adrenaline that juices you when you\u2019re new \u2014 when you\u2019re still keeping a tally of the lives you\u2019ve saved \u2014 disappears. You just do the job. \u201cHigh speed and low drag,\u201d Aguirre told me when I called. \u201cPlease ignore the siren,\u201d he said. \u201cWe\u2019re going to a call.\u201d A stroke. Nothing to get excited about. Coffee sustains him. He stays clean. Some guys, he said, use Provigil, but that\u2019s prescribed. \u201cFor shift-work disorder,\u201d he said.", "answer": "Please ignore the siren", "sentence": "\u201c Please ignore the siren ,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_sentence": "The #nightshift hashtag is especially well populated by the armed professions and the healing ones. Sometimes they are almost one and the same, as in the case of @armedmedic3153, a.k.a. Marcelo Aguirre, a paramedic in Newark and suburban New Jersey. He owns an AR-15, a \u00ad9-millimeter\u00ad and a shotgun, but the only thing he shoots on the night shift is his camera. He works nights so he can study days; he wants to be a doctor. Nights are good preparation for that: You get more serious cases. You learn on the job. A 12-hour course each night you\u2019re on. Twenty-four hours if you take a double. After a while, the adrenaline that juices you when you\u2019re new \u2014 when you\u2019re still keeping a tally of the lives you\u2019ve saved \u2014 disappears. You just do the job. \u201cHigh speed and low drag,\u201d Aguirre told me when I called. \u201c Please ignore the siren ,\u201d he said. \u201cWe\u2019re going to a call.\u201d A stroke. Nothing to get excited about. Coffee sustains him. He stays clean. Some guys, he said, use Provigil, but that\u2019s prescribed. \u201cFor shift-work disorder,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "The #nightshift hashtag is especially well populated by the armed professions and the healing ones. Sometimes they are almost one and the same, as in the case of @armedmedic3153, a.k.a. Marcelo Aguirre, a paramedic in Newark and suburban New Jersey. He owns an AR-15, a \u00ad9-millimeter\u00ad and a shotgun, but the only thing he shoots on the night shift is his camera. He works nights so he can study days; he wants to be a doctor. Nights are good preparation for that: You get more serious cases. You learn on the job. A 12-hour course each night you\u2019re on. Twenty-four hours if you take a double. After a while, the adrenaline that juices you when you\u2019re new \u2014 when you\u2019re still keeping a tally of the lives you\u2019ve saved \u2014 disappears. You just do the job. \u201cHigh speed and low drag,\u201d Aguirre told me when I called. \u201c Please ignore the siren ,\u201d he said. \u201cWe\u2019re going to a call.\u201d A stroke. Nothing to get excited about. Coffee sustains him. He stays clean. Some guys, he said, use Provigil, but that\u2019s prescribed. \u201cFor shift-work disorder,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "\u201c Please ignore the siren ,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_id": "5d703385c8e4820a9b66de7b"} +{"question": "The Nun's Story takes place around the time of what war?", "paragraph": "1:30 P.M. (TCM) THE NUN\u2019S STORY (1959) \u201cThe Nun\u2019s Story\u201d was nominated for eight Academy Awards. Unfortunately, it was up against one of the most celebrated films ever, \u201cBen-Hur,\u201d and came out Oscar-less. But the film was a Hollywood success even without the hardware. Based on Kathryn Hulme\u2019s novel of the same title, this drama stars Audrey Hepburn as a young Belgian who becomes a nursing nun around the time of World War II. Bosley Crowther, writing in The Times, said that the film\u2019s screenwriter, Robert Anderson, and director, Fred Zinnemann, \u201chave derived an equally amazing motion picture of an extraordinary dedicated life.\u201d", "answer": "World War II", "sentence": "Based on Kathryn Hulme\u2019s novel of the same title, this drama stars Audrey Hepburn as a young Belgian who becomes a nursing nun around the time of World War II .", "paragraph_sentence": "1:30 P.M. (TCM) THE NUN\u2019S STORY (1959) \u201cThe Nun\u2019s Story\u201d was nominated for eight Academy Awards. Unfortunately, it was up against one of the most celebrated films ever, \u201cBen-Hur,\u201d and came out Oscar-less. But the film was a Hollywood success even without the hardware. Based on Kathryn Hulme\u2019s novel of the same title, this drama stars Audrey Hepburn as a young Belgian who becomes a nursing nun around the time of World War II . Bosley Crowther, writing in The Times, said that the film\u2019s screenwriter, Robert Anderson, and director, Fred Zinnemann, \u201chave derived an equally amazing motion picture of an extraordinary dedicated life.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "1:30 P.M. (TCM) THE NUN\u2019S STORY (1959) \u201cThe Nun\u2019s Story\u201d was nominated for eight Academy Awards. Unfortunately, it was up against one of the most celebrated films ever, \u201cBen-Hur,\u201d and came out Oscar-less. But the film was a Hollywood success even without the hardware. Based on Kathryn Hulme\u2019s novel of the same title, this drama stars Audrey Hepburn as a young Belgian who becomes a nursing nun around the time of World War II . Bosley Crowther, writing in The Times, said that the film\u2019s screenwriter, Robert Anderson, and director, Fred Zinnemann, \u201chave derived an equally amazing motion picture of an extraordinary dedicated life.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Based on Kathryn Hulme\u2019s novel of the same title, this drama stars Audrey Hepburn as a young Belgian who becomes a nursing nun around the time of World War II .", "paragraph_id": "5d702638c8e4820a9b66d279"} +{"question": "What do Joe Swanberg's characters struggle with?", "paragraph": "You might almost mistake this for a middle- or late-period Woody Allen movie, in other words. Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance, but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground. His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis. Their conversation is stripped of cultural references and instead of grappling with the meaning of existence they struggle with the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility. They want to be cool, fun, laid back and nonjudgmental, but they also want to behave decently.", "answer": "the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility", "sentence": "Their conversation is stripped of cultural references and instead of grappling with the meaning of existence they struggle with the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility .", "paragraph_sentence": "You might almost mistake this for a middle- or late-period Woody Allen movie, in other words. Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance, but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground. His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis. Their conversation is stripped of cultural references and instead of grappling with the meaning of existence they struggle with the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility . They want to be cool, fun, laid back and nonjudgmental, but they also want to behave decently.", "paragraph_answer": "You might almost mistake this for a middle- or late-period Woody Allen movie, in other words. Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance, but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground. His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis. Their conversation is stripped of cultural references and instead of grappling with the meaning of existence they struggle with the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility . They want to be cool, fun, laid back and nonjudgmental, but they also want to behave decently.", "sentence_answer": "Their conversation is stripped of cultural references and instead of grappling with the meaning of existence they struggle with the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility .", "paragraph_id": "5d708315c8e4820a9b66f41b"} +{"question": "What team is Alexis Sanchez on?", "paragraph": "During that score, the referee never saw that the ball deflected from Giroud\u2019s head onto his forearm, which possibly could have ruled out the goal. The assistant referee beside the post did play a role in the second score. After a shot by Mesut Ozil, Neuer tried to scoop the ball away from his goal, but the official correctly spotted that it had, in fact, crossed the goal line. So justice was served. Arsenal, using its rapid speed via Walcott, Alexis S\u00e1nchez and the adventurous young right back H\u00e9ctor Beller\u00edn, has found and honed a new winning tactic. It is called counterattacking, and it has been alien to Wenger\u2019s philosophy over much of his two decades in London. You possibly could thank Wenger\u2019s assistant, the former Arsenal defender Steve Bould, for the change.", "answer": "Arsenal", "sentence": "Arsenal , using its rapid speed via Walcott, Alexis S\u00e1nchez and the adventurous young right back H\u00e9ctor Beller\u00edn, has found and honed a new winning tactic.", "paragraph_sentence": "During that score, the referee never saw that the ball deflected from Giroud\u2019s head onto his forearm, which possibly could have ruled out the goal. The assistant referee beside the post did play a role in the second score. After a shot by Mesut Ozil, Neuer tried to scoop the ball away from his goal, but the official correctly spotted that it had, in fact, crossed the goal line. So justice was served. Arsenal , using its rapid speed via Walcott, Alexis S\u00e1nchez and the adventurous young right back H\u00e9ctor Beller\u00edn, has found and honed a new winning tactic. It is called counterattacking, and it has been alien to Wenger\u2019s philosophy over much of his two decades in London. You possibly could thank Wenger\u2019s assistant, the former Arsenal defender Steve Bould, for the change.", "paragraph_answer": "During that score, the referee never saw that the ball deflected from Giroud\u2019s head onto his forearm, which possibly could have ruled out the goal. The assistant referee beside the post did play a role in the second score. After a shot by Mesut Ozil, Neuer tried to scoop the ball away from his goal, but the official correctly spotted that it had, in fact, crossed the goal line. So justice was served. Arsenal , using its rapid speed via Walcott, Alexis S\u00e1nchez and the adventurous young right back H\u00e9ctor Beller\u00edn, has found and honed a new winning tactic. It is called counterattacking, and it has been alien to Wenger\u2019s philosophy over much of his two decades in London. You possibly could thank Wenger\u2019s assistant, the former Arsenal defender Steve Bould, for the change.", "sentence_answer": " Arsenal , using its rapid speed via Walcott, Alexis S\u00e1nchez and the adventurous young right back H\u00e9ctor Beller\u00edn, has found and honed a new winning tactic.", "paragraph_id": "5d702983c8e4820a9b66d715"} +{"question": "At what venue does the play take place?", "paragraph": "\u2018Jack and the Beanstalk\u2019 (Friday through Sunday, and Tuesday through Thursday) Many plants grow in Central Park, so why not a beanstalk? This one will sprout indoors at the Swedish Cottage Marionette Theater, which is reviving Michael Alogna\u2019s adaptation of the classic fairy tale about Jack, the Giant (here named Milford), Dolly the Cow and the famous Golden Goose. Bruce Cannon, the theater\u2019s artistic director, has revised the script, and a human actor now stars in the show along with the company\u2019s hand-built marionettes. (Through June 28.) Weekdays at 10:30 a.m. and noon, with an additional performance on Wednesdays at 2:30 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays at 1 p.m. Reservations required. 79th Street and the West Drive, Central Park, 212-988-9093, cityparksfoundation.org/arts.", "answer": "Swedish Cottage Marionette Theater", "sentence": "This one will sprout indoors at the Swedish Cottage Marionette Theater , which is reviving Michael Alogna\u2019s adaptation of the classic fairy tale about Jack, the Giant (here named Milford), Dolly the Cow and the famous Golden Goose.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Jack and the Beanstalk\u2019 (Friday through Sunday, and Tuesday through Thursday) Many plants grow in Central Park, so why not a beanstalk? This one will sprout indoors at the Swedish Cottage Marionette Theater , which is reviving Michael Alogna\u2019s adaptation of the classic fairy tale about Jack, the Giant (here named Milford), Dolly the Cow and the famous Golden Goose. Bruce Cannon, the theater\u2019s artistic director, has revised the script, and a human actor now stars in the show along with the company\u2019s hand-built marionettes. (Through June 28.) Weekdays at 10:30 a.m. and noon, with an additional performance on Wednesdays at 2:30 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays at 1 p.m. Reservations required. 79th Street and the West Drive, Central Park, 212-988-9093, cityparksfoundation.org/arts.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Jack and the Beanstalk\u2019 (Friday through Sunday, and Tuesday through Thursday) Many plants grow in Central Park, so why not a beanstalk? This one will sprout indoors at the Swedish Cottage Marionette Theater , which is reviving Michael Alogna\u2019s adaptation of the classic fairy tale about Jack, the Giant (here named Milford), Dolly the Cow and the famous Golden Goose. Bruce Cannon, the theater\u2019s artistic director, has revised the script, and a human actor now stars in the show along with the company\u2019s hand-built marionettes. (Through June 28.) Weekdays at 10:30 a.m. and noon, with an additional performance on Wednesdays at 2:30 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays at 1 p.m. Reservations required. 79th Street and the West Drive, Central Park, 212-988-9093, cityparksfoundation.org/arts.", "sentence_answer": "This one will sprout indoors at the Swedish Cottage Marionette Theater , which is reviving Michael Alogna\u2019s adaptation of the classic fairy tale about Jack, the Giant (here named Milford), Dolly the Cow and the famous Golden Goose.", "paragraph_id": "5d70a2a4c8e4820a9b66f683"} +{"question": "In which year James Roundell represented the winning Japanese bidder while working for Christie's?", "paragraph": "\u201cIn the old days you had a small market. Now globalization is a huge factor,\u201d said James Roundell, a director at the London and New York dealer and adviser Dickinson, who, while working at Christie\u2019s in 1987, represented the winning Japanese telephone bidder for Van Gogh\u2019s \u201cSunflowers.\u201d That $39.9 million was the first of the modern \u201cart boom\u201c prices. \u201cThere\u2019s a lot of fashion involved, and people are buying for show,\u201d Mr. Roundell said. \u201cI\u2019m not sure that many of them are buying for the love of the object. For some, particularly wealthy Americans, it\u2019s all about playing the market. Back in the early 20th century, collectors would buy a painting, live with it in their own home and leave it to a museum. Now it\u2019s about acquisition, not collecting.\u201d", "answer": "1987", "sentence": "Now globalization is a huge factor,\u201d said James Roundell, a director at the London and New York dealer and adviser Dickinson, who, while working at Christie\u2019s in 1987 , represented the winning Japanese telephone bidder for Van Gogh\u2019s \u201cSunflowers.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIn the old days you had a small market. Now globalization is a huge factor,\u201d said James Roundell, a director at the London and New York dealer and adviser Dickinson, who, while working at Christie\u2019s in 1987 , represented the winning Japanese telephone bidder for Van Gogh\u2019s \u201cSunflowers.\u201d That $39.9 million was the first of the modern \u201cart boom\u201c prices. \u201cThere\u2019s a lot of fashion involved, and people are buying for show,\u201d Mr. Roundell said. \u201cI\u2019m not sure that many of them are buying for the love of the object. For some, particularly wealthy Americans, it\u2019s all about playing the market. Back in the early 20th century, collectors would buy a painting, live with it in their own home and leave it to a museum. Now it\u2019s about acquisition, not collecting.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIn the old days you had a small market. Now globalization is a huge factor,\u201d said James Roundell, a director at the London and New York dealer and adviser Dickinson, who, while working at Christie\u2019s in 1987 , represented the winning Japanese telephone bidder for Van Gogh\u2019s \u201cSunflowers.\u201d That $39.9 million was the first of the modern \u201cart boom\u201c prices. \u201cThere\u2019s a lot of fashion involved, and people are buying for show,\u201d Mr. Roundell said. \u201cI\u2019m not sure that many of them are buying for the love of the object. For some, particularly wealthy Americans, it\u2019s all about playing the market. Back in the early 20th century, collectors would buy a painting, live with it in their own home and leave it to a museum. Now it\u2019s about acquisition, not collecting.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Now globalization is a huge factor,\u201d said James Roundell, a director at the London and New York dealer and adviser Dickinson, who, while working at Christie\u2019s in 1987 , represented the winning Japanese telephone bidder for Van Gogh\u2019s \u201cSunflowers.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d7027e6c8e4820a9b66d594"} +{"question": "What did Mr. Harrell learnt in 2010?", "paragraph": "Mr. Harrell had served several stints in prison for drug crimes starting in 2002. He had five disciplinary infractions while incarcerated, including one days before his death for possessing contraband, according to prison records. None involved violence. Inmates and family members say that any erratic behavior more likely stemmed from his mental illness. In the weeks before his death, they said, he had been depressed. In 2010 he learned he had bipolar disorder and was hospitalized, according to medical records. His wife, Diane Harrell, said that when he was not taking his medication, he would go through the house turning over family photographs for fear they were staring at him. He also believed the television was talking to him, she said.", "answer": "he had bipolar disorder", "sentence": "In 2010 he learned he had bipolar disorder and was hospitalized, according to medical records.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Harrell had served several stints in prison for drug crimes starting in 2002. He had five disciplinary infractions while incarcerated, including one days before his death for possessing contraband, according to prison records. None involved violence. Inmates and family members say that any erratic behavior more likely stemmed from his mental illness. In the weeks before his death, they said, he had been depressed. In 2010 he learned he had bipolar disorder and was hospitalized, according to medical records. His wife, Diane Harrell, said that when he was not taking his medication, he would go through the house turning over family photographs for fear they were staring at him. He also believed the television was talking to him, she said.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Harrell had served several stints in prison for drug crimes starting in 2002. He had five disciplinary infractions while incarcerated, including one days before his death for possessing contraband, according to prison records. None involved violence. Inmates and family members say that any erratic behavior more likely stemmed from his mental illness. In the weeks before his death, they said, he had been depressed. In 2010 he learned he had bipolar disorder and was hospitalized, according to medical records. His wife, Diane Harrell, said that when he was not taking his medication, he would go through the house turning over family photographs for fear they were staring at him. He also believed the television was talking to him, she said.", "sentence_answer": "In 2010 he learned he had bipolar disorder and was hospitalized, according to medical records.", "paragraph_id": "5d701da1c8e4820a9b66c917"} +{"question": "What sort of analysts are mentioned?", "paragraph": "In a statement, Mr. McGinty said, \u201cOnce the investigation is complete \u2014 and in the death of Tamir Rice, it is not at this time \u2014 all evidence and expert analysis will be presented to the grand jury.\u201d", "answer": "expert", "sentence": "In a statement, Mr. McGinty said, \u201cOnce the investigation is complete \u2014 and in the death of Tamir Rice, it is not at this time \u2014 all evidence and expert analysis will be presented to the grand jury.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " In a statement, Mr. McGinty said, \u201cOnce the investigation is complete \u2014 and in the death of Tamir Rice, it is not at this time \u2014 all evidence and expert analysis will be presented to the grand jury.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "In a statement, Mr. McGinty said, \u201cOnce the investigation is complete \u2014 and in the death of Tamir Rice, it is not at this time \u2014 all evidence and expert analysis will be presented to the grand jury.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In a statement, Mr. McGinty said, \u201cOnce the investigation is complete \u2014 and in the death of Tamir Rice, it is not at this time \u2014 all evidence and expert analysis will be presented to the grand jury.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d700c63c8e4820a9b66b777"} +{"question": "What did Maher have to hold near a heater?", "paragraph": "For some New Yorkers, the subzero wind chill was the occupational hazard of making a living outdoors. Maher Bawady, 43, of Queens, woke at 2:30 a.m. on Monday to set up his food cart outside 500 Park Avenue in Manhattan. By 6:30 a.m., he had had two cups of coffee and was nursing a hot tea on what looked like his worst day on the street in more than 14 years as a vendor. He had to hold each latex glove by a heater so it would stretch over his hand. At 7:29 a.m., the temperature sank to a low of 3 degrees in Central Park, the lowest since the record of 1 degree was set in January 2004, said Tim Morrin, the observation program leader for the National Weather Service. As Mr. Morrin explained the meteorological reasons for the cold spell, he evoked a vast snow-covered landscape swept by arctic winds and a jet stream that had shifted south of the metropolitan region in January, opening the door to the coldest blasts in a decade. More snow is expected after midnight, he said, enough to affect the commute on Tuesday morning.", "answer": "each latex glove", "sentence": "He had to hold each latex glove by a heater so it would stretch over his hand.", "paragraph_sentence": "For some New Yorkers, the subzero wind chill was the occupational hazard of making a living outdoors. Maher Bawady, 43, of Queens, woke at 2:30 a.m. on Monday to set up his food cart outside 500 Park Avenue in Manhattan. By 6:30 a.m., he had had two cups of coffee and was nursing a hot tea on what looked like his worst day on the street in more than 14 years as a vendor. He had to hold each latex glove by a heater so it would stretch over his hand. At 7:29 a.m., the temperature sank to a low of 3 degrees in Central Park, the lowest since the record of 1 degree was set in January 2004, said Tim Morrin, the observation program leader for the National Weather Service. As Mr. Morrin explained the meteorological reasons for the cold spell, he evoked a vast snow-covered landscape swept by arctic winds and a jet stream that had shifted south of the metropolitan region in January, opening the door to the coldest blasts in a decade. More snow is expected after midnight, he said, enough to affect the commute on Tuesday morning.", "paragraph_answer": "For some New Yorkers, the subzero wind chill was the occupational hazard of making a living outdoors. Maher Bawady, 43, of Queens, woke at 2:30 a.m. on Monday to set up his food cart outside 500 Park Avenue in Manhattan. By 6:30 a.m., he had had two cups of coffee and was nursing a hot tea on what looked like his worst day on the street in more than 14 years as a vendor. He had to hold each latex glove by a heater so it would stretch over his hand. At 7:29 a.m., the temperature sank to a low of 3 degrees in Central Park, the lowest since the record of 1 degree was set in January 2004, said Tim Morrin, the observation program leader for the National Weather Service. As Mr. Morrin explained the meteorological reasons for the cold spell, he evoked a vast snow-covered landscape swept by arctic winds and a jet stream that had shifted south of the metropolitan region in January, opening the door to the coldest blasts in a decade. More snow is expected after midnight, he said, enough to affect the commute on Tuesday morning.", "sentence_answer": "He had to hold each latex glove by a heater so it would stretch over his hand.", "paragraph_id": "5d708b4bc8e4820a9b66f50c"} +{"question": "What have router manufactures recently done?", "paragraph": "Router manufacturers have more recently improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind, said Mr. Fraser. New routers often include smarter antennas that do a better job of assembling signals and beaming energy toward devices that are moving around. Some features inside newer routers also help reduce signal interference. Newer routers typically can transmit data over two radio frequencies \u2014 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz \u2014 and give you the option to split them up into two separate Wi-Fi networks. In general, the 2.4 GHz band transmits data farther and is more crowded because many types of devices, like cordless phones and microwaves, use that frequency. The 5 GHz band is less congested but typically travels a shorter distance. Consumer behavior is also to blame for Wi-Fi headaches. People may wait years before buying a new router, so their devices might be more up-to-date than their infrastructure. An outdated router becomes a bottleneck that hinders the speeds of web downloads and file transfers between connected devices.", "answer": "improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind", "sentence": "Router manufacturers have more recently improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind , said Mr. Fraser.", "paragraph_sentence": " Router manufacturers have more recently improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind , said Mr. Fraser. New routers often include smarter antennas that do a better job of assembling signals and beaming energy toward devices that are moving around. Some features inside newer routers also help reduce signal interference. Newer routers typically can transmit data over two radio frequencies \u2014 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz \u2014 and give you the option to split them up into two separate Wi-Fi networks. In general, the 2.4 GHz band transmits data farther and is more crowded because many types of devices, like cordless phones and microwaves, use that frequency. The 5 GHz band is less congested but typically travels a shorter distance. Consumer behavior is also to blame for Wi-Fi headaches. People may wait years before buying a new router, so their devices might be more up-to-date than their infrastructure. An outdated router becomes a bottleneck that hinders the speeds of web downloads and file transfers between connected devices.", "paragraph_answer": "Router manufacturers have more recently improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind , said Mr. Fraser. New routers often include smarter antennas that do a better job of assembling signals and beaming energy toward devices that are moving around. Some features inside newer routers also help reduce signal interference. Newer routers typically can transmit data over two radio frequencies \u2014 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz \u2014 and give you the option to split them up into two separate Wi-Fi networks. In general, the 2.4 GHz band transmits data farther and is more crowded because many types of devices, like cordless phones and microwaves, use that frequency. The 5 GHz band is less congested but typically travels a shorter distance. Consumer behavior is also to blame for Wi-Fi headaches. People may wait years before buying a new router, so their devices might be more up-to-date than their infrastructure. An outdated router becomes a bottleneck that hinders the speeds of web downloads and file transfers between connected devices.", "sentence_answer": "Router manufacturers have more recently improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind , said Mr. Fraser.", "paragraph_id": "5d705376c8e4820a9b66ec23"} +{"question": "What is Christianity deeply intertwined with?", "paragraph": "ROME \u2014 Catholics should not try to convert Jews, but should work together with them to fight anti-Semitism, the Vatican said on Thursday in a far-reaching document meant to solidify its increasingly positive relations with Jews. Despite a long history of mutual suspicion and conflict, Christianity and Judaism are deeply intertwined, and Christians should treat the subject of the Holocaust with sensitivity and repel any anti-Semitic tendencies, the Vatican wrote. Titled \u201cThe Gifts and Calling of God Are Irrevocable,\u201d the document was issued by the Vatican\u2019s Commission for Religious Relations with Jews. Addressing an issue that has been a sore point between the two faiths for centuries, the commission wrote that the church was \u201cobliged to view evangelization to Jews, who believe in the one God, in a different manner from that to people of other religions and world views.\u201d It specified that \u201cthe Catholic Church neither conducts nor supports any specific institutional mission work directed towards Jews.\u201d Analysts said the language in the document seemed intended to put the issue to rest.", "answer": "Judaism", "sentence": "Despite a long history of mutual suspicion and conflict, Christianity and Judaism are deeply intertwined, and Christians should treat the subject of the Holocaust with sensitivity and repel any anti-Semitic tendencies, the Vatican wrote.", "paragraph_sentence": "ROME \u2014 Catholics should not try to convert Jews, but should work together with them to fight anti-Semitism, the Vatican said on Thursday in a far-reaching document meant to solidify its increasingly positive relations with Jews. Despite a long history of mutual suspicion and conflict, Christianity and Judaism are deeply intertwined, and Christians should treat the subject of the Holocaust with sensitivity and repel any anti-Semitic tendencies, the Vatican wrote. Titled \u201cThe Gifts and Calling of God Are Irrevocable,\u201d the document was issued by the Vatican\u2019s Commission for Religious Relations with Jews. Addressing an issue that has been a sore point between the two faiths for centuries, the commission wrote that the church was \u201cobliged to view evangelization to Jews, who believe in the one God, in a different manner from that to people of other religions and world views.\u201d It specified that \u201cthe Catholic Church neither conducts nor supports any specific institutional mission work directed towards Jews.\u201d Analysts said the language in the document seemed intended to put the issue to rest.", "paragraph_answer": "ROME \u2014 Catholics should not try to convert Jews, but should work together with them to fight anti-Semitism, the Vatican said on Thursday in a far-reaching document meant to solidify its increasingly positive relations with Jews. Despite a long history of mutual suspicion and conflict, Christianity and Judaism are deeply intertwined, and Christians should treat the subject of the Holocaust with sensitivity and repel any anti-Semitic tendencies, the Vatican wrote. Titled \u201cThe Gifts and Calling of God Are Irrevocable,\u201d the document was issued by the Vatican\u2019s Commission for Religious Relations with Jews. Addressing an issue that has been a sore point between the two faiths for centuries, the commission wrote that the church was \u201cobliged to view evangelization to Jews, who believe in the one God, in a different manner from that to people of other religions and world views.\u201d It specified that \u201cthe Catholic Church neither conducts nor supports any specific institutional mission work directed towards Jews.\u201d Analysts said the language in the document seemed intended to put the issue to rest.", "sentence_answer": "Despite a long history of mutual suspicion and conflict, Christianity and Judaism are deeply intertwined, and Christians should treat the subject of the Holocaust with sensitivity and repel any anti-Semitic tendencies, the Vatican wrote.", "paragraph_id": "5d705312c8e4820a9b66ebfe"} +{"question": "What was Wilkins granted a patent for in 1988?", "paragraph": "Mr. Wilkins, who died at 90 on Monday in Las Vegas, tried but failed to patent his tub, which meant it could proliferate with abandon. It became a fixture of hotel love nests everywhere. (He was, however, granted Patent No. D294290 in 1988 for a tub shaped like a champagne glass, which also became popular at Cove Haven.) In 1971, in a two-page photo spread complete with a smooching couple, Life magazine gushed about the bubble-brimming, red-tiled \u201csweetheart tub\u201d in Cove Haven\u2019s mirrored bathrooms. \u201cA surfeit of affluent vulgarity,\u201d the magazine said, apparently good-humoredly.", "answer": "tub shaped like a champagne glass", "sentence": "(He was, however, granted Patent No. D294290 in 1988 for a tub shaped like a champagne glass , which also became popular at Cove Haven.)", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Wilkins, who died at 90 on Monday in Las Vegas, tried but failed to patent his tub, which meant it could proliferate with abandon. It became a fixture of hotel love nests everywhere. (He was, however, granted Patent No. D294290 in 1988 for a tub shaped like a champagne glass , which also became popular at Cove Haven.) In 1971, in a two-page photo spread complete with a smooching couple, Life magazine gushed about the bubble-brimming, red-tiled \u201csweetheart tub\u201d in Cove Haven\u2019s mirrored bathrooms. \u201cA surfeit of affluent vulgarity,\u201d the magazine said, apparently good-humoredly.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Wilkins, who died at 90 on Monday in Las Vegas, tried but failed to patent his tub, which meant it could proliferate with abandon. It became a fixture of hotel love nests everywhere. (He was, however, granted Patent No. D294290 in 1988 for a tub shaped like a champagne glass , which also became popular at Cove Haven.) In 1971, in a two-page photo spread complete with a smooching couple, Life magazine gushed about the bubble-brimming, red-tiled \u201csweetheart tub\u201d in Cove Haven\u2019s mirrored bathrooms. \u201cA surfeit of affluent vulgarity,\u201d the magazine said, apparently good-humoredly.", "sentence_answer": "(He was, however, granted Patent No. D294290 in 1988 for a tub shaped like a champagne glass , which also became popular at Cove Haven.)", "paragraph_id": "5d7008bdc8e4820a9b66b0a4"} +{"question": "Besides the Israelis what other nationality was given the spirit of love?", "paragraph": "The church\u2019s boycott resolution reflects what supporters call the growing momentum of the Boycott, Divest and Sanction movement, which seeks to pressure Israel economically over the long-paralyzed Middle East peace process. The church said in a statement that it \u201cconsiders Tuesday\u2019s actions a next step in the U.C.C.\u2019s involvement with peace in the Middle East.\u201d The Rev. John Deckenback, conference minister of the church\u2019s Central Atlantic Conference, which submitted the boycott resolution, called the outcome a reflection of the church\u2019s \u201cspirit of love for both Israelis and Palestinians.\u201d", "answer": "Palestinians", "sentence": "The Rev. John Deckenback, conference minister of the church\u2019s Central Atlantic Conference, which submitted the boycott resolution, called the outcome a reflection of the church\u2019s \u201cspirit of love for both Israelis and Palestinians .", "paragraph_sentence": "The church\u2019s boycott resolution reflects what supporters call the growing momentum of the Boycott, Divest and Sanction movement, which seeks to pressure Israel economically over the long-paralyzed Middle East peace process. The church said in a statement that it \u201cconsiders Tuesday\u2019s actions a next step in the U.C.C.\u2019s involvement with peace in the Middle East.\u201d The Rev. John Deckenback, conference minister of the church\u2019s Central Atlantic Conference, which submitted the boycott resolution, called the outcome a reflection of the church\u2019s \u201cspirit of love for both Israelis and Palestinians . \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The church\u2019s boycott resolution reflects what supporters call the growing momentum of the Boycott, Divest and Sanction movement, which seeks to pressure Israel economically over the long-paralyzed Middle East peace process. The church said in a statement that it \u201cconsiders Tuesday\u2019s actions a next step in the U.C.C.\u2019s involvement with peace in the Middle East.\u201d The Rev. John Deckenback, conference minister of the church\u2019s Central Atlantic Conference, which submitted the boycott resolution, called the outcome a reflection of the church\u2019s \u201cspirit of love for both Israelis and Palestinians .\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The Rev. John Deckenback, conference minister of the church\u2019s Central Atlantic Conference, which submitted the boycott resolution, called the outcome a reflection of the church\u2019s \u201cspirit of love for both Israelis and Palestinians .", "paragraph_id": "5d70083fc8e4820a9b66afa7"} +{"question": "Which team was Colin Kaepernick a fan of when he was growing up?", "paragraph": "Buffalo has also received solid production from guard Richie Incognito and wide receiver Percy Harvin. Those two talented players had seen their public image tarnished over the last few seasons, but they appear to have found a home with Coach Rex Ryan and are playing a big part in the team\u2019s success. The Giants may have the more impressive trophy case, but for right now the Bills are New York\u2019s best (and, technically, only) team. PICK: BILLS Packers (3-0) at 49ers (1-2) 4.25 p.m. Line: Packers by 9 \u00bd Colin Kaepernick has always enjoyed playing the Packers. He may have grown up rooting for the team, but he has shown it no mercy, beating it once in the regular season and twice in the playoffs. He has done it with his arm (412 passing yards and three touchdowns in the 2013 season opener) and with his legs (a record 181 yards rushing in a 2012 playoff win).", "answer": "Packers", "sentence": "PICK: BILLS Packers (3-0) at 49ers (1-2) 4.25 p.m.", "paragraph_sentence": "Buffalo has also received solid production from guard Richie Incognito and wide receiver Percy Harvin. Those two talented players had seen their public image tarnished over the last few seasons, but they appear to have found a home with Coach Rex Ryan and are playing a big part in the team\u2019s success. The Giants may have the more impressive trophy case, but for right now the Bills are New York\u2019s best (and, technically, only) team. PICK: BILLS Packers (3-0) at 49ers (1-2) 4.25 p.m. Line: Packers by 9 \u00bd Colin Kaepernick has always enjoyed playing the Packers. He may have grown up rooting for the team, but he has shown it no mercy, beating it once in the regular season and twice in the playoffs. He has done it with his arm (412 passing yards and three touchdowns in the 2013 season opener) and with his legs (a record 181 yards rushing in a 2012 playoff win).", "paragraph_answer": "Buffalo has also received solid production from guard Richie Incognito and wide receiver Percy Harvin. Those two talented players had seen their public image tarnished over the last few seasons, but they appear to have found a home with Coach Rex Ryan and are playing a big part in the team\u2019s success. The Giants may have the more impressive trophy case, but for right now the Bills are New York\u2019s best (and, technically, only) team. PICK: BILLS Packers (3-0) at 49ers (1-2) 4.25 p.m. Line: Packers by 9 \u00bd Colin Kaepernick has always enjoyed playing the Packers. He may have grown up rooting for the team, but he has shown it no mercy, beating it once in the regular season and twice in the playoffs. He has done it with his arm (412 passing yards and three touchdowns in the 2013 season opener) and with his legs (a record 181 yards rushing in a 2012 playoff win).", "sentence_answer": "PICK: BILLS Packers (3-0) at 49ers (1-2) 4.25 p.m.", "paragraph_id": "5d70281dc8e4820a9b66d5dd"} +{"question": "Which world-renowned charity group joined the program as a scientific consultant?", "paragraph": "Unilever brought on the United Soybean Board and the Iowa Soybean Association, two trade groups, to give the program bona fides. The World Wildlife Fund signed up as a scientific consultant. Practical Farmers of Iowa, a nonprofit that focuses on farm ecology, joined in, as did Field to Market, an alliance of agricultural companies that has developed software to measure farming practices. This ad hoc coalition then began reaching out to Iowa farmers. The pitch to soybean growers is simple. By participating in the program, they receive an extra 10 cents a bushel of soybeans from ADM, have access to additional state subsidies for certain eco-friendly farming techniques and receive education about sustainability. Three years into the program, 250 farmers responsible for 285,000 acres have signed up. Mr. Sutter was initially reluctant to participate in the program, worried that data about his farm he was required to share might be obtained by big seed suppliers like Monsanto. But he ultimately joined.", "answer": "World Wildlife Fund", "sentence": "The World Wildlife Fund signed up as a scientific consultant.", "paragraph_sentence": "Unilever brought on the United Soybean Board and the Iowa Soybean Association, two trade groups, to give the program bona fides. The World Wildlife Fund signed up as a scientific consultant. Practical Farmers of Iowa, a nonprofit that focuses on farm ecology, joined in, as did Field to Market, an alliance of agricultural companies that has developed software to measure farming practices. This ad hoc coalition then began reaching out to Iowa farmers. The pitch to soybean growers is simple. By participating in the program, they receive an extra 10 cents a bushel of soybeans from ADM, have access to additional state subsidies for certain eco-friendly farming techniques and receive education about sustainability. Three years into the program, 250 farmers responsible for 285,000 acres have signed up. Mr. Sutter was initially reluctant to participate in the program, worried that data about his farm he was required to share might be obtained by big seed suppliers like Monsanto. But he ultimately joined.", "paragraph_answer": "Unilever brought on the United Soybean Board and the Iowa Soybean Association, two trade groups, to give the program bona fides. The World Wildlife Fund signed up as a scientific consultant. Practical Farmers of Iowa, a nonprofit that focuses on farm ecology, joined in, as did Field to Market, an alliance of agricultural companies that has developed software to measure farming practices. This ad hoc coalition then began reaching out to Iowa farmers. The pitch to soybean growers is simple. By participating in the program, they receive an extra 10 cents a bushel of soybeans from ADM, have access to additional state subsidies for certain eco-friendly farming techniques and receive education about sustainability. Three years into the program, 250 farmers responsible for 285,000 acres have signed up. Mr. Sutter was initially reluctant to participate in the program, worried that data about his farm he was required to share might be obtained by big seed suppliers like Monsanto. But he ultimately joined.", "sentence_answer": "The World Wildlife Fund signed up as a scientific consultant.", "paragraph_id": "5d7032fec8e4820a9b66de24"} +{"question": "What is Cook's title?", "paragraph": "Timothy D. Cook, Apple\u2019s chief executive, called the new iPad Pro \u201cthe most capable\u201d tablet the company has ever created. With a larger screen and optional keyboard, it becomes a device that is meant to be useful for both the creation and consumption of content. \u201cIt makes sense for Apple to reveal a new keyboard along with new, larger-screen iPads with faster processors,\u201d said Toni Sacconaghi, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein. \u201cThe message being that Apple is trying to push the iPad to be more of a PC replacement, a converged device of a tablet notebook that has broader computing powers.\u201d But starting at $800 (not including the optional $170 keyboard and the $100 stylus), it is much more expensive than earlier iPads.", "answer": "Apple\u2019s chief executive", "sentence": "Timothy D. Cook, Apple\u2019s chief executive , called the new iPad Pro \u201cthe most capable\u201d tablet the company has ever created.", "paragraph_sentence": " Timothy D. Cook, Apple\u2019s chief executive , called the new iPad Pro \u201cthe most capable\u201d tablet the company has ever created. With a larger screen and optional keyboard, it becomes a device that is meant to be useful for both the creation and consumption of content. \u201cIt makes sense for Apple to reveal a new keyboard along with new, larger-screen iPads with faster processors,\u201d said Toni Sacconaghi, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein. \u201cThe message being that Apple is trying to push the iPad to be more of a PC replacement, a converged device of a tablet notebook that has broader computing powers.\u201d But starting at $800 (not including the optional $170 keyboard and the $100 stylus), it is much more expensive than earlier iPads.", "paragraph_answer": "Timothy D. Cook, Apple\u2019s chief executive , called the new iPad Pro \u201cthe most capable\u201d tablet the company has ever created. With a larger screen and optional keyboard, it becomes a device that is meant to be useful for both the creation and consumption of content. \u201cIt makes sense for Apple to reveal a new keyboard along with new, larger-screen iPads with faster processors,\u201d said Toni Sacconaghi, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein. \u201cThe message being that Apple is trying to push the iPad to be more of a PC replacement, a converged device of a tablet notebook that has broader computing powers.\u201d But starting at $800 (not including the optional $170 keyboard and the $100 stylus), it is much more expensive than earlier iPads.", "sentence_answer": "Timothy D. Cook, Apple\u2019s chief executive , called the new iPad Pro \u201cthe most capable\u201d tablet the company has ever created.", "paragraph_id": "5d702d18c8e4820a9b66daa5"} +{"question": "Which disease has the greatest health care cost in the last five years of life?", "paragraph": "So when a group of researchers asked which of these diseases involved the greatest health care costs in the last five years of life, the answer they found might seem surprising. The most expensive, by far, was dementia. The study looked at patients on Medicare. The average total cost of care for a person with dementia over those five years was $287,038. For a patient who died of heart disease it was $175,136. For a cancer patient it was $173,383. Medicare paid almost the same amount for patients with each of those diseases \u2014 close to $100,000 \u2014 but dementia patients had many more expenses that were not covered.", "answer": "dementia", "sentence": "The most expensive, by far, was dementia .", "paragraph_sentence": "So when a group of researchers asked which of these diseases involved the greatest health care costs in the last five years of life, the answer they found might seem surprising. The most expensive, by far, was dementia . The study looked at patients on Medicare. The average total cost of care for a person with dementia over those five years was $287,038. For a patient who died of heart disease it was $175,136. For a cancer patient it was $173,383. Medicare paid almost the same amount for patients with each of those diseases \u2014 close to $100,000 \u2014 but dementia patients had many more expenses that were not covered.", "paragraph_answer": "So when a group of researchers asked which of these diseases involved the greatest health care costs in the last five years of life, the answer they found might seem surprising. The most expensive, by far, was dementia . The study looked at patients on Medicare. The average total cost of care for a person with dementia over those five years was $287,038. For a patient who died of heart disease it was $175,136. For a cancer patient it was $173,383. Medicare paid almost the same amount for patients with each of those diseases \u2014 close to $100,000 \u2014 but dementia patients had many more expenses that were not covered.", "sentence_answer": "The most expensive, by far, was dementia .", "paragraph_id": "5d703023c8e4820a9b66dc99"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d7007ecc8e4820a9b66aeed"} +{"question": "Where Time Rice traveled for his Broadway debut?", "paragraph": "And they got their own taste of pop stardom the following year, when they traveled to New York for its Broadway debut. But Mr. Lloyd Webber recalls his first viewing of that show, produced by Robert Stigwood and directed by Tom O\u2019Horgan, as \u201cthe worst day of my life.\u201d The production was too ornate and too glitzy by his reckoning, and he was powerless to stop it. \u201cWhat can you do if you\u2019re 23 years old?\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. Four decades later, Mr. Lloyd Webber and his company, the Really Useful Group, allow no such leeway with their worldwide productions of \u201cPhantom,\u201d \u201cSuperstar\u201d and \u201cCats,\u201d which was recently revived on the West End and is being eyed for a Broadway return.", "answer": "New York", "sentence": "And they got their own taste of pop stardom the following year, when they traveled to New York for its Broadway debut.", "paragraph_sentence": " And they got their own taste of pop stardom the following year, when they traveled to New York for its Broadway debut. But Mr. Lloyd Webber recalls his first viewing of that show, produced by Robert Stigwood and directed by Tom O\u2019Horgan, as \u201cthe worst day of my life.\u201d The production was too ornate and too glitzy by his reckoning, and he was powerless to stop it. \u201cWhat can you do if you\u2019re 23 years old?\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. Four decades later, Mr. Lloyd Webber and his company, the Really Useful Group, allow no such leeway with their worldwide productions of \u201cPhantom,\u201d \u201cSuperstar\u201d and \u201cCats,\u201d which was recently revived on the West End and is being eyed for a Broadway return.", "paragraph_answer": "And they got their own taste of pop stardom the following year, when they traveled to New York for its Broadway debut. But Mr. Lloyd Webber recalls his first viewing of that show, produced by Robert Stigwood and directed by Tom O\u2019Horgan, as \u201cthe worst day of my life.\u201d The production was too ornate and too glitzy by his reckoning, and he was powerless to stop it. \u201cWhat can you do if you\u2019re 23 years old?\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. Four decades later, Mr. Lloyd Webber and his company, the Really Useful Group, allow no such leeway with their worldwide productions of \u201cPhantom,\u201d \u201cSuperstar\u201d and \u201cCats,\u201d which was recently revived on the West End and is being eyed for a Broadway return.", "sentence_answer": "And they got their own taste of pop stardom the following year, when they traveled to New York for its Broadway debut.", "paragraph_id": "5d704477c8e4820a9b66e77b"} +{"question": "Sapa is how far from Topas Ecolodge?", "paragraph": "Topas Ecolodge, 11 miles from Sapa, was one of the first foreign-run lodges in the ethnic hinterland. It sits atop terraced rice paddies at an elevation of about 3,280 feet and has panoramic views of the nearby Hoang Lien Son Mountains. The lodge has 25 bungalows and a restored stilt house that was remodeled to reflect Scandinavian design elements. A two-night stay, including breakfasts, train travel from Hanoi and a shuttle transfer, costs $236 per couple. The lodge employs about 60 full-time workers, mostly from six local ethnic-minority groups, Mr. Koppen said. Most of the staff members receive years of language and hospitality training, and the lodge purchases the bulk of its food, materials and decorations locally. The lodge has not yet broken even, Mr. Koppen added, but it was never intended to be what he called a \u201ctourism factory\u201d whose only goal was making money.", "answer": "11 miles", "sentence": "Topas Ecolodge, 11 miles from Sapa, was one of the first foreign-run lodges in the ethnic hinterland.", "paragraph_sentence": " Topas Ecolodge, 11 miles from Sapa, was one of the first foreign-run lodges in the ethnic hinterland. It sits atop terraced rice paddies at an elevation of about 3,280 feet and has panoramic views of the nearby Hoang Lien Son Mountains. The lodge has 25 bungalows and a restored stilt house that was remodeled to reflect Scandinavian design elements. A two-night stay, including breakfasts, train travel from Hanoi and a shuttle transfer, costs $236 per couple. The lodge employs about 60 full-time workers, mostly from six local ethnic-minority groups, Mr. Koppen said. Most of the staff members receive years of language and hospitality training, and the lodge purchases the bulk of its food, materials and decorations locally. The lodge has not yet broken even, Mr. Koppen added, but it was never intended to be what he called a \u201ctourism factory\u201d whose only goal was making money.", "paragraph_answer": "Topas Ecolodge, 11 miles from Sapa, was one of the first foreign-run lodges in the ethnic hinterland. It sits atop terraced rice paddies at an elevation of about 3,280 feet and has panoramic views of the nearby Hoang Lien Son Mountains. The lodge has 25 bungalows and a restored stilt house that was remodeled to reflect Scandinavian design elements. A two-night stay, including breakfasts, train travel from Hanoi and a shuttle transfer, costs $236 per couple. The lodge employs about 60 full-time workers, mostly from six local ethnic-minority groups, Mr. Koppen said. Most of the staff members receive years of language and hospitality training, and the lodge purchases the bulk of its food, materials and decorations locally. The lodge has not yet broken even, Mr. Koppen added, but it was never intended to be what he called a \u201ctourism factory\u201d whose only goal was making money.", "sentence_answer": "Topas Ecolodge, 11 miles from Sapa, was one of the first foreign-run lodges in the ethnic hinterland.", "paragraph_id": "5d700b94c8e4820a9b66b659"} +{"question": "How many Grateful Dead living members are there?", "paragraph": "Just a few months after what was billed as the Grateful Dead\u2019s last stand \u2014 five sold-out stadium shows for some 212,000 fans that grossed more than $60 million in ticket and pay-per-view sales \u2014 the band is rising once again, albeit in a slightly fractured arrangement. This weekend, insatiable Deadheads can see all of the group\u2019s so-called core four living members in just two stops: Madison Square Garden, which will host Dead & Company \u2014 featuring Bob Weir, Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann, joined by the pop singer and guitarist John Mayer, the bassist Oteil Burbridge and the keyboardist Jeff Chimenti \u2014 for two sold-out shows on Saturday and Sunday; and at the Capitol Theater, about 30 miles north in Port Chester, N.Y., where the Dead bassist Phil Lesh will play three consecutive nights starting Friday (with another run Nov. 5 to 7). \u201cOnly in the world of the Grateful Dead could that happen on Halloween,\u201d said Peter Shapiro, the concert promoter who owns the Capitol and organized this summer\u2019s \u201cFare Thee Well: Celebrating 50 Years of Grateful Dead\u201d shows in Chicago and Santa Clara, Calif. The Dead had a penchant for blown-out holiday concerts, he noted, and both locales are \u201cinstitutional venues\u201d where the full band played dozens of times.", "answer": "four", "sentence": "This weekend, insatiable Deadheads can see all of the group\u2019s so-called core four living members in just two stops: Madison Square Garden, which will host Dead & Company \u2014 featuring Bob Weir, Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann, joined by the pop singer and guitarist John Mayer, the bassist Oteil Burbridge and the keyboardist Jeff Chimenti \u2014 for two sold-out shows on Saturday and Sunday; and at the Capitol Theater, about 30 miles north in Port Chester, N.Y., where the Dead bassist Phil Lesh will play three consecutive nights starting Friday (with another run Nov. 5 to 7).", "paragraph_sentence": "Just a few months after what was billed as the Grateful Dead\u2019s last stand \u2014 five sold-out stadium shows for some 212,000 fans that grossed more than $60 million in ticket and pay-per-view sales \u2014 the band is rising once again, albeit in a slightly fractured arrangement. This weekend, insatiable Deadheads can see all of the group\u2019s so-called core four living members in just two stops: Madison Square Garden, which will host Dead & Company \u2014 featuring Bob Weir, Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann, joined by the pop singer and guitarist John Mayer, the bassist Oteil Burbridge and the keyboardist Jeff Chimenti \u2014 for two sold-out shows on Saturday and Sunday; and at the Capitol Theater, about 30 miles north in Port Chester, N.Y., where the Dead bassist Phil Lesh will play three consecutive nights starting Friday (with another run Nov. 5 to 7). \u201cOnly in the world of the Grateful Dead could that happen on Halloween,\u201d said Peter Shapiro, the concert promoter who owns the Capitol and organized this summer\u2019s \u201cFare Thee Well: Celebrating 50 Years of Grateful Dead\u201d shows in Chicago and Santa Clara, Calif. The Dead had a penchant for blown-out holiday concerts, he noted, and both locales are \u201cinstitutional venues\u201d where the full band played dozens of times.", "paragraph_answer": "Just a few months after what was billed as the Grateful Dead\u2019s last stand \u2014 five sold-out stadium shows for some 212,000 fans that grossed more than $60 million in ticket and pay-per-view sales \u2014 the band is rising once again, albeit in a slightly fractured arrangement. This weekend, insatiable Deadheads can see all of the group\u2019s so-called core four living members in just two stops: Madison Square Garden, which will host Dead & Company \u2014 featuring Bob Weir, Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann, joined by the pop singer and guitarist John Mayer, the bassist Oteil Burbridge and the keyboardist Jeff Chimenti \u2014 for two sold-out shows on Saturday and Sunday; and at the Capitol Theater, about 30 miles north in Port Chester, N.Y., where the Dead bassist Phil Lesh will play three consecutive nights starting Friday (with another run Nov. 5 to 7). \u201cOnly in the world of the Grateful Dead could that happen on Halloween,\u201d said Peter Shapiro, the concert promoter who owns the Capitol and organized this summer\u2019s \u201cFare Thee Well: Celebrating 50 Years of Grateful Dead\u201d shows in Chicago and Santa Clara, Calif. The Dead had a penchant for blown-out holiday concerts, he noted, and both locales are \u201cinstitutional venues\u201d where the full band played dozens of times.", "sentence_answer": "This weekend, insatiable Deadheads can see all of the group\u2019s so-called core four living members in just two stops: Madison Square Garden, which will host Dead & Company \u2014 featuring Bob Weir, Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann, joined by the pop singer and guitarist John Mayer, the bassist Oteil Burbridge and the keyboardist Jeff Chimenti \u2014 for two sold-out shows on Saturday and Sunday; and at the Capitol Theater, about 30 miles north in Port Chester, N.Y., where the Dead bassist Phil Lesh will play three consecutive nights starting Friday (with another run Nov. 5 to 7).", "paragraph_id": "5d7005d2c8e4820a9b66a9b1"} +{"question": "What country needed instructions from the Americans?", "paragraph": "In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians\u2019 soldierly skills lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction. \u201cI came into it expecting them not to know much of the basics,\u201d said Sgt. Michael Faranda, who is teaching maneuvers. He was correct. Things \u201cevery soldier should know,\u201d he said, they did not. Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises. Still, Sergeant Faranda said, the Ukrainians\u2019 willingness to go into combat was all the more notable for their lack of preparation for it.", "answer": "Ukrainians", "sentence": "In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians \u2019 soldierly skills lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction.", "paragraph_sentence": " In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians \u2019 soldierly skills lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction. \u201cI came into it expecting them not to know much of the basics,\u201d said Sgt. Michael Faranda, who is teaching maneuvers. He was correct. Things \u201cevery soldier should know,\u201d he said, they did not. Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises. Still, Sergeant Faranda said, the Ukrainians\u2019 willingness to go into combat was all the more notable for their lack of preparation for it.", "paragraph_answer": "In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians \u2019 soldierly skills lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction. \u201cI came into it expecting them not to know much of the basics,\u201d said Sgt. Michael Faranda, who is teaching maneuvers. He was correct. Things \u201cevery soldier should know,\u201d he said, they did not. Some even forgot their helmets on the first day of exercises. Still, Sergeant Faranda said, the Ukrainians\u2019 willingness to go into combat was all the more notable for their lack of preparation for it.", "sentence_answer": "In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found the Ukrainians \u2019 soldierly skills lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026e9c8e4820a9b66d41f"} +{"question": "What does Mr. Chow claim not to be?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt\u2019s not like I get impressed once, and I\u2019m over it, and I need something new,\u201d she said. \u201cI love this teacup. It impresses me. When I love something, whether things or people, I love them very deeply.\u201d She is the third Mrs. Chow. (Or maybe even the fourth; some magazine profiles over the years have indicated that Mr. Chow was briefly married in the 1960s. Asked to clarify, he responded: \u201cI\u2019m not a family lawyer, nor an accountant. I don\u2019t think it\u2019s relevant.\u201d) She was preceded by the model Tina Chow, who died in 1992; and, before that, Grace Coddington, who is now the creative director at Vogue.", "answer": "family lawyer, nor an accountant", "sentence": "Asked to clarify, he responded: \u201cI\u2019m not a family lawyer, nor an accountant .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s not like I get impressed once, and I\u2019m over it, and I need something new,\u201d she said. \u201cI love this teacup. It impresses me. When I love something, whether things or people, I love them very deeply.\u201d She is the third Mrs. Chow. (Or maybe even the fourth; some magazine profiles over the years have indicated that Mr. Chow was briefly married in the 1960s. Asked to clarify, he responded: \u201cI\u2019m not a family lawyer, nor an accountant . I don\u2019t think it\u2019s relevant.\u201d) She was preceded by the model Tina Chow, who died in 1992; and, before that, Grace Coddington, who is now the creative director at Vogue.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s not like I get impressed once, and I\u2019m over it, and I need something new,\u201d she said. \u201cI love this teacup. It impresses me. When I love something, whether things or people, I love them very deeply.\u201d She is the third Mrs. Chow. (Or maybe even the fourth; some magazine profiles over the years have indicated that Mr. Chow was briefly married in the 1960s. Asked to clarify, he responded: \u201cI\u2019m not a family lawyer, nor an accountant . I don\u2019t think it\u2019s relevant.\u201d) She was preceded by the model Tina Chow, who died in 1992; and, before that, Grace Coddington, who is now the creative director at Vogue.", "sentence_answer": "Asked to clarify, he responded: \u201cI\u2019m not a family lawyer, nor an accountant .", "paragraph_id": "5d700778c8e4820a9b66adc8"} +{"question": "In what city did Kayahan perform his last public concert?", "paragraph": "His last memorable public performance was an open-air Valentine\u2019s Day concert in Istanbul in February. He got out of his sickbed to sing with his wife, Ipek Acar, and Nilufer. Besides his wife, Kayahan\u2019s survivors include two daughters, Beste and Asli Gonul. \u201cWe are in grief over losing Kayahan, who contributed to Turkish music with countless compositions and marked a generation with his songs,\u201d Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said on Twitter.", "answer": "Istanbul", "sentence": "His last memorable public performance was an open-air Valentine\u2019s Day concert in Istanbul in February.", "paragraph_sentence": " His last memorable public performance was an open-air Valentine\u2019s Day concert in Istanbul in February. He got out of his sickbed to sing with his wife, Ipek Acar, and Nilufer. Besides his wife, Kayahan\u2019s survivors include two daughters, Beste and Asli Gonul. \u201cWe are in grief over losing Kayahan, who contributed to Turkish music with countless compositions and marked a generation with his songs,\u201d Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said on Twitter.", "paragraph_answer": "His last memorable public performance was an open-air Valentine\u2019s Day concert in Istanbul in February. He got out of his sickbed to sing with his wife, Ipek Acar, and Nilufer. Besides his wife, Kayahan\u2019s survivors include two daughters, Beste and Asli Gonul. \u201cWe are in grief over losing Kayahan, who contributed to Turkish music with countless compositions and marked a generation with his songs,\u201d Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said on Twitter.", "sentence_answer": "His last memorable public performance was an open-air Valentine\u2019s Day concert in Istanbul in February.", "paragraph_id": "5d70232fc8e4820a9b66cf76"} +{"question": "Which team is hasn't lost any games yet this season?", "paragraph": "PICK: COLTS Panthers (3-0) at Buccaneers (1-2) 1 p.m. Line: Panthers by 3 The Panthers are undefeated despite playing most of the time without Luke Kuechly or Kelvin Benjamin. The team has rarely been associated with such perseverance, but Cam Newton has the Panthers just four wins short of the team\u2019s division-leading total from last season. The team has endured another loss, with defensive end Charles Johnson sidelined, but a trade for Jared Allen should pay dividends soon even if he is limited this week.", "answer": "Panthers", "sentence": "PICK: COLTS Panthers (3-0) at Buccaneers (1-2) 1 p.m.", "paragraph_sentence": " PICK: COLTS Panthers (3-0) at Buccaneers (1-2) 1 p.m. Line: Panthers by 3 The Panthers are undefeated despite playing most of the time without Luke Kuechly or Kelvin Benjamin. The team has rarely been associated with such perseverance, but Cam Newton has the Panthers just four wins short of the team\u2019s division-leading total from last season. The team has endured another loss, with defensive end Charles Johnson sidelined, but a trade for Jared Allen should pay dividends soon even if he is limited this week.", "paragraph_answer": "PICK: COLTS Panthers (3-0) at Buccaneers (1-2) 1 p.m. Line: Panthers by 3 The Panthers are undefeated despite playing most of the time without Luke Kuechly or Kelvin Benjamin. The team has rarely been associated with such perseverance, but Cam Newton has the Panthers just four wins short of the team\u2019s division-leading total from last season. The team has endured another loss, with defensive end Charles Johnson sidelined, but a trade for Jared Allen should pay dividends soon even if he is limited this week.", "sentence_answer": "PICK: COLTS Panthers (3-0) at Buccaneers (1-2) 1 p.m.", "paragraph_id": "5d702ebcc8e4820a9b66dbe3"} +{"question": "Who were most of Emily's friends who went on walks around Ithica with her\"", "paragraph": "On a quiet Friday morning in November 2010, Sandy sat down with a mug of honey-\u00adginger tea to read two books that Daryl had brought her. By this point, a year and a half after her amnestic M.C.I. diagnosis, she had progressed to what Duffy said was Alzheimer\u2019s disease. She had retired from Cornell, but she was doing well. She could still travel alone to familiar destinations, including Austin, Tex., where Emily was living. Jeremy had temporarily moved back home to be with her. She could read novels, even difficult ones like Cormac McCarthy\u2019s \u201cThe Road.\u201d She played tennis, gardened and went for walks around Ithaca with a handful of friends, most of them former colleagues from Cornell. She saw a few psychotherapy patients. One would later say that even though Sandy was having some trouble remembering words, \u201cit didn\u2019t really matter. In a therapy relationship you\u2019re talking more about emotions \u2014 and in that regard, she didn\u2019t miss a beat.\u201d", "answer": "former colleagues from Cornell", "sentence": "She played tennis, gardened and went for walks around Ithaca with a handful of friends, most of them former colleagues from Cornell .", "paragraph_sentence": "On a quiet Friday morning in November 2010, Sandy sat down with a mug of honey-\u00adginger tea to read two books that Daryl had brought her. By this point, a year and a half after her amnestic M.C.I. diagnosis, she had progressed to what Duffy said was Alzheimer\u2019s disease. She had retired from Cornell, but she was doing well. She could still travel alone to familiar destinations, including Austin, Tex., where Emily was living. Jeremy had temporarily moved back home to be with her. She could read novels, even difficult ones like Cormac McCarthy\u2019s \u201cThe Road.\u201d She played tennis, gardened and went for walks around Ithaca with a handful of friends, most of them former colleagues from Cornell . She saw a few psychotherapy patients. One would later say that even though Sandy was having some trouble remembering words, \u201cit didn\u2019t really matter. In a therapy relationship you\u2019re talking more about emotions \u2014 and in that regard, she didn\u2019t miss a beat.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "On a quiet Friday morning in November 2010, Sandy sat down with a mug of honey-\u00adginger tea to read two books that Daryl had brought her. By this point, a year and a half after her amnestic M.C.I. diagnosis, she had progressed to what Duffy said was Alzheimer\u2019s disease. She had retired from Cornell, but she was doing well. She could still travel alone to familiar destinations, including Austin, Tex., where Emily was living. Jeremy had temporarily moved back home to be with her. She could read novels, even difficult ones like Cormac McCarthy\u2019s \u201cThe Road.\u201d She played tennis, gardened and went for walks around Ithaca with a handful of friends, most of them former colleagues from Cornell . She saw a few psychotherapy patients. One would later say that even though Sandy was having some trouble remembering words, \u201cit didn\u2019t really matter. In a therapy relationship you\u2019re talking more about emotions \u2014 and in that regard, she didn\u2019t miss a beat.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "She played tennis, gardened and went for walks around Ithaca with a handful of friends, most of them former colleagues from Cornell .", "paragraph_id": "5d702b07c8e4820a9b66d887"} +{"question": "Where is a duodenoscope inserted into the patient?", "paragraph": "A duodenoscope is a long, flexible tube with a tiny camera at the tip. It is typically inserted down the throat of an anesthetized patient to examine the very small ducts that drain the liver or gallbladder. The inner tubing is intricate and difficult to clean, and can harbor up to 10 billion individual bacteria, said William A. Rutala, an infection control specialist at University of North Carolina Hospitals. By contrast, a surgical forceps may have roughly 100 bacteria on its surface after use in the operating room, he said, and is easily cleaned with heat, detergents and high-pressure sprays.", "answer": "down the throat", "sentence": "It is typically inserted down the throat of an anesthetized patient to examine the very small ducts that drain the liver or gallbladder.", "paragraph_sentence": "A duodenoscope is a long, flexible tube with a tiny camera at the tip. It is typically inserted down the throat of an anesthetized patient to examine the very small ducts that drain the liver or gallbladder. The inner tubing is intricate and difficult to clean, and can harbor up to 10 billion individual bacteria, said William A. Rutala, an infection control specialist at University of North Carolina Hospitals. By contrast, a surgical forceps may have roughly 100 bacteria on its surface after use in the operating room, he said, and is easily cleaned with heat, detergents and high-pressure sprays.", "paragraph_answer": "A duodenoscope is a long, flexible tube with a tiny camera at the tip. It is typically inserted down the throat of an anesthetized patient to examine the very small ducts that drain the liver or gallbladder. The inner tubing is intricate and difficult to clean, and can harbor up to 10 billion individual bacteria, said William A. Rutala, an infection control specialist at University of North Carolina Hospitals. By contrast, a surgical forceps may have roughly 100 bacteria on its surface after use in the operating room, he said, and is easily cleaned with heat, detergents and high-pressure sprays.", "sentence_answer": "It is typically inserted down the throat of an anesthetized patient to examine the very small ducts that drain the liver or gallbladder.", "paragraph_id": "5d704486c8e4820a9b66e784"} +{"question": "What event occurred a few hours later?", "paragraph": "Four more attacks were reported on Thursday. A Palestinian gunman drove up to an Israeli military checkpoint in the West Bank and opened fire on the soldiers there, according to the military. The assailant was shot and killed, and one soldier and one bystander were wounded. Palestinian news outlets identified the gunman as an officer in the Palestinian Authority\u2019s intelligence service. Hours later, in Jerusalem, an Israeli police officer was stabbed by a Palestinian resident of the West Bank, the authorities said. A Palestinian doctor from a nearby clinic gave first aid. Police officers at the scene fatally shot the assailant. At night, a gunman fired at an Israeli vehicle near a West Bank settlement, causing no injuries. And two Palestinians stabbed a soldier in Hebron and were subsequently killed.", "answer": "an Israeli police officer was stabbed by a Palestinian resident of the West Bank", "sentence": "Hours later, in Jerusalem, an Israeli police officer was stabbed by a Palestinian resident of the West Bank , the authorities said.", "paragraph_sentence": "Four more attacks were reported on Thursday. A Palestinian gunman drove up to an Israeli military checkpoint in the West Bank and opened fire on the soldiers there, according to the military. The assailant was shot and killed, and one soldier and one bystander were wounded. Palestinian news outlets identified the gunman as an officer in the Palestinian Authority\u2019s intelligence service. Hours later, in Jerusalem, an Israeli police officer was stabbed by a Palestinian resident of the West Bank , the authorities said. A Palestinian doctor from a nearby clinic gave first aid. Police officers at the scene fatally shot the assailant. At night, a gunman fired at an Israeli vehicle near a West Bank settlement, causing no injuries. And two Palestinians stabbed a soldier in Hebron and were subsequently killed.", "paragraph_answer": "Four more attacks were reported on Thursday. A Palestinian gunman drove up to an Israeli military checkpoint in the West Bank and opened fire on the soldiers there, according to the military. The assailant was shot and killed, and one soldier and one bystander were wounded. Palestinian news outlets identified the gunman as an officer in the Palestinian Authority\u2019s intelligence service. Hours later, in Jerusalem, an Israeli police officer was stabbed by a Palestinian resident of the West Bank , the authorities said. A Palestinian doctor from a nearby clinic gave first aid. Police officers at the scene fatally shot the assailant. At night, a gunman fired at an Israeli vehicle near a West Bank settlement, causing no injuries. And two Palestinians stabbed a soldier in Hebron and were subsequently killed.", "sentence_answer": "Hours later, in Jerusalem, an Israeli police officer was stabbed by a Palestinian resident of the West Bank , the authorities said.", "paragraph_id": "5d701c7bc8e4820a9b66c7dc"} +{"question": "In what country did the vote on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict take place?", "paragraph": "Approval came at the church\u2019s general synod in Cleveland, where delegates voted 508 to 124 in favor of divestment and boycott, with 38 abstentions. It was one of two resolutions on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict debated by the church, which has about one million members and more than 5,000 congregations nationwide. The second resolution, which called the actions of Israel against Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip acts of apartheid, received 51 percent of the vote \u2014 312 for, 295 against and 31 abstentions \u2014 failing to gain the two-thirds majority required for passage. Nonetheless, the slim majority was regarded by supporters of Israel as troubling. Passage of that measure would have made the church the first in the United States to officially describe Israel\u2019s behavior toward the Palestinians as apartheid.", "answer": "United States", "sentence": "Passage of that measure would have made the church the first in the United States to officially describe Israel\u2019s behavior toward the Palestinians as apartheid.", "paragraph_sentence": "Approval came at the church\u2019s general synod in Cleveland, where delegates voted 508 to 124 in favor of divestment and boycott, with 38 abstentions. It was one of two resolutions on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict debated by the church, which has about one million members and more than 5,000 congregations nationwide. The second resolution, which called the actions of Israel against Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip acts of apartheid, received 51 percent of the vote \u2014 312 for, 295 against and 31 abstentions \u2014 failing to gain the two-thirds majority required for passage. Nonetheless, the slim majority was regarded by supporters of Israel as troubling. Passage of that measure would have made the church the first in the United States to officially describe Israel\u2019s behavior toward the Palestinians as apartheid. ", "paragraph_answer": "Approval came at the church\u2019s general synod in Cleveland, where delegates voted 508 to 124 in favor of divestment and boycott, with 38 abstentions. It was one of two resolutions on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict debated by the church, which has about one million members and more than 5,000 congregations nationwide. The second resolution, which called the actions of Israel against Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip acts of apartheid, received 51 percent of the vote \u2014 312 for, 295 against and 31 abstentions \u2014 failing to gain the two-thirds majority required for passage. Nonetheless, the slim majority was regarded by supporters of Israel as troubling. Passage of that measure would have made the church the first in the United States to officially describe Israel\u2019s behavior toward the Palestinians as apartheid.", "sentence_answer": "Passage of that measure would have made the church the first in the United States to officially describe Israel\u2019s behavior toward the Palestinians as apartheid.", "paragraph_id": "5d700686c8e4820a9b66ab94"} +{"question": "What kind of people does Leive say are really valuable?", "paragraph": "I also like asking, \u201cWhat would you be doing if you weren\u2019t in this business at all?\u201d I\u2019m always curious about who people are outside of work, and I think you want to hire people who have something going on in their lives besides work. I have definitely seen that people who have full lives are not just happier but also tend to be better at their jobs. They don\u2019t take everything so personally. People who can come up with a great idea and execute it, soup to nuts, are really valuable. We are never at a shortage for great ideas. But then there are people who have the project management piece of it, and that\u2019s not something that I think people were hired for in magazines 25 years ago. Now it\u2019s indispensable. The people on my team who can come up with an idea, put together a plan and presentation for getting it done, pick up the phone and find partners, are gold.", "answer": "People who can come up with a great idea and execute it", "sentence": "People who can come up with a great idea and execute it , soup to nuts, are really valuable.", "paragraph_sentence": "I also like asking, \u201cWhat would you be doing if you weren\u2019t in this business at all?\u201d I\u2019m always curious about who people are outside of work, and I think you want to hire people who have something going on in their lives besides work. I have definitely seen that people who have full lives are not just happier but also tend to be better at their jobs. They don\u2019t take everything so personally. People who can come up with a great idea and execute it , soup to nuts, are really valuable. We are never at a shortage for great ideas. But then there are people who have the project management piece of it, and that\u2019s not something that I think people were hired for in magazines 25 years ago. Now it\u2019s indispensable. The people on my team who can come up with an idea, put together a plan and presentation for getting it done, pick up the phone and find partners, are gold.", "paragraph_answer": "I also like asking, \u201cWhat would you be doing if you weren\u2019t in this business at all?\u201d I\u2019m always curious about who people are outside of work, and I think you want to hire people who have something going on in their lives besides work. I have definitely seen that people who have full lives are not just happier but also tend to be better at their jobs. They don\u2019t take everything so personally. People who can come up with a great idea and execute it , soup to nuts, are really valuable. We are never at a shortage for great ideas. But then there are people who have the project management piece of it, and that\u2019s not something that I think people were hired for in magazines 25 years ago. Now it\u2019s indispensable. The people on my team who can come up with an idea, put together a plan and presentation for getting it done, pick up the phone and find partners, are gold.", "sentence_answer": " People who can come up with a great idea and execute it , soup to nuts, are really valuable.", "paragraph_id": "5d701759c8e4820a9b66c336"} +{"question": "Under which leader did the Neo-Westernizer current exert itself?", "paragraph": "The other current has been the neo-Westernizer, which re-exerted itself strongly during the Mikhail Gorbachev years and gave rise to his world-transforming ideas and ideals. In contrast to the neo-Slavophile current that is anti-Western, this liberal rival outlook actually seeks integration with the West, which Mr. Gorbachev assiduously pursued during his tenure. Unimagined opportunities for cooperation to fashion a more peaceful world may have been possible if Mr. Gorbachev had been able to continue his revolution. Unfortunately, given the popularity of the neo-Slavophile current in today\u2019s Russia, the world is facing a new Cold War. Reza Fakhari, Brooklyn, N.Y.", "answer": "Mikhail Gorbachev", "sentence": "The other current has been the neo-Westernizer, which re-exerted itself strongly during the Mikhail Gorbachev years and gave rise to his world-transforming ideas and ideals.", "paragraph_sentence": " The other current has been the neo-Westernizer, which re-exerted itself strongly during the Mikhail Gorbachev years and gave rise to his world-transforming ideas and ideals. In contrast to the neo-Slavophile current that is anti-Western, this liberal rival outlook actually seeks integration with the West, which Mr. Gorbachev assiduously pursued during his tenure. Unimagined opportunities for cooperation to fashion a more peaceful world may have been possible if Mr. Gorbachev had been able to continue his revolution. Unfortunately, given the popularity of the neo-Slavophile current in today\u2019s Russia, the world is facing a new Cold War. Reza Fakhari, Brooklyn, N.Y.", "paragraph_answer": "The other current has been the neo-Westernizer, which re-exerted itself strongly during the Mikhail Gorbachev years and gave rise to his world-transforming ideas and ideals. In contrast to the neo-Slavophile current that is anti-Western, this liberal rival outlook actually seeks integration with the West, which Mr. Gorbachev assiduously pursued during his tenure. Unimagined opportunities for cooperation to fashion a more peaceful world may have been possible if Mr. Gorbachev had been able to continue his revolution. Unfortunately, given the popularity of the neo-Slavophile current in today\u2019s Russia, the world is facing a new Cold War. Reza Fakhari, Brooklyn, N.Y.", "sentence_answer": "The other current has been the neo-Westernizer, which re-exerted itself strongly during the Mikhail Gorbachev years and gave rise to his world-transforming ideas and ideals.", "paragraph_id": "5d709b61c8e4820a9b66f622"} +{"question": "How much has tuition and fees increased over the last 20 years?", "paragraph": "Today\u2019s economy leaves little doubt about the value of college. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, in 2014 the median worker with a bachelor\u2019s degree (and no advanced degree) earned $69,260, compared with $34,540 for the median worker with only a high school diploma. Over a lifetime, that difference accumulates to about $1.5 million. Increasing educational attainment is also the best way to combat growing income inequality. Over the last 40 years, the wages of skilled workers have increased substantially compared with the wages of the unskilled. Most economists agree that a leading cause is skill-biased technological change \u2014 the tendency of new technologies to increase the relative demand for skilled workers. College is the main institution that can offset this trend by turning unskilled individuals into skilled ones. Even those who do not attend college benefit when more of their fellow citizens do so. A person who becomes educated leaves the pool of the unskilled. Those left behind face fewer competitors. With fewer unskilled workers vying for the available jobs, wages at the bottom of the economic ladder are bid up. Although increasing college attendance makes a lot of sense, both for individuals and for the nation, the financial hurdle to doing so is higher than ever. The College Board reports that published tuition and fees at a typical private, nonprofit college, adjusted for overall inflation, have increased by 70 percent over the last 20 years. What gives?", "answer": "70 percent", "sentence": "The College Board reports that published tuition and fees at a typical private, nonprofit college, adjusted for overall inflation, have increased by 70 percent over the last 20 years.", "paragraph_sentence": "Today\u2019s economy leaves little doubt about the value of college. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, in 2014 the median worker with a bachelor\u2019s degree (and no advanced degree) earned $69,260, compared with $34,540 for the median worker with only a high school diploma. Over a lifetime, that difference accumulates to about $1.5 million. Increasing educational attainment is also the best way to combat growing income inequality. Over the last 40 years, the wages of skilled workers have increased substantially compared with the wages of the unskilled. Most economists agree that a leading cause is skill-biased technological change \u2014 the tendency of new technologies to increase the relative demand for skilled workers. College is the main institution that can offset this trend by turning unskilled individuals into skilled ones. Even those who do not attend college benefit when more of their fellow citizens do so. A person who becomes educated leaves the pool of the unskilled. Those left behind face fewer competitors. With fewer unskilled workers vying for the available jobs, wages at the bottom of the economic ladder are bid up. Although increasing college attendance makes a lot of sense, both for individuals and for the nation, the financial hurdle to doing so is higher than ever. The College Board reports that published tuition and fees at a typical private, nonprofit college, adjusted for overall inflation, have increased by 70 percent over the last 20 years. What gives?", "paragraph_answer": "Today\u2019s economy leaves little doubt about the value of college. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, in 2014 the median worker with a bachelor\u2019s degree (and no advanced degree) earned $69,260, compared with $34,540 for the median worker with only a high school diploma. Over a lifetime, that difference accumulates to about $1.5 million. Increasing educational attainment is also the best way to combat growing income inequality. Over the last 40 years, the wages of skilled workers have increased substantially compared with the wages of the unskilled. Most economists agree that a leading cause is skill-biased technological change \u2014 the tendency of new technologies to increase the relative demand for skilled workers. College is the main institution that can offset this trend by turning unskilled individuals into skilled ones. Even those who do not attend college benefit when more of their fellow citizens do so. A person who becomes educated leaves the pool of the unskilled. Those left behind face fewer competitors. With fewer unskilled workers vying for the available jobs, wages at the bottom of the economic ladder are bid up. Although increasing college attendance makes a lot of sense, both for individuals and for the nation, the financial hurdle to doing so is higher than ever. The College Board reports that published tuition and fees at a typical private, nonprofit college, adjusted for overall inflation, have increased by 70 percent over the last 20 years. What gives?", "sentence_answer": "The College Board reports that published tuition and fees at a typical private, nonprofit college, adjusted for overall inflation, have increased by 70 percent over the last 20 years.", "paragraph_id": "5d7006a1c8e4820a9b66abdd"} +{"question": "Which Presidential administration worked to ease the burdens of Same-Sex couples?", "paragraph": "Since then, the Obama administration has worked to ease the burdens on same-sex couples in the military. It allows them, for instance, to take leaves to get married in states that permit same-sex marriages.", "answer": "Obama administration", "sentence": "Since then, the Obama administration has worked to ease the burdens on same-sex couples in the military.", "paragraph_sentence": " Since then, the Obama administration has worked to ease the burdens on same-sex couples in the military. It allows them, for instance, to take leaves to get married in states that permit same-sex marriages.", "paragraph_answer": "Since then, the Obama administration has worked to ease the burdens on same-sex couples in the military. It allows them, for instance, to take leaves to get married in states that permit same-sex marriages.", "sentence_answer": "Since then, the Obama administration has worked to ease the burdens on same-sex couples in the military.", "paragraph_id": "5d700cebc8e4820a9b66b851"} +{"question": "How many Ukrainian where trained during basic training courses?", "paragraph": "Capt. Andrii Syurkalo, a Ukrainian officer, said it was commendable that the trainers were willing to use the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal as an element in a class on the Geneva Conventions. American officers described the course work as equivalent to the latter months of basic training in the United States. The courses will train 705 Ukrainian soldiers at a cost of $19 million over six months. The Ukrainian National Guard is rotating from the front what units it can spare for the training. American instructors intend to recommend top performers to serve as trainers within other Ukrainian units, and in this way spread the instruction more broadly.", "answer": "705", "sentence": "The courses will train 705 Ukrainian soldiers at a cost of $19 million over six months.", "paragraph_sentence": "Capt. Andrii Syurkalo, a Ukrainian officer, said it was commendable that the trainers were willing to use the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal as an element in a class on the Geneva Conventions. American officers described the course work as equivalent to the latter months of basic training in the United States. The courses will train 705 Ukrainian soldiers at a cost of $19 million over six months. The Ukrainian National Guard is rotating from the front what units it can spare for the training. American instructors intend to recommend top performers to serve as trainers within other Ukrainian units, and in this way spread the instruction more broadly.", "paragraph_answer": "Capt. Andrii Syurkalo, a Ukrainian officer, said it was commendable that the trainers were willing to use the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal as an element in a class on the Geneva Conventions. American officers described the course work as equivalent to the latter months of basic training in the United States. The courses will train 705 Ukrainian soldiers at a cost of $19 million over six months. The Ukrainian National Guard is rotating from the front what units it can spare for the training. American instructors intend to recommend top performers to serve as trainers within other Ukrainian units, and in this way spread the instruction more broadly.", "sentence_answer": "The courses will train 705 Ukrainian soldiers at a cost of $19 million over six months.", "paragraph_id": "5d702701c8e4820a9b66d4c1"} +{"question": "In what state was the only law that was affected located?", "paragraph": "Monday\u2019s development, which set no precedent, did not affect the validity of any law aside from North Carolina\u2019s. The health care providers who challenged the North Carolina law urged the justices to turn down the state\u2019s appeal. \u201cThe state requires physicians to recite the state\u2019s message even when the patient physically avoids seeing or hearing it,\u201d their brief said. \u201cThat is farce, not informed consent, and it demonstrates beyond any doubt that the requirement is an impermissible attempt to use physicians to spread the state\u2019s ideological message.\u201d Abortion rights groups welcomed the Supreme Court\u2019s action. \u201cThis misguided law would have inserted politics and bad medicine into every exam room in North Carolina,\u201d Cecile Richards, president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said in a statement.", "answer": "North Carolina", "sentence": "Monday\u2019s development, which set no precedent, did not affect the validity of any law aside from North Carolina \u2019s. The health care providers who challenged the North Carolina law urged the justices to turn down the state\u2019s appeal.", "paragraph_sentence": " Monday\u2019s development, which set no precedent, did not affect the validity of any law aside from North Carolina \u2019s. The health care providers who challenged the North Carolina law urged the justices to turn down the state\u2019s appeal. \u201cThe state requires physicians to recite the state\u2019s message even when the patient physically avoids seeing or hearing it,\u201d their brief said. \u201cThat is farce, not informed consent, and it demonstrates beyond any doubt that the requirement is an impermissible attempt to use physicians to spread the state\u2019s ideological message.\u201d Abortion rights groups welcomed the Supreme Court\u2019s action. \u201cThis misguided law would have inserted politics and bad medicine into every exam room in North Carolina,\u201d Cecile Richards, president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said in a statement.", "paragraph_answer": "Monday\u2019s development, which set no precedent, did not affect the validity of any law aside from North Carolina \u2019s. The health care providers who challenged the North Carolina law urged the justices to turn down the state\u2019s appeal. \u201cThe state requires physicians to recite the state\u2019s message even when the patient physically avoids seeing or hearing it,\u201d their brief said. \u201cThat is farce, not informed consent, and it demonstrates beyond any doubt that the requirement is an impermissible attempt to use physicians to spread the state\u2019s ideological message.\u201d Abortion rights groups welcomed the Supreme Court\u2019s action. \u201cThis misguided law would have inserted politics and bad medicine into every exam room in North Carolina,\u201d Cecile Richards, president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said in a statement.", "sentence_answer": "Monday\u2019s development, which set no precedent, did not affect the validity of any law aside from North Carolina \u2019s. The health care providers who challenged the North Carolina law urged the justices to turn down the state\u2019s appeal.", "paragraph_id": "5d707daac8e4820a9b66f384"} +{"question": "How tall was Geoffrey Holder?", "paragraph": "Geoffrey Holder was, for starters, a dancer. He was also a choreographer, an actor, a painter \u2014 the list goes on. With a towering height (6-foot-6) and personality to match, he made his presence known all over New York for over 50 years. He died last fall, but Mr. Holder\u2019s legacy is alive and well as Lincoln Center Out of Doors pays tribute with free events on Saturday to commemorate what would have been his 85th birthday. A screening of the 2009 documentary \u201cCarmen & Geoffrey,\u201d about Mr. Holder\u2019s prolific career and his relationship with his wife, the dancer Carmen de Lavallade, will be preceded by a discussion with the filmmakers (and husband and wife) Nick Doob and Linda Atkinson.", "answer": "6-foot-6", "sentence": "With a towering height ( 6-foot-6 ) and personality to match, he made his presence known all over New York for over 50 years.", "paragraph_sentence": "Geoffrey Holder was, for starters, a dancer. He was also a choreographer, an actor, a painter \u2014 the list goes on. With a towering height ( 6-foot-6 ) and personality to match, he made his presence known all over New York for over 50 years. He died last fall, but Mr. Holder\u2019s legacy is alive and well as Lincoln Center Out of Doors pays tribute with free events on Saturday to commemorate what would have been his 85th birthday. A screening of the 2009 documentary \u201cCarmen & Geoffrey,\u201d about Mr. Holder\u2019s prolific career and his relationship with his wife, the dancer Carmen de Lavallade, will be preceded by a discussion with the filmmakers (and husband and wife) Nick Doob and Linda Atkinson.", "paragraph_answer": "Geoffrey Holder was, for starters, a dancer. He was also a choreographer, an actor, a painter \u2014 the list goes on. With a towering height ( 6-foot-6 ) and personality to match, he made his presence known all over New York for over 50 years. He died last fall, but Mr. Holder\u2019s legacy is alive and well as Lincoln Center Out of Doors pays tribute with free events on Saturday to commemorate what would have been his 85th birthday. A screening of the 2009 documentary \u201cCarmen & Geoffrey,\u201d about Mr. Holder\u2019s prolific career and his relationship with his wife, the dancer Carmen de Lavallade, will be preceded by a discussion with the filmmakers (and husband and wife) Nick Doob and Linda Atkinson.", "sentence_answer": "With a towering height ( 6-foot-6 ) and personality to match, he made his presence known all over New York for over 50 years.", "paragraph_id": "5d703e25c8e4820a9b66e3bc"} +{"question": "What is the highest grade the Berkeley Carroll School teach?", "paragraph": "Public School 321, a well-regarded elementary school on Seventh Avenue, is a major attraction. Last year, 78 percent of students met state standards on the state English test, and 80 percent on the math test, versus 30 and 39 percent citywide. The Berkeley Carroll School, a private institution for prekindergarten through 12th grade, has its lower school on Carroll Street and middle and high schools on Lincoln Place. The Commute", "answer": "12th", "sentence": "The Berkeley Carroll School, a private institution for prekindergarten through 12th grade, has its lower school on Carroll Street and middle and high schools on Lincoln Place.", "paragraph_sentence": "Public School 321, a well-regarded elementary school on Seventh Avenue, is a major attraction. Last year, 78 percent of students met state standards on the state English test, and 80 percent on the math test, versus 30 and 39 percent citywide. The Berkeley Carroll School, a private institution for prekindergarten through 12th grade, has its lower school on Carroll Street and middle and high schools on Lincoln Place. The Commute", "paragraph_answer": "Public School 321, a well-regarded elementary school on Seventh Avenue, is a major attraction. Last year, 78 percent of students met state standards on the state English test, and 80 percent on the math test, versus 30 and 39 percent citywide. The Berkeley Carroll School, a private institution for prekindergarten through 12th grade, has its lower school on Carroll Street and middle and high schools on Lincoln Place. The Commute", "sentence_answer": "The Berkeley Carroll School, a private institution for prekindergarten through 12th grade, has its lower school on Carroll Street and middle and high schools on Lincoln Place.", "paragraph_id": "5d708f39c8e4820a9b66f566"} +{"question": "What would cause a distraction during the case?", "paragraph": "\u201cHe is resolved to fight the case, but realized doing the budget while doing the case would be a distraction,\u201d said a person involved in the discussions this weekend who was not authorized to speak on the record because of the sensitive nature of the talks. Under the tentative plan developed on Sunday, the Assembly majority leader, Joseph D. Morelle of the Rochester area, and the chairman of the powerful Ways and Means Committee, Herman D. Farrell Jr., Democrat of Manhattan, would assume responsibility for budget negotiations.", "answer": "doing the budget", "sentence": "\u201cHe is resolved to fight the case, but realized doing the budget while doing the case would be a distraction,\u201d said a person involved in the discussions this weekend who was not authorized to speak on the record because of the sensitive nature of the talks.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cHe is resolved to fight the case, but realized doing the budget while doing the case would be a distraction,\u201d said a person involved in the discussions this weekend who was not authorized to speak on the record because of the sensitive nature of the talks. Under the tentative plan developed on Sunday, the Assembly majority leader, Joseph D. Morelle of the Rochester area, and the chairman of the powerful Ways and Means Committee, Herman D. Farrell Jr., Democrat of Manhattan, would assume responsibility for budget negotiations.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cHe is resolved to fight the case, but realized doing the budget while doing the case would be a distraction,\u201d said a person involved in the discussions this weekend who was not authorized to speak on the record because of the sensitive nature of the talks. Under the tentative plan developed on Sunday, the Assembly majority leader, Joseph D. Morelle of the Rochester area, and the chairman of the powerful Ways and Means Committee, Herman D. Farrell Jr., Democrat of Manhattan, would assume responsibility for budget negotiations.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cHe is resolved to fight the case, but realized doing the budget while doing the case would be a distraction,\u201d said a person involved in the discussions this weekend who was not authorized to speak on the record because of the sensitive nature of the talks.", "paragraph_id": "5d7080fbc8e4820a9b66f3d3"} +{"question": "Who is the Countess's lost love?", "paragraph": "Remember Valentino, the Countess\u2019s lost love whose back story we spent two episodes learning? Forget undead, he\u2019s officially dead thanks to Donovan\u2019s jealousy. That\u2019s what you get for bringing a scimitar to a gunfight. While the Countess confronts Donovan, Liz is talking Iris into making a move: \u201cYou and I are women of a certain age. We have suffered, more than our fair share. Damn it, we are the ones who should inherit the earth [...] We\u2019re entitled to a second chance. A glorious blazing, final act.\u201d Armed with guns galore (no scimitars in sight) Iris and Liz open fire on the Countess and Donovan, giving \u201cHotel\u201d it\u2019s first serious cliffhanger. Thus far Liz has been right about caftans, books choices and the best way to fake p\u00e2t\u00e9. Let us hope she was also right when she said, \u201cMy friend, the best is yet to come.\u201d", "answer": "Valentino", "sentence": "Remember Valentino , the Countess\u2019s lost love whose back story we spent two episodes learning?", "paragraph_sentence": " Remember Valentino , the Countess\u2019s lost love whose back story we spent two episodes learning? Forget undead, he\u2019s officially dead thanks to Donovan\u2019s jealousy. That\u2019s what you get for bringing a scimitar to a gunfight. While the Countess confronts Donovan, Liz is talking Iris into making a move: \u201cYou and I are women of a certain age. We have suffered, more than our fair share. Damn it, we are the ones who should inherit the earth [...] We\u2019re entitled to a second chance. A glorious blazing, final act.\u201d Armed with guns galore (no scimitars in sight) Iris and Liz open fire on the Countess and Donovan, giving \u201cHotel\u201d it\u2019s first serious cliffhanger. Thus far Liz has been right about caftans, books choices and the best way to fake p\u00e2t\u00e9. Let us hope she was also right when she said, \u201cMy friend, the best is yet to come.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Remember Valentino , the Countess\u2019s lost love whose back story we spent two episodes learning? Forget undead, he\u2019s officially dead thanks to Donovan\u2019s jealousy. That\u2019s what you get for bringing a scimitar to a gunfight. While the Countess confronts Donovan, Liz is talking Iris into making a move: \u201cYou and I are women of a certain age. We have suffered, more than our fair share. Damn it, we are the ones who should inherit the earth [...] We\u2019re entitled to a second chance. A glorious blazing, final act.\u201d Armed with guns galore (no scimitars in sight) Iris and Liz open fire on the Countess and Donovan, giving \u201cHotel\u201d it\u2019s first serious cliffhanger. Thus far Liz has been right about caftans, books choices and the best way to fake p\u00e2t\u00e9. Let us hope she was also right when she said, \u201cMy friend, the best is yet to come.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Remember Valentino , the Countess\u2019s lost love whose back story we spent two episodes learning?", "paragraph_id": "5d703e83c8e4820a9b66e3f9"} +{"question": "Where was the event held on Sunday?", "paragraph": "\u201cPut Hillary in jail!\u201d a man shouted. Mr. Cruz smiled. \u201cShe may already be there,\u201d he said. \u201cBut if so, I\u2019ll be sure to bake her a cake and send it to her.\u201d Several voters interviewed across three states on the trip so far said they admired Mr. Trump, and had previously considered supporting him, but had found themselves drifting toward Mr. Cruz. \u201cHe\u2019s a Southern guy,\u201d Frank Dolhan, 50, said of Mr. Cruz in Kennesaw. \u201cTrump\u2019s a Northern guy.\u201d Mike Homan, 35, of Dallas, Ga., attended the event with a Trump supporter, Howard Adkins, whom he hoped to flip. Mr. Adkins wondered if Mr. Cruz might be able to preserve the spirit of some of Mr. Trump\u2019s more explosive proposals, like restricting Muslim entry into the country, which he said had veered \u201cunconstitutional, a little.\u201d \u201cIt\u2019s a hard thing to do,\u201d Mr. Adkins said, \u201cto stay within our Constitution and keep people out.\u201d An event on Sunday in Trussville, Ala., included residents who had attended Mr. Trump\u2019s rally in nearby Birmingham last month. \u201cThey have very similar messages,\u201d said Steve McMunn, 63, who remains torn between the two.", "answer": "Trussville, Ala", "sentence": "An event on Sunday in Trussville, Ala ., included residents who had attended Mr. Trump\u2019s rally in nearby Birmingham last month.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cPut Hillary in jail!\u201d a man shouted. Mr. Cruz smiled. \u201cShe may already be there,\u201d he said. \u201cBut if so, I\u2019ll be sure to bake her a cake and send it to her.\u201d Several voters interviewed across three states on the trip so far said they admired Mr. Trump, and had previously considered supporting him, but had found themselves drifting toward Mr. Cruz. \u201cHe\u2019s a Southern guy,\u201d Frank Dolhan, 50, said of Mr. Cruz in Kennesaw. \u201cTrump\u2019s a Northern guy.\u201d Mike Homan, 35, of Dallas, Ga., attended the event with a Trump supporter, Howard Adkins, whom he hoped to flip. Mr. Adkins wondered if Mr. Cruz might be able to preserve the spirit of some of Mr. Trump\u2019s more explosive proposals, like restricting Muslim entry into the country, which he said had veered \u201cunconstitutional, a little.\u201d \u201cIt\u2019s a hard thing to do,\u201d Mr. Adkins said, \u201cto stay within our Constitution and keep people out.\u201d An event on Sunday in Trussville, Ala ., included residents who had attended Mr. Trump\u2019s rally in nearby Birmingham last month. \u201cThey have very similar messages,\u201d said Steve McMunn, 63, who remains torn between the two.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cPut Hillary in jail!\u201d a man shouted. Mr. Cruz smiled. \u201cShe may already be there,\u201d he said. \u201cBut if so, I\u2019ll be sure to bake her a cake and send it to her.\u201d Several voters interviewed across three states on the trip so far said they admired Mr. Trump, and had previously considered supporting him, but had found themselves drifting toward Mr. Cruz. \u201cHe\u2019s a Southern guy,\u201d Frank Dolhan, 50, said of Mr. Cruz in Kennesaw. \u201cTrump\u2019s a Northern guy.\u201d Mike Homan, 35, of Dallas, Ga., attended the event with a Trump supporter, Howard Adkins, whom he hoped to flip. Mr. Adkins wondered if Mr. Cruz might be able to preserve the spirit of some of Mr. Trump\u2019s more explosive proposals, like restricting Muslim entry into the country, which he said had veered \u201cunconstitutional, a little.\u201d \u201cIt\u2019s a hard thing to do,\u201d Mr. Adkins said, \u201cto stay within our Constitution and keep people out.\u201d An event on Sunday in Trussville, Ala ., included residents who had attended Mr. Trump\u2019s rally in nearby Birmingham last month. \u201cThey have very similar messages,\u201d said Steve McMunn, 63, who remains torn between the two.", "sentence_answer": "An event on Sunday in Trussville, Ala ., included residents who had attended Mr. Trump\u2019s rally in nearby Birmingham last month.", "paragraph_id": "5d7037fbc8e4820a9b66e0f6"} +{"question": "What is the show a string of?", "paragraph": "The routines are all out of shape, truncated where they should be developed further, extended way past where they should end. The performers\u2019 impressive specialty steps \u2014 the flips, the windmills, the head spins and backspins \u2014 are sprinkled indiscriminately, losing the force they might have had. Even the dancers\u2019 smiles are clumsy. At first I thought their bizarrely clownish grins were some comment on falsity or cultural assimilation; then I decided they were actually a misguided effort to play to the children. The show is a string of unrealized ideas. Spiritual striving is expressed not through dance but through slow-motion walking toward a video backdrop of heavenly clouds. A snatch of Michael Jackson\u2019s \u201cThriller\u201d teases with a hint of nostalgic pleasure; what follows instead are performers in fright masks doing power moves in front of images of war and of the twin towers burning. Hip-hop dance can successfully address such heavy subject matter, but not like this.", "answer": "unrealized ideas", "sentence": "The show is a string of unrealized ideas .", "paragraph_sentence": "The routines are all out of shape, truncated where they should be developed further, extended way past where they should end. The performers\u2019 impressive specialty steps \u2014 the flips, the windmills, the head spins and backspins \u2014 are sprinkled indiscriminately, losing the force they might have had. Even the dancers\u2019 smiles are clumsy. At first I thought their bizarrely clownish grins were some comment on falsity or cultural assimilation; then I decided they were actually a misguided effort to play to the children. The show is a string of unrealized ideas . Spiritual striving is expressed not through dance but through slow-motion walking toward a video backdrop of heavenly clouds. A snatch of Michael Jackson\u2019s \u201cThriller\u201d teases with a hint of nostalgic pleasure; what follows instead are performers in fright masks doing power moves in front of images of war and of the twin towers burning. Hip-hop dance can successfully address such heavy subject matter, but not like this.", "paragraph_answer": "The routines are all out of shape, truncated where they should be developed further, extended way past where they should end. The performers\u2019 impressive specialty steps \u2014 the flips, the windmills, the head spins and backspins \u2014 are sprinkled indiscriminately, losing the force they might have had. Even the dancers\u2019 smiles are clumsy. At first I thought their bizarrely clownish grins were some comment on falsity or cultural assimilation; then I decided they were actually a misguided effort to play to the children. The show is a string of unrealized ideas . Spiritual striving is expressed not through dance but through slow-motion walking toward a video backdrop of heavenly clouds. A snatch of Michael Jackson\u2019s \u201cThriller\u201d teases with a hint of nostalgic pleasure; what follows instead are performers in fright masks doing power moves in front of images of war and of the twin towers burning. Hip-hop dance can successfully address such heavy subject matter, but not like this.", "sentence_answer": "The show is a string of unrealized ideas .", "paragraph_id": "5d702f4fc8e4820a9b66dc28"} +{"question": "Who has said that concussion information was only relayed in broad strokes during short preseason training sessions?", "paragraph": "The N.C.A.A. advocates uniform concussion policies for all members, but some players said concussion information was often relayed in broad strokes and only in preseason training sessions that lasted under an hour. Digit Murphy coached women\u2019s hockey for almost 30 years. She said that with a growing platform, players had the ability to force change and initiate more dialogue with the sport\u2019s governing bodies. \u201cI really believe someone is going to get killed,\u201d Murphy said. \u201cThe sport has gone through so many iterations \u2014 N.H.L. and USA Hockey has increased awareness of it, but as you compete for higher stakes, you have this inability to care about the consequences of playing the sport because you\u2019re so focused and intensely involved in the game.\u201d She added, \u201cWhen athletics becomes a business, anything that becomes an elephant in the room is not discussed.\u201d", "answer": "some players", "sentence": "The N.C.A.A. advocates uniform concussion policies for all members, but some players said concussion information was often relayed in broad strokes and only in preseason training sessions that lasted under an hour.", "paragraph_sentence": " The N.C.A.A. advocates uniform concussion policies for all members, but some players said concussion information was often relayed in broad strokes and only in preseason training sessions that lasted under an hour. Digit Murphy coached women\u2019s hockey for almost 30 years. She said that with a growing platform, players had the ability to force change and initiate more dialogue with the sport\u2019s governing bodies. \u201cI really believe someone is going to get killed,\u201d Murphy said. \u201cThe sport has gone through so many iterations \u2014 N.H.L. and USA Hockey has increased awareness of it, but as you compete for higher stakes, you have this inability to care about the consequences of playing the sport because you\u2019re so focused and intensely involved in the game.\u201d She added, \u201cWhen athletics becomes a business, anything that becomes an elephant in the room is not discussed.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The N.C.A.A. advocates uniform concussion policies for all members, but some players said concussion information was often relayed in broad strokes and only in preseason training sessions that lasted under an hour. Digit Murphy coached women\u2019s hockey for almost 30 years. She said that with a growing platform, players had the ability to force change and initiate more dialogue with the sport\u2019s governing bodies. \u201cI really believe someone is going to get killed,\u201d Murphy said. \u201cThe sport has gone through so many iterations \u2014 N.H.L. and USA Hockey has increased awareness of it, but as you compete for higher stakes, you have this inability to care about the consequences of playing the sport because you\u2019re so focused and intensely involved in the game.\u201d She added, \u201cWhen athletics becomes a business, anything that becomes an elephant in the room is not discussed.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The N.C.A.A. advocates uniform concussion policies for all members, but some players said concussion information was often relayed in broad strokes and only in preseason training sessions that lasted under an hour.", "paragraph_id": "5d70249dc8e4820a9b66d0da"} +{"question": "On which date did the shooting happen?", "paragraph": "As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze. After an emotional 10-week trial, one of the longest and most complex in this state\u2019s history, it took a jury of nine women and three men about 12 hours of deliberation over two days to convict Mr. Holmes on all counts. He now faces a lengthy sentencing process in which prosecutors are seeking the death penalty. The jury\u2019s verdict roundly rejected arguments from his defense lawyers that he had had a psychotic break and was legally insane when he carried out the massacre inside the Century 16 theater in suburban Aurora, Colo., on July 20, 2012. His lawyers argued he was not in control of his thoughts or actions, but prosecutors said Mr. Holmes, despite being mentally ill, had plotted the shootings with calculation and knew what he wanted to accomplish when he started firing into the crowd.", "answer": "July 20, 2012", "sentence": "The jury\u2019s verdict roundly rejected arguments from his defense lawyers that he had had a psychotic break and was legally insane when he carried out the massacre inside the Century 16 theater in suburban Aurora, Colo., on July 20, 2012 .", "paragraph_sentence": "As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze. After an emotional 10-week trial, one of the longest and most complex in this state\u2019s history, it took a jury of nine women and three men about 12 hours of deliberation over two days to convict Mr. Holmes on all counts. He now faces a lengthy sentencing process in which prosecutors are seeking the death penalty. The jury\u2019s verdict roundly rejected arguments from his defense lawyers that he had had a psychotic break and was legally insane when he carried out the massacre inside the Century 16 theater in suburban Aurora, Colo., on July 20, 2012 . His lawyers argued he was not in control of his thoughts or actions, but prosecutors said Mr. Holmes, despite being mentally ill, had plotted the shootings with calculation and knew what he wanted to accomplish when he started firing into the crowd.", "paragraph_answer": "As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze. After an emotional 10-week trial, one of the longest and most complex in this state\u2019s history, it took a jury of nine women and three men about 12 hours of deliberation over two days to convict Mr. Holmes on all counts. He now faces a lengthy sentencing process in which prosecutors are seeking the death penalty. The jury\u2019s verdict roundly rejected arguments from his defense lawyers that he had had a psychotic break and was legally insane when he carried out the massacre inside the Century 16 theater in suburban Aurora, Colo., on July 20, 2012 . His lawyers argued he was not in control of his thoughts or actions, but prosecutors said Mr. Holmes, despite being mentally ill, had plotted the shootings with calculation and knew what he wanted to accomplish when he started firing into the crowd.", "sentence_answer": "The jury\u2019s verdict roundly rejected arguments from his defense lawyers that he had had a psychotic break and was legally insane when he carried out the massacre inside the Century 16 theater in suburban Aurora, Colo., on July 20, 2012 .", "paragraph_id": "5d701381c8e4820a9b66c01f"} +{"question": "In which year did Illdefons Cerda design Barcelona?", "paragraph": "Not so long ago, travelers might have stopped in the Gl\u00f2ries area of Barcelona only if they were stuck in traffic. Three major roads leading in and out of this Spanish city \u2014 Avenida Diagonal, Avenida Meridiana and the Gran Via de les Corts Catalanes \u2014 converged here at an elevated roundabout, where cars often came to a standstill. But lately this northeastern axis of the Catalan capital \u2014 situated in the Sant Mart\u00ed district, bordering Eixample \u2014 is becoming a place to go to, not just through, especially for those interested in design. The roundabout has been torn down as part of a roadway reconfiguration, making the area more walkable. And some of the city\u2019s most exciting public spaces have sprung up nearby, including a popular flea market under a modernist metal roof and, opening last December, the Barcelona Design Museum. \u201cThe area is definitely up-and-coming,\u201d said the tour guide Jordan Susselman, whose company, Hi. This Is Barcelona \u2026 , increasingly makes stops in Gl\u00f2ries and adjacent Poblenou. In fact, the city has been trying to invigorate this part of town for some time. Ildefons Cerd\u00e0, the engineer who drew up the 1859 plan for the expansion of Barcelona, envisioned his Pla\u00e7a de les Gl\u00f2ries Catalanes as a new town center. Instead, Gl\u00f2ries (pronounced GLO-rias), as it\u2019s commonly called, became the aforementioned traffic snarl, a no man\u2019s land at the top point of a triangular swath stretching down to the Mediterranean, encompassing Poblenou, or \u201cnew city,\u201d a longtime manufacturing zone that declined in the 20th century.", "answer": "1859", "sentence": "Ildefons Cerd\u00e0, the engineer who drew up the 1859 plan for the expansion of Barcelona, envisioned his Pla\u00e7a de les Gl\u00f2ries Catalanes as a new town center.", "paragraph_sentence": "Not so long ago, travelers might have stopped in the Gl\u00f2ries area of Barcelona only if they were stuck in traffic. Three major roads leading in and out of this Spanish city \u2014 Avenida Diagonal, Avenida Meridiana and the Gran Via de les Corts Catalanes \u2014 converged here at an elevated roundabout, where cars often came to a standstill. But lately this northeastern axis of the Catalan capital \u2014 situated in the Sant Mart\u00ed district, bordering Eixample \u2014 is becoming a place to go to, not just through, especially for those interested in design. The roundabout has been torn down as part of a roadway reconfiguration, making the area more walkable. And some of the city\u2019s most exciting public spaces have sprung up nearby, including a popular flea market under a modernist metal roof and, opening last December, the Barcelona Design Museum. \u201cThe area is definitely up-and-coming,\u201d said the tour guide Jordan Susselman, whose company, Hi. This Is Barcelona \u2026 , increasingly makes stops in Gl\u00f2ries and adjacent Poblenou. In fact, the city has been trying to invigorate this part of town for some time. Ildefons Cerd\u00e0, the engineer who drew up the 1859 plan for the expansion of Barcelona, envisioned his Pla\u00e7a de les Gl\u00f2ries Catalanes as a new town center. Instead, Gl\u00f2ries (pronounced GLO-rias), as it\u2019s commonly called, became the aforementioned traffic snarl, a no man\u2019s land at the top point of a triangular swath stretching down to the Mediterranean, encompassing Poblenou, or \u201cnew city,\u201d a longtime manufacturing zone that declined in the 20th century.", "paragraph_answer": "Not so long ago, travelers might have stopped in the Gl\u00f2ries area of Barcelona only if they were stuck in traffic. Three major roads leading in and out of this Spanish city \u2014 Avenida Diagonal, Avenida Meridiana and the Gran Via de les Corts Catalanes \u2014 converged here at an elevated roundabout, where cars often came to a standstill. But lately this northeastern axis of the Catalan capital \u2014 situated in the Sant Mart\u00ed district, bordering Eixample \u2014 is becoming a place to go to, not just through, especially for those interested in design. The roundabout has been torn down as part of a roadway reconfiguration, making the area more walkable. And some of the city\u2019s most exciting public spaces have sprung up nearby, including a popular flea market under a modernist metal roof and, opening last December, the Barcelona Design Museum. \u201cThe area is definitely up-and-coming,\u201d said the tour guide Jordan Susselman, whose company, Hi. This Is Barcelona \u2026 , increasingly makes stops in Gl\u00f2ries and adjacent Poblenou. In fact, the city has been trying to invigorate this part of town for some time. Ildefons Cerd\u00e0, the engineer who drew up the 1859 plan for the expansion of Barcelona, envisioned his Pla\u00e7a de les Gl\u00f2ries Catalanes as a new town center. Instead, Gl\u00f2ries (pronounced GLO-rias), as it\u2019s commonly called, became the aforementioned traffic snarl, a no man\u2019s land at the top point of a triangular swath stretching down to the Mediterranean, encompassing Poblenou, or \u201cnew city,\u201d a longtime manufacturing zone that declined in the 20th century.", "sentence_answer": "Ildefons Cerd\u00e0, the engineer who drew up the 1859 plan for the expansion of Barcelona, envisioned his Pla\u00e7a de les Gl\u00f2ries Catalanes as a new town center.", "paragraph_id": "5d7069fbc8e4820a9b66f145"} +{"question": "How long as the National Front been in existence?", "paragraph": "The first posters highlighted hostility to migrants \u2014 \u201cTwo Million Unemployed is Two Million Immigrants Too Many!\u201d reads one from 1978. \u201cImmigrants weigh on the economic life of our country,\u201d Jean-Marie Le Pen told an interviewer that year \u2014 words that could have come from his daughter. \u201cImmigration was its central theme,\u201d writes the historian Val\u00e9rie Igounet about the National Front\u2019s early days. \u201cRejection of immigration, this is what it is has been for more than 40 years,\u201d Laurent Bouvet, a political scientist who specializes in the National Front, said in an interview. \u201cThere\u2019s this side of them, a hierarchy of civilizations.\u201d", "answer": "40 years", "sentence": "\u201cRejection of immigration, this is what it is has been for more than 40 years ,\u201d Laurent Bouvet, a political scientist who specializes in the National Front, said in an interview.", "paragraph_sentence": "The first posters highlighted hostility to migrants \u2014 \u201cTwo Million Unemployed is Two Million Immigrants Too Many!\u201d reads one from 1978. \u201cImmigrants weigh on the economic life of our country,\u201d Jean-Marie Le Pen told an interviewer that year \u2014 words that could have come from his daughter. \u201cImmigration was its central theme,\u201d writes the historian Val\u00e9rie Igounet about the National Front\u2019s early days. \u201cRejection of immigration, this is what it is has been for more than 40 years ,\u201d Laurent Bouvet, a political scientist who specializes in the National Front, said in an interview. \u201cThere\u2019s this side of them, a hierarchy of civilizations.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The first posters highlighted hostility to migrants \u2014 \u201cTwo Million Unemployed is Two Million Immigrants Too Many!\u201d reads one from 1978. \u201cImmigrants weigh on the economic life of our country,\u201d Jean-Marie Le Pen told an interviewer that year \u2014 words that could have come from his daughter. \u201cImmigration was its central theme,\u201d writes the historian Val\u00e9rie Igounet about the National Front\u2019s early days. \u201cRejection of immigration, this is what it is has been for more than 40 years ,\u201d Laurent Bouvet, a political scientist who specializes in the National Front, said in an interview. \u201cThere\u2019s this side of them, a hierarchy of civilizations.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cRejection of immigration, this is what it is has been for more than 40 years ,\u201d Laurent Bouvet, a political scientist who specializes in the National Front, said in an interview.", "paragraph_id": "5d703381c8e4820a9b66de66"} +{"question": "Did Mr. Sweat surrender when he was ordered to stop running?", "paragraph": "Two days later, a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border. He chased him into an open field, and when the prisoner refused his order to stop running, the sergeant, a firearms instructor, dropped to one knee and fired, striking him twice from a distance of more than 50 yards with a .45-caliber pistol, two people briefed on the shooting said. Mr. Sweat provided the account to investigators from the State Police, the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, and the State Inspector General\u2019s Office during several sessions in recent weeks, according to the people briefed on his statements. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about the investigation. The escape, the manhunt and the resulting spectacle proved to be an embarrassment for the Corrections Department and the administration of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.", "answer": "prisoner refused his order to stop running", "sentence": "He chased him into an open field, and when the prisoner refused his order to stop running , the sergeant, a firearms instructor, dropped to one knee and fired, striking him twice from a distance of more than 50 yards with a .45-caliber pistol, two people briefed on the shooting said.", "paragraph_sentence": "Two days later, a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border. He chased him into an open field, and when the prisoner refused his order to stop running , the sergeant, a firearms instructor, dropped to one knee and fired, striking him twice from a distance of more than 50 yards with a .45-caliber pistol, two people briefed on the shooting said. Mr. Sweat provided the account to investigators from the State Police, the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, and the State Inspector General\u2019s Office during several sessions in recent weeks, according to the people briefed on his statements. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about the investigation. The escape, the manhunt and the resulting spectacle proved to be an embarrassment for the Corrections Department and the administration of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.", "paragraph_answer": "Two days later, a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border. He chased him into an open field, and when the prisoner refused his order to stop running , the sergeant, a firearms instructor, dropped to one knee and fired, striking him twice from a distance of more than 50 yards with a .45-caliber pistol, two people briefed on the shooting said. Mr. Sweat provided the account to investigators from the State Police, the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, and the State Inspector General\u2019s Office during several sessions in recent weeks, according to the people briefed on his statements. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about the investigation. The escape, the manhunt and the resulting spectacle proved to be an embarrassment for the Corrections Department and the administration of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.", "sentence_answer": "He chased him into an open field, and when the prisoner refused his order to stop running , the sergeant, a firearms instructor, dropped to one knee and fired, striking him twice from a distance of more than 50 yards with a .45-caliber pistol, two people briefed on the shooting said.", "paragraph_id": "5d7057ddc8e4820a9b66ed90"} +{"question": "What is the name of the person who directs entertainment at GLAAD?", "paragraph": "Several reality series, some still in the planning stages, are centered on transgender people, like TLC\u2019s \u201cAll That Jazz,\u201d about the teenage transgender activist Jazz Jennings, and VH1\u2019s \u201cTransAmerica,\u201d about the model and activist Carmen Carrera. Nick Adams, the director of programs for transgender media at the gay rights organization Glaad, said that any time a transgender celebrity comes forward with his or her story, \u201cit goes a very long way toward educating people about who we are and the challenges that we face.\u201d \u201cEvery transgender person\u2019s journey is unique, and by choosing to share this story, Bruce Jenner adds another layer to America\u2019s understanding of what it means to be transgender,\u201d Mr. Adams said in a statement on Friday night. Mr. Adams, who is transgender, said that media portrayals of transgender people had improved since he transitioned 18 years ago. But, he said, such reports need to more fully explore what it means to be transgender.", "answer": "Nick Adams", "sentence": "Nick Adams , the director of programs for transgender media at the gay rights organization Glaad, said that any time a transgender celebrity comes forward with his or her story, \u201cit goes a very long way toward educating people about who we are and the challenges that we face.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Several reality series, some still in the planning stages, are centered on transgender people, like TLC\u2019s \u201cAll That Jazz,\u201d about the teenage transgender activist Jazz Jennings, and VH1\u2019s \u201cTransAmerica,\u201d about the model and activist Carmen Carrera. Nick Adams , the director of programs for transgender media at the gay rights organization Glaad, said that any time a transgender celebrity comes forward with his or her story, \u201cit goes a very long way toward educating people about who we are and the challenges that we face.\u201d \u201cEvery transgender person\u2019s journey is unique, and by choosing to share this story, Bruce Jenner adds another layer to America\u2019s understanding of what it means to be transgender,\u201d Mr. Adams said in a statement on Friday night. Mr. Adams, who is transgender, said that media portrayals of transgender people had improved since he transitioned 18 years ago. But, he said, such reports need to more fully explore what it means to be transgender.", "paragraph_answer": "Several reality series, some still in the planning stages, are centered on transgender people, like TLC\u2019s \u201cAll That Jazz,\u201d about the teenage transgender activist Jazz Jennings, and VH1\u2019s \u201cTransAmerica,\u201d about the model and activist Carmen Carrera. Nick Adams , the director of programs for transgender media at the gay rights organization Glaad, said that any time a transgender celebrity comes forward with his or her story, \u201cit goes a very long way toward educating people about who we are and the challenges that we face.\u201d \u201cEvery transgender person\u2019s journey is unique, and by choosing to share this story, Bruce Jenner adds another layer to America\u2019s understanding of what it means to be transgender,\u201d Mr. Adams said in a statement on Friday night. Mr. Adams, who is transgender, said that media portrayals of transgender people had improved since he transitioned 18 years ago. But, he said, such reports need to more fully explore what it means to be transgender.", "sentence_answer": " Nick Adams , the director of programs for transgender media at the gay rights organization Glaad, said that any time a transgender celebrity comes forward with his or her story, \u201cit goes a very long way toward educating people about who we are and the challenges that we face.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d700ffec8e4820a9b66bbfa"} +{"question": "What narrative tool does Ball use?", "paragraph": "With the simplicity of a fable and the drama of a psychological thriller, Ball tells a story about starting over from nothing, reconstructing life from its most basic elements. These acts of narrative deconstruction highlight his strength as a deeply questioning writer at home in fact as much as abstraction. In the \u00advillage\u2019s cemetery, Ball deconstructs death. Noting that gravestones are \u201cirrational\u201d because they prolong suffering while failing to bring back the dead, the claimant wonders: \u201cBut, if life is just that, just being reasonable, then there is nothing in it \u2014 nothing worthwhile. So, the yearning that we have to keep dead things living \u2014 or to make unreasonable things reasonable. That is why a person should live.\u201d", "answer": "narrative deconstruction", "sentence": "These acts of narrative deconstruction highlight his strength as a deeply questioning writer at home in fact as much as abstraction.", "paragraph_sentence": "With the simplicity of a fable and the drama of a psychological thriller, Ball tells a story about starting over from nothing, reconstructing life from its most basic elements. These acts of narrative deconstruction highlight his strength as a deeply questioning writer at home in fact as much as abstraction. In the \u00advillage\u2019s cemetery, Ball deconstructs death. Noting that gravestones are \u201cirrational\u201d because they prolong suffering while failing to bring back the dead, the claimant wonders: \u201cBut, if life is just that, just being reasonable, then there is nothing in it \u2014 nothing worthwhile. So, the yearning that we have to keep dead things living \u2014 or to make unreasonable things reasonable. That is why a person should live.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "With the simplicity of a fable and the drama of a psychological thriller, Ball tells a story about starting over from nothing, reconstructing life from its most basic elements. These acts of narrative deconstruction highlight his strength as a deeply questioning writer at home in fact as much as abstraction. In the \u00advillage\u2019s cemetery, Ball deconstructs death. Noting that gravestones are \u201cirrational\u201d because they prolong suffering while failing to bring back the dead, the claimant wonders: \u201cBut, if life is just that, just being reasonable, then there is nothing in it \u2014 nothing worthwhile. So, the yearning that we have to keep dead things living \u2014 or to make unreasonable things reasonable. That is why a person should live.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "These acts of narrative deconstruction highlight his strength as a deeply questioning writer at home in fact as much as abstraction.", "paragraph_id": "5d700702c8e4820a9b66aca6"} +{"question": "How did Mr Abbott alienate voters?", "paragraph": "Mr. Rudd was ousted in an internal party coup in 2010 and replaced by Julia Gillard, Australia\u2019s first female prime minister. As Ms. Gillard\u2019s poll numbers fell, the party reinstalled Mr. Rudd months before the election of 2013, which Mr. Abbott\u2019s conservative coalition won. Already a polarizing figure when he took office, Mr. Abbott saw his popularity decline amid a slowing economy as he made a series of political missteps and alienated many voters with his strongly conservative stances and often abrasive style. His combative manner contributed to his government\u2019s inability to get major budget measures through the lower and upper houses of Parliament.", "answer": "with his strongly conservative stances", "sentence": "Already a polarizing figure when he took office, Mr. Abbott saw his popularity decline amid a slowing economy as he made a series of political missteps and alienated many voters with his strongly conservative stances and often abrasive style.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Rudd was ousted in an internal party coup in 2010 and replaced by Julia Gillard, Australia\u2019s first female prime minister. As Ms. Gillard\u2019s poll numbers fell, the party reinstalled Mr. Rudd months before the election of 2013, which Mr. Abbott\u2019s conservative coalition won. Already a polarizing figure when he took office, Mr. Abbott saw his popularity decline amid a slowing economy as he made a series of political missteps and alienated many voters with his strongly conservative stances and often abrasive style. His combative manner contributed to his government\u2019s inability to get major budget measures through the lower and upper houses of Parliament.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Rudd was ousted in an internal party coup in 2010 and replaced by Julia Gillard, Australia\u2019s first female prime minister. As Ms. Gillard\u2019s poll numbers fell, the party reinstalled Mr. Rudd months before the election of 2013, which Mr. Abbott\u2019s conservative coalition won. Already a polarizing figure when he took office, Mr. Abbott saw his popularity decline amid a slowing economy as he made a series of political missteps and alienated many voters with his strongly conservative stances and often abrasive style. His combative manner contributed to his government\u2019s inability to get major budget measures through the lower and upper houses of Parliament.", "sentence_answer": "Already a polarizing figure when he took office, Mr. Abbott saw his popularity decline amid a slowing economy as he made a series of political missteps and alienated many voters with his strongly conservative stances and often abrasive style.", "paragraph_id": "5d700e1dc8e4820a9b66b9ef"} +{"question": "What kind of music does Joan Shelley perform?", "paragraph": "Stars shine overhead, and rivers flow nearby in songs by Joan Shelley, who performed on Thursday night at Union Pool in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Her music is folky and pastoral, with a sense of scale that makes her humble about her place in mankind and the universe, and her songs are serene but never complacent. In \u201cElectric Ursa,\u201d the title song of her current album (No Quarter Records), Ms. Shelley sang, \u201cUnder your stars, your earthless movement/We are only feeble humans.\u201d", "answer": "folky and pastoral", "sentence": "Her music is folky and pastoral , with a sense of scale that makes her humble about her place in mankind and the universe, and her songs are serene but never complacent.", "paragraph_sentence": "Stars shine overhead, and rivers flow nearby in songs by Joan Shelley, who performed on Thursday night at Union Pool in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Her music is folky and pastoral , with a sense of scale that makes her humble about her place in mankind and the universe, and her songs are serene but never complacent. In \u201cElectric Ursa,\u201d the title song of her current album (No Quarter Records), Ms. Shelley sang, \u201cUnder your stars, your earthless movement/We are only feeble humans.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Stars shine overhead, and rivers flow nearby in songs by Joan Shelley, who performed on Thursday night at Union Pool in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Her music is folky and pastoral , with a sense of scale that makes her humble about her place in mankind and the universe, and her songs are serene but never complacent. In \u201cElectric Ursa,\u201d the title song of her current album (No Quarter Records), Ms. Shelley sang, \u201cUnder your stars, your earthless movement/We are only feeble humans.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Her music is folky and pastoral , with a sense of scale that makes her humble about her place in mankind and the universe, and her songs are serene but never complacent.", "paragraph_id": "5d70441fc8e4820a9b66e758"} +{"question": "What is Mr. Putin focusing on to the exclusion of Russia's problems?", "paragraph": "Second, it gives Mr. Putin the opportunity to play the statesman, too busy reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position in the world to get caught up in problems like recession, 16 percent inflation and a weak ruble. \u201cHe wants to keep the society consolidated and to present himself continuously as a high-profile leader who lives somewhere above everything in the country,\u201d Mr. Trudolyubov said, \u201cso you cannot connect anything that he is doing to what is happening with the ruble, or the hospitals or the schools or the roads. All that is beneath him.\u201d Third, there is a kind of \u201cbread and circus\u201d aspect to it all. In keeping with the paternalistic traditions of czarist Russia, Mr. Putin constantly assumes the role of national superhero.", "answer": "reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position", "sentence": "Second, it gives Mr. Putin the opportunity to play the statesman, too busy reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position in the world to get caught up in problems like recession, 16 percent inflation and a weak ruble.", "paragraph_sentence": " Second, it gives Mr. Putin the opportunity to play the statesman, too busy reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position in the world to get caught up in problems like recession, 16 percent inflation and a weak ruble. \u201cHe wants to keep the society consolidated and to present himself continuously as a high-profile leader who lives somewhere above everything in the country,\u201d Mr. Trudolyubov said, \u201cso you cannot connect anything that he is doing to what is happening with the ruble, or the hospitals or the schools or the roads. All that is beneath him.\u201d Third, there is a kind of \u201cbread and circus\u201d aspect to it all. In keeping with the paternalistic traditions of czarist Russia, Mr. Putin constantly assumes the role of national superhero.", "paragraph_answer": "Second, it gives Mr. Putin the opportunity to play the statesman, too busy reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position in the world to get caught up in problems like recession, 16 percent inflation and a weak ruble. \u201cHe wants to keep the society consolidated and to present himself continuously as a high-profile leader who lives somewhere above everything in the country,\u201d Mr. Trudolyubov said, \u201cso you cannot connect anything that he is doing to what is happening with the ruble, or the hospitals or the schools or the roads. All that is beneath him.\u201d Third, there is a kind of \u201cbread and circus\u201d aspect to it all. In keeping with the paternalistic traditions of czarist Russia, Mr. Putin constantly assumes the role of national superhero.", "sentence_answer": "Second, it gives Mr. Putin the opportunity to play the statesman, too busy reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position in the world to get caught up in problems like recession, 16 percent inflation and a weak ruble.", "paragraph_id": "5d701816c8e4820a9b66c412"} +{"question": "What will attract savers?", "paragraph": "Policy makers need to do more to shift the economy away from investment and toward consumer demand and services. The central bank\u2019s decision to remove limits on deposit rates is a good step in that direction, because it should force banks to compete with one another to attract savers. Because they could not earn much by depositing money in banks, a lot of Chinese families invested in risky real estate projects or the inflated stock market. Now, they should have better options. Because it is the world\u2019s second-biggest economy, China\u2019s monetary and fiscal policies increasingly matter to the rest of the world. If the country\u2019s growth slows sharply in the coming months, that could help to tip the already fragile global economy into another recession.", "answer": "banks to compete with one another", "sentence": "The central bank\u2019s decision to remove limits on deposit rates is a good step in that direction, because it should force banks to compete with one another to attract savers.", "paragraph_sentence": "Policy makers need to do more to shift the economy away from investment and toward consumer demand and services. The central bank\u2019s decision to remove limits on deposit rates is a good step in that direction, because it should force banks to compete with one another to attract savers. Because they could not earn much by depositing money in banks, a lot of Chinese families invested in risky real estate projects or the inflated stock market. Now, they should have better options. Because it is the world\u2019s second-biggest economy, China\u2019s monetary and fiscal policies increasingly matter to the rest of the world. If the country\u2019s growth slows sharply in the coming months, that could help to tip the already fragile global economy into another recession.", "paragraph_answer": "Policy makers need to do more to shift the economy away from investment and toward consumer demand and services. The central bank\u2019s decision to remove limits on deposit rates is a good step in that direction, because it should force banks to compete with one another to attract savers. Because they could not earn much by depositing money in banks, a lot of Chinese families invested in risky real estate projects or the inflated stock market. Now, they should have better options. Because it is the world\u2019s second-biggest economy, China\u2019s monetary and fiscal policies increasingly matter to the rest of the world. If the country\u2019s growth slows sharply in the coming months, that could help to tip the already fragile global economy into another recession.", "sentence_answer": "The central bank\u2019s decision to remove limits on deposit rates is a good step in that direction, because it should force banks to compete with one another to attract savers.", "paragraph_id": "5d7079d7c8e4820a9b66f305"} +{"question": "What deformity did the heckler have that Cobb beat up?", "paragraph": "Cobb once beat up a teammate, the pitcher Ed Siever, continuing to punch him after he was probably already unconscious and then kicking him in the face. He went into the stands and severely assaulted a heckler who was missing seven fingers, having lost them in a workplace accident, even as surrounding spectators yelled, \u201cHe has no hands!\u201d And consider: These incidents are recounted in Charles Leerhsen\u2019s new biography, \u201cTy Cobb: A Terrible Beauty,\u201d a book largely intended to rehabilitate its subject\u2019s reputation. In writing this combination early-\u00adbaseball history and legal brief, Leerhsen, a onetime editor at Sports Illustrated, has chosen a formidable reclamation project. Cobb\u2019s image is not a fixer-upper; it\u2019s a Superfund site.", "answer": "missing seven fingers", "sentence": "He went into the stands and severely assaulted a heckler who was missing seven fingers , having lost them in a workplace accident, even as surrounding spectators yelled, \u201cHe has no hands!\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Cobb once beat up a teammate, the pitcher Ed Siever, continuing to punch him after he was probably already unconscious and then kicking him in the face. He went into the stands and severely assaulted a heckler who was missing seven fingers , having lost them in a workplace accident, even as surrounding spectators yelled, \u201cHe has no hands!\u201d And consider: These incidents are recounted in Charles Leerhsen\u2019s new biography, \u201cTy Cobb: A Terrible Beauty,\u201d a book largely intended to rehabilitate its subject\u2019s reputation. In writing this combination early-\u00adbaseball history and legal brief, Leerhsen, a onetime editor at Sports Illustrated, has chosen a formidable reclamation project. Cobb\u2019s image is not a fixer-upper; it\u2019s a Superfund site.", "paragraph_answer": "Cobb once beat up a teammate, the pitcher Ed Siever, continuing to punch him after he was probably already unconscious and then kicking him in the face. He went into the stands and severely assaulted a heckler who was missing seven fingers , having lost them in a workplace accident, even as surrounding spectators yelled, \u201cHe has no hands!\u201d And consider: These incidents are recounted in Charles Leerhsen\u2019s new biography, \u201cTy Cobb: A Terrible Beauty,\u201d a book largely intended to rehabilitate its subject\u2019s reputation. In writing this combination early-\u00adbaseball history and legal brief, Leerhsen, a onetime editor at Sports Illustrated, has chosen a formidable reclamation project. Cobb\u2019s image is not a fixer-upper; it\u2019s a Superfund site.", "sentence_answer": "He went into the stands and severely assaulted a heckler who was missing seven fingers , having lost them in a workplace accident, even as surrounding spectators yelled, \u201cHe has no hands!\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d700b05c8e4820a9b66b549"} +{"question": "In what Mr. Obama spent the money assigned for his camping?", "paragraph": "Ever since the Supreme Court permitted political committees to raise unlimited sums for independent spending, the super PAC has occupied a growing place in the political ecosystem. The 2012 version of presidential super PACs mainly paid for ads. Restore Our Future, the PAC supporting Mr. Romney, spent 97.6 percent of its $142 million in independent expenditures \u2014 messages advocating Mr. Romney\u2019s election or the defeat of his opponents \u2014 on broadcast ads and mail. Priorities USA Action, which backed Mr. Obama, spent almost exclusively on TV, radio and online advertising, according to Federal Election Commission records. Together with the national parties, both sides managed to raise and spend nearly $2 billion. Some donors balked at giving large amounts of money for negative television ads, so a Democratic super PAC was created to help conduct opposition research.", "answer": "on TV, radio and online advertising", "sentence": "Priorities USA Action, which backed Mr. Obama, spent almost exclusively on TV, radio and online advertising , according to Federal Election Commission records.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ever since the Supreme Court permitted political committees to raise unlimited sums for independent spending, the super PAC has occupied a growing place in the political ecosystem. The 2012 version of presidential super PACs mainly paid for ads. Restore Our Future, the PAC supporting Mr. Romney, spent 97.6 percent of its $142 million in independent expenditures \u2014 messages advocating Mr. Romney\u2019s election or the defeat of his opponents \u2014 on broadcast ads and mail. Priorities USA Action, which backed Mr. Obama, spent almost exclusively on TV, radio and online advertising , according to Federal Election Commission records. Together with the national parties, both sides managed to raise and spend nearly $2 billion. Some donors balked at giving large amounts of money for negative television ads, so a Democratic super PAC was created to help conduct opposition research.", "paragraph_answer": "Ever since the Supreme Court permitted political committees to raise unlimited sums for independent spending, the super PAC has occupied a growing place in the political ecosystem. The 2012 version of presidential super PACs mainly paid for ads. Restore Our Future, the PAC supporting Mr. Romney, spent 97.6 percent of its $142 million in independent expenditures \u2014 messages advocating Mr. Romney\u2019s election or the defeat of his opponents \u2014 on broadcast ads and mail. Priorities USA Action, which backed Mr. Obama, spent almost exclusively on TV, radio and online advertising , according to Federal Election Commission records. Together with the national parties, both sides managed to raise and spend nearly $2 billion. Some donors balked at giving large amounts of money for negative television ads, so a Democratic super PAC was created to help conduct opposition research.", "sentence_answer": "Priorities USA Action, which backed Mr. Obama, spent almost exclusively on TV, radio and online advertising , according to Federal Election Commission records.", "paragraph_id": "5d702e39c8e4820a9b66db86"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d70112ac8e4820a9b66bdac"} +{"question": "When does the Stamford Art Association close on weekends?", "paragraph": "STAMFORD P.M.W. Gallery \u201cNoir 2,\u201d etchings, lithographs, drawings and paintings by Ann Chernow. Through June 21. By appointment only. P.M.W. Gallery, 530 Roxbury Road. 203-322-5427; pmwgallery.com. STAMFORD Stamford Art Association \u201cUp, Down, All Around \u2014 Small Works,\u201d group show. \u201cFamiliar/Unfamiliar,\u201d Arthur Vitello III. Through July 9. Thursdays and Fridays, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays, noon to 3 p.m. Stamford Art Association, 39 Franklin Street. 203-325-1139; stamfordartassociation.org.", "answer": "3 p.m.", "sentence": "Thursdays and Fridays, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. ; Saturdays and Sundays, noon to 3 p.m. Stamford Art Association, 39 Franklin Street.", "paragraph_sentence": "STAMFORD P.M.W. Gallery \u201cNoir 2,\u201d etchings, lithographs, drawings and paintings by Ann Chernow. Through June 21. By appointment only. P.M.W. Gallery, 530 Roxbury Road. 203-322-5427; pmwgallery.com. STAMFORD Stamford Art Association \u201cUp, Down, All Around \u2014 Small Works,\u201d group show. \u201cFamiliar/Unfamiliar,\u201d Arthur Vitello III. Through July 9. Thursdays and Fridays, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. ; Saturdays and Sundays, noon to 3 p.m. Stamford Art Association, 39 Franklin Street. 203-325-1139; stamfordartassociation.org.", "paragraph_answer": "STAMFORD P.M.W. Gallery \u201cNoir 2,\u201d etchings, lithographs, drawings and paintings by Ann Chernow. Through June 21. By appointment only. P.M.W. Gallery, 530 Roxbury Road. 203-322-5427; pmwgallery.com. STAMFORD Stamford Art Association \u201cUp, Down, All Around \u2014 Small Works,\u201d group show. \u201cFamiliar/Unfamiliar,\u201d Arthur Vitello III. Through July 9. Thursdays and Fridays, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. ; Saturdays and Sundays, noon to 3 p.m. Stamford Art Association, 39 Franklin Street. 203-325-1139; stamfordartassociation.org.", "sentence_answer": "Thursdays and Fridays, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. ; Saturdays and Sundays, noon to 3 p.m. Stamford Art Association, 39 Franklin Street.", "paragraph_id": "5d7045b3c8e4820a9b66e808"} +{"question": "What sport is this paragraph about?", "paragraph": "The blurring of lines between sports and ready-to-wear via that hybrid known as athleisure wear has only exacerbated the situation. Indeed, brands increasingly unveil their \u201ccollections\u201d weeks in advance so consumers can Get the Look. Athletic brands, that is. Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon, where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open, in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most nontennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach.", "answer": "tennis", "sentence": "Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon, where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open, in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most non tennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach.", "paragraph_sentence": "The blurring of lines between sports and ready-to-wear via that hybrid known as athleisure wear has only exacerbated the situation. Indeed, brands increasingly unveil their \u201ccollections\u201d weeks in advance so consumers can Get the Look. Athletic brands, that is. Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon, where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open, in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most non tennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach. ", "paragraph_answer": "The blurring of lines between sports and ready-to-wear via that hybrid known as athleisure wear has only exacerbated the situation. Indeed, brands increasingly unveil their \u201ccollections\u201d weeks in advance so consumers can Get the Look. Athletic brands, that is. Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon, where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open, in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most non tennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach.", "sentence_answer": "Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon, where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open, in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most non tennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach.", "paragraph_id": "5d701892c8e4820a9b66c4b3"} +{"question": "Which colleges are faraway?", "paragraph": "Parents and prospective students often think of colleges as cohesive institutions, each with their own cultures and academic standards. To attend, say, the University of North Carolina \u2014 regardless of what you study \u2014 is supposed to mean something different from attending nearby Duke, North Carolina State or a faraway college. In reality, colleges are much less cohesive than many outsiders realize, especially when it comes to academics. Many instead resemble a collection of disparate departments \u2014 or even just disparate professors \u2014 who happen to work on the same campus. These disparate groups rarely interact, share little in common and face little accountability. Yes, higher education is generally worth it, by any empirical definition, as I\u2019ve often written. But higher education is also full of expensive, damaging inefficiencies and inconsistencies. Our contributor Kevin Carey has written an important and eye-opening piece on this subject, and I encourage you to read it. He starts the piece with a notorious football scandal but goes far beyond sports and scandal. Colleges, Kevin writes, \u201care not coherent academic enterprises with consistent standards of classroom excellence. When it comes to exerting influence over teaching and learning, they\u2019re Easter eggs. They barely exist.\u201d Let us know what you think of his argument, in the comments section at the bottom or through Facebook or Twitter. And I hope you enjoy your weekend. David Leonhardt", "answer": "Duke, North Carolina State", "sentence": "To attend, say, the University of North Carolina \u2014 regardless of what you study \u2014 is supposed to mean something different from attending nearby Duke, North Carolina State or a faraway college.", "paragraph_sentence": "Parents and prospective students often think of colleges as cohesive institutions, each with their own cultures and academic standards. To attend, say, the University of North Carolina \u2014 regardless of what you study \u2014 is supposed to mean something different from attending nearby Duke, North Carolina State or a faraway college. In reality, colleges are much less cohesive than many outsiders realize, especially when it comes to academics. Many instead resemble a collection of disparate departments \u2014 or even just disparate professors \u2014 who happen to work on the same campus. These disparate groups rarely interact, share little in common and face little accountability. Yes, higher education is generally worth it, by any empirical definition, as I\u2019ve often written. But higher education is also full of expensive, damaging inefficiencies and inconsistencies. Our contributor Kevin Carey has written an important and eye-opening piece on this subject, and I encourage you to read it. He starts the piece with a notorious football scandal but goes far beyond sports and scandal. Colleges, Kevin writes, \u201care not coherent academic enterprises with consistent standards of classroom excellence. When it comes to exerting influence over teaching and learning, they\u2019re Easter eggs. They barely exist.\u201d Let us know what you think of his argument, in the comments section at the bottom or through Facebook or Twitter. And I hope you enjoy your weekend. David Leonhardt", "paragraph_answer": "Parents and prospective students often think of colleges as cohesive institutions, each with their own cultures and academic standards. To attend, say, the University of North Carolina \u2014 regardless of what you study \u2014 is supposed to mean something different from attending nearby Duke, North Carolina State or a faraway college. In reality, colleges are much less cohesive than many outsiders realize, especially when it comes to academics. Many instead resemble a collection of disparate departments \u2014 or even just disparate professors \u2014 who happen to work on the same campus. These disparate groups rarely interact, share little in common and face little accountability. Yes, higher education is generally worth it, by any empirical definition, as I\u2019ve often written. But higher education is also full of expensive, damaging inefficiencies and inconsistencies. Our contributor Kevin Carey has written an important and eye-opening piece on this subject, and I encourage you to read it. He starts the piece with a notorious football scandal but goes far beyond sports and scandal. Colleges, Kevin writes, \u201care not coherent academic enterprises with consistent standards of classroom excellence. When it comes to exerting influence over teaching and learning, they\u2019re Easter eggs. They barely exist.\u201d Let us know what you think of his argument, in the comments section at the bottom or through Facebook or Twitter. And I hope you enjoy your weekend. David Leonhardt", "sentence_answer": "To attend, say, the University of North Carolina \u2014 regardless of what you study \u2014 is supposed to mean something different from attending nearby Duke, North Carolina State or a faraway college.", "paragraph_id": "5d704185c8e4820a9b66e59f"} +{"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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700e5fc8e4820a9b66ba4d"} +{"question": "When will the induction of the managing director class at Goldman Sachs Group begin?", "paragraph": "The Goldman Sachs Group is in the middle of its biennial election of the next class of managing directors, an envied status that puts the lucky few just a breath away from the company\u2019s loftiest title of partner. The managing director class that will be inducted starting in January is being culled now, said Gary Cohn, president and chief operating officer, who added he had \u201cno real concerns\u201d about the culture of the bank. Mr. Cohn said Goldman had learned to adapt and change over the years as its model shifted from a traditional private partnership to a global publicly traded company.", "answer": "January", "sentence": "The managing director class that will be inducted starting in January is being culled now, said Gary Cohn, president and chief operating officer, who added he had \u201cno real concerns\u201d about the culture of the bank.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Goldman Sachs Group is in the middle of its biennial election of the next class of managing directors, an envied status that puts the lucky few just a breath away from the company\u2019s loftiest title of partner. The managing director class that will be inducted starting in January is being culled now, said Gary Cohn, president and chief operating officer, who added he had \u201cno real concerns\u201d about the culture of the bank. Mr. Cohn said Goldman had learned to adapt and change over the years as its model shifted from a traditional private partnership to a global publicly traded company.", "paragraph_answer": "The Goldman Sachs Group is in the middle of its biennial election of the next class of managing directors, an envied status that puts the lucky few just a breath away from the company\u2019s loftiest title of partner. The managing director class that will be inducted starting in January is being culled now, said Gary Cohn, president and chief operating officer, who added he had \u201cno real concerns\u201d about the culture of the bank. Mr. Cohn said Goldman had learned to adapt and change over the years as its model shifted from a traditional private partnership to a global publicly traded company.", "sentence_answer": "The managing director class that will be inducted starting in January is being culled now, said Gary Cohn, president and chief operating officer, who added he had \u201cno real concerns\u201d about the culture of the bank.", "paragraph_id": "5d7032cfc8e4820a9b66de0e"} +{"question": "Does Swenson believe we can still extract all the water we want?", "paragraph": "On a boat ride in July through one of the delta\u2019s channels, Anna Swenson, co-director of a community group called North Delta Cares, spoke of William Mulholland, the famed Los Angeles water boss who, in the early 20th century, purloined the water of the distant Owens Valley on behalf of his city. \u201cWilliam Mulholland is in the grave, and so should his ideas be,\u201d Ms. Swenson said. \u201cThe days when you could come up here and stick your straw in to satisfy your insatiable demands \u2014 those days are over.\u201d", "answer": "those days are over", "sentence": "\u201cThe days when you could come up here and stick your straw in to satisfy your insatiable demands \u2014 those days are over .", "paragraph_sentence": "On a boat ride in July through one of the delta\u2019s channels, Anna Swenson, co-director of a community group called North Delta Cares, spoke of William Mulholland, the famed Los Angeles water boss who, in the early 20th century, purloined the water of the distant Owens Valley on behalf of his city. \u201cWilliam Mulholland is in the grave, and so should his ideas be,\u201d Ms. Swenson said. \u201cThe days when you could come up here and stick your straw in to satisfy your insatiable demands \u2014 those days are over . \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "On a boat ride in July through one of the delta\u2019s channels, Anna Swenson, co-director of a community group called North Delta Cares, spoke of William Mulholland, the famed Los Angeles water boss who, in the early 20th century, purloined the water of the distant Owens Valley on behalf of his city. \u201cWilliam Mulholland is in the grave, and so should his ideas be,\u201d Ms. Swenson said. \u201cThe days when you could come up here and stick your straw in to satisfy your insatiable demands \u2014 those days are over .\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe days when you could come up here and stick your straw in to satisfy your insatiable demands \u2014 those days are over .", "paragraph_id": "5d700cc7c8e4820a9b66b824"} +{"question": "Who is the director of Pan?", "paragraph": "\u2018Our Brand Is Crisis\u2019 (R, 1:47) This hard-working comedy stars Sandra Bullock as a mercenary political consultant trying to strategize a former Bolivian president, Castillo (Joaquim de Almeida), back into office. Directed by David Gordon Green and stuffed with fine actors, the movie has outrage and some laughs, but no teeth. (Dargis) \u2018Pan\u2019 (PG, 1:51) Ostensibly an origin story about Peter Pan, this woeful would-be blockbuster, directed by the usually competent Joe Wright, is a murky, lumpy stew of pop-culture borrowings, from Harry Potter to \u201cAvatar.\u201d (Scott)", "answer": "Joe Wright", "sentence": "Ostensibly an origin story about Peter Pan, this woeful would-be blockbuster, directed by the usually competent Joe Wright , is a murky, lumpy stew of pop-culture borrowings, from Harry Potter to \u201cAvatar.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Our Brand Is Crisis\u2019 (R, 1:47) This hard-working comedy stars Sandra Bullock as a mercenary political consultant trying to strategize a former Bolivian president, Castillo (Joaquim de Almeida), back into office. Directed by David Gordon Green and stuffed with fine actors, the movie has outrage and some laughs, but no teeth. (Dargis) \u2018Pan\u2019 (PG, 1:51) Ostensibly an origin story about Peter Pan, this woeful would-be blockbuster, directed by the usually competent Joe Wright , is a murky, lumpy stew of pop-culture borrowings, from Harry Potter to \u201cAvatar.\u201d (Scott)", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Our Brand Is Crisis\u2019 (R, 1:47) This hard-working comedy stars Sandra Bullock as a mercenary political consultant trying to strategize a former Bolivian president, Castillo (Joaquim de Almeida), back into office. Directed by David Gordon Green and stuffed with fine actors, the movie has outrage and some laughs, but no teeth. (Dargis) \u2018Pan\u2019 (PG, 1:51) Ostensibly an origin story about Peter Pan, this woeful would-be blockbuster, directed by the usually competent Joe Wright , is a murky, lumpy stew of pop-culture borrowings, from Harry Potter to \u201cAvatar.\u201d (Scott)", "sentence_answer": "Ostensibly an origin story about Peter Pan, this woeful would-be blockbuster, directed by the usually competent Joe Wright , is a murky, lumpy stew of pop-culture borrowings, from Harry Potter to \u201cAvatar.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d702091c8e4820a9b66cc68"} +{"question": "Who was the pastry chef?", "paragraph": "We fared better with desserts. The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo, was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu. While the frozen lemon mousse had an icy, not-so-lemony taste, the cr\u00e8me br\u00fbl\u00e9e trio in classic, coffee and passion fruit flavors, as well as the triple chocolate mousse cake, were incredibly velvety. Better still was the warm honey pine nut tart, with a filling of caramelized nuts and chestnut honey and a dollop of cr\u00e8me fra\u00eeche. It was a sweet ending, but the nits picked throughout the night went beyond the food: some of our plates were chipped, and the waitstaff didn\u2019t replace a dropped knife or clean up our visibly dirty table before bringing out desserts. These faults wouldn\u2019t matter as much if the prices were lower, but Orama is an expensive night out, so our expectations were high. Still, there are those views and that gorgeous villa. Until the kitchen and the service catch up to the visuals, it might be preferable to savor the skyline and d\u00e9cor from the bar.", "answer": "Krista Guiwo", "sentence": "The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo , was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu.", "paragraph_sentence": "We fared better with desserts. The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo , was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu. While the frozen lemon mousse had an icy, not-so-lemony taste, the cr\u00e8me br\u00fbl\u00e9e trio in classic, coffee and passion fruit flavors, as well as the triple chocolate mousse cake, were incredibly velvety. Better still was the warm honey pine nut tart, with a filling of caramelized nuts and chestnut honey and a dollop of cr\u00e8me fra\u00eeche. It was a sweet ending, but the nits picked throughout the night went beyond the food: some of our plates were chipped, and the waitstaff didn\u2019t replace a dropped knife or clean up our visibly dirty table before bringing out desserts. These faults wouldn\u2019t matter as much if the prices were lower, but Orama is an expensive night out, so our expectations were high. Still, there are those views and that gorgeous villa. Until the kitchen and the service catch up to the visuals, it might be preferable to savor the skyline and d\u00e9cor from the bar.", "paragraph_answer": "We fared better with desserts. The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo , was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu. While the frozen lemon mousse had an icy, not-so-lemony taste, the cr\u00e8me br\u00fbl\u00e9e trio in classic, coffee and passion fruit flavors, as well as the triple chocolate mousse cake, were incredibly velvety. Better still was the warm honey pine nut tart, with a filling of caramelized nuts and chestnut honey and a dollop of cr\u00e8me fra\u00eeche. It was a sweet ending, but the nits picked throughout the night went beyond the food: some of our plates were chipped, and the waitstaff didn\u2019t replace a dropped knife or clean up our visibly dirty table before bringing out desserts. These faults wouldn\u2019t matter as much if the prices were lower, but Orama is an expensive night out, so our expectations were high. Still, there are those views and that gorgeous villa. Until the kitchen and the service catch up to the visuals, it might be preferable to savor the skyline and d\u00e9cor from the bar.", "sentence_answer": "The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo , was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu.", "paragraph_id": "5d706d9ec8e4820a9b66f195"} +{"question": "How many bases in Germany does BRAC not apply to?", "paragraph": "WASHINGTON \u2014 THERE are signs that Congress may soon approve another series of domestic military base closings, after the Pentagon threatened earlier this month to cut nearly 90,000 jobs instead. For years, the military has been trying to save money with new rounds of Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC), the congressionally mandated process for shuttering underutilized domestic military installations. The move could save billions since, by the Pentagon\u2019s own estimate, our network of domestic bases is bloated by more than 20 percent. But Congress has resisted, since local bases mean local jobs, and votes. BRAC, however, does not apply to the more than 700 United States bases overseas, including 174 in Germany, 113 in Japan and 83 in South Korea, as well as hundreds more in some 70 countries from Aruba to Kenya to Thailand. The military and Congress should go further by closing installations abroad. They both waste taxpayer money and undermine national security.", "answer": "174", "sentence": "BRAC, however, does not apply to the more than 700 United States bases overseas, including 174 in Germany, 113 in Japan and 83 in South Korea, as well as hundreds more in some 70 countries from Aruba to Kenya to Thailand.", "paragraph_sentence": "WASHINGTON \u2014 THERE are signs that Congress may soon approve another series of domestic military base closings, after the Pentagon threatened earlier this month to cut nearly 90,000 jobs instead. For years, the military has been trying to save money with new rounds of Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC), the congressionally mandated process for shuttering underutilized domestic military installations. The move could save billions since, by the Pentagon\u2019s own estimate, our network of domestic bases is bloated by more than 20 percent. But Congress has resisted, since local bases mean local jobs, and votes. BRAC, however, does not apply to the more than 700 United States bases overseas, including 174 in Germany, 113 in Japan and 83 in South Korea, as well as hundreds more in some 70 countries from Aruba to Kenya to Thailand. The military and Congress should go further by closing installations abroad. They both waste taxpayer money and undermine national security.", "paragraph_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 THERE are signs that Congress may soon approve another series of domestic military base closings, after the Pentagon threatened earlier this month to cut nearly 90,000 jobs instead. For years, the military has been trying to save money with new rounds of Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC), the congressionally mandated process for shuttering underutilized domestic military installations. The move could save billions since, by the Pentagon\u2019s own estimate, our network of domestic bases is bloated by more than 20 percent. But Congress has resisted, since local bases mean local jobs, and votes. BRAC, however, does not apply to the more than 700 United States bases overseas, including 174 in Germany, 113 in Japan and 83 in South Korea, as well as hundreds more in some 70 countries from Aruba to Kenya to Thailand. The military and Congress should go further by closing installations abroad. They both waste taxpayer money and undermine national security.", "sentence_answer": "BRAC, however, does not apply to the more than 700 United States bases overseas, including 174 in Germany, 113 in Japan and 83 in South Korea, as well as hundreds more in some 70 countries from Aruba to Kenya to Thailand.", "paragraph_id": "5d702d27c8e4820a9b66dace"} +{"question": "What school did Baker Mayfield transfer from?", "paragraph": "Much has changed on offense for the Sooners. Coach Bob Stoops replaced the offensive coordinators Josh Heupel (now at Utah State) and Jay Norvell (now at Texas) with Lincoln Riley, who installed a spread \u201cair raid\u201d offense. Baker Mayfield, a walk-on transfer from Texas Tech, won the job of starting quarterback over Trevor Knight, who led the Sooners over Alabama in the Sugar Bowl two seasons ago. Mayfield could be poised for a big game. Last week, Tennessee allowed 433 yards passing. Fans in Knoxville are dying for a big victory, and Neyland Stadium is sure to be rocking. Oklahoma is the favorite on the road, but this one promises to be close. 20 Boise State at B.Y.U.", "answer": "Texas Tech", "sentence": "Baker Mayfield, a walk-on transfer from Texas Tech , won the job of starting quarterback over Trevor Knight, who led the Sooners over Alabama in the Sugar Bowl two seasons ago.", "paragraph_sentence": "Much has changed on offense for the Sooners. Coach Bob Stoops replaced the offensive coordinators Josh Heupel (now at Utah State) and Jay Norvell (now at Texas) with Lincoln Riley, who installed a spread \u201cair raid\u201d offense. Baker Mayfield, a walk-on transfer from Texas Tech , won the job of starting quarterback over Trevor Knight, who led the Sooners over Alabama in the Sugar Bowl two seasons ago. Mayfield could be poised for a big game. Last week, Tennessee allowed 433 yards passing. Fans in Knoxville are dying for a big victory, and Neyland Stadium is sure to be rocking. Oklahoma is the favorite on the road, but this one promises to be close. 20 Boise State at B.Y.U.", "paragraph_answer": "Much has changed on offense for the Sooners. Coach Bob Stoops replaced the offensive coordinators Josh Heupel (now at Utah State) and Jay Norvell (now at Texas) with Lincoln Riley, who installed a spread \u201cair raid\u201d offense. Baker Mayfield, a walk-on transfer from Texas Tech , won the job of starting quarterback over Trevor Knight, who led the Sooners over Alabama in the Sugar Bowl two seasons ago. Mayfield could be poised for a big game. Last week, Tennessee allowed 433 yards passing. Fans in Knoxville are dying for a big victory, and Neyland Stadium is sure to be rocking. Oklahoma is the favorite on the road, but this one promises to be close. 20 Boise State at B.Y.U.", "sentence_answer": "Baker Mayfield, a walk-on transfer from Texas Tech , won the job of starting quarterback over Trevor Knight, who led the Sooners over Alabama in the Sugar Bowl two seasons ago.", "paragraph_id": "5d701647c8e4820a9b66c24a"} +{"question": "Amtrak's relationship with which state soured last week?", "paragraph": "\u201cAmtrak\u2019s leadership must reflect and determine how they can better manage their current funding to avoid these types of delays in the future,\u201d he said in a statement. Amtrak also depends on money from states, and its relationship with Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey soured last week. On Friday, Mr. Christie accused Amtrak of \u201cabject neglect\u201d of its infrastructure. He said he had asked New Jersey\u2019s attorney general to determine how the state could make sure that the nearly $100 million it pays Amtrak each year was being used properly. Amtrak officials countered that New Jersey Transit\u2019s payments mostly go toward operating costs, like train dispatching and inspections, and for electricity to run the trains, and that in the 2014 fiscal year, for example, only about $13.6 million was left for system upgrades.", "answer": "New Jersey", "sentence": "Amtrak also depends on money from states, and its relationship with Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey soured last week.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cAmtrak\u2019s leadership must reflect and determine how they can better manage their current funding to avoid these types of delays in the future,\u201d he said in a statement. Amtrak also depends on money from states, and its relationship with Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey soured last week. On Friday, Mr. Christie accused Amtrak of \u201cabject neglect\u201d of its infrastructure. He said he had asked New Jersey\u2019s attorney general to determine how the state could make sure that the nearly $100 million it pays Amtrak each year was being used properly. Amtrak officials countered that New Jersey Transit\u2019s payments mostly go toward operating costs, like train dispatching and inspections, and for electricity to run the trains, and that in the 2014 fiscal year, for example, only about $13.6 million was left for system upgrades.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cAmtrak\u2019s leadership must reflect and determine how they can better manage their current funding to avoid these types of delays in the future,\u201d he said in a statement. Amtrak also depends on money from states, and its relationship with Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey soured last week. On Friday, Mr. Christie accused Amtrak of \u201cabject neglect\u201d of its infrastructure. He said he had asked New Jersey\u2019s attorney general to determine how the state could make sure that the nearly $100 million it pays Amtrak each year was being used properly. Amtrak officials countered that New Jersey Transit\u2019s payments mostly go toward operating costs, like train dispatching and inspections, and for electricity to run the trains, and that in the 2014 fiscal year, for example, only about $13.6 million was left for system upgrades.", "sentence_answer": "Amtrak also depends on money from states, and its relationship with Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey soured last week.", "paragraph_id": "5d702125c8e4820a9b66cce9"}