diff --git "a/data/processed/nyt.train02.jsonl" "b/data/processed/nyt.train02.jsonl" new file mode 100644--- /dev/null +++ "b/data/processed/nyt.train02.jsonl" @@ -0,0 +1,355 @@ +{"question": "How many percentage of California's water is from underground?", "paragraph": "As it happens, Needles gets most of its water from underground \u2014 pumping an average of about 700 million gallons a year from four wells it has drilled into the local aquifer. In recent years, such withdrawals have taken on more importance in the West, particularly in California and Arizona, as streams shrivel, rivers are fought over and reservoirs run dry. About 60 percent of California\u2019s water now comes from underground, according to estimates by NASA researchers. Arizona, staring down imminent rationing of Colorado River water, pumps nearly half its supplies from aquifers.", "answer": "60 percent", "sentence": "About 60 percent of California\u2019s water now comes from underground, according to estimates by NASA researchers.", "paragraph_sentence": "As it happens, Needles gets most of its water from underground \u2014 pumping an average of about 700 million gallons a year from four wells it has drilled into the local aquifer. In recent years, such withdrawals have taken on more importance in the West, particularly in California and Arizona, as streams shrivel, rivers are fought over and reservoirs run dry. About 60 percent of California\u2019s water now comes from underground, according to estimates by NASA researchers. Arizona, staring down imminent rationing of Colorado River water, pumps nearly half its supplies from aquifers.", "paragraph_answer": "As it happens, Needles gets most of its water from underground \u2014 pumping an average of about 700 million gallons a year from four wells it has drilled into the local aquifer. In recent years, such withdrawals have taken on more importance in the West, particularly in California and Arizona, as streams shrivel, rivers are fought over and reservoirs run dry. About 60 percent of California\u2019s water now comes from underground, according to estimates by NASA researchers. Arizona, staring down imminent rationing of Colorado River water, pumps nearly half its supplies from aquifers.", "sentence_answer": "About 60 percent of California\u2019s water now comes from underground, according to estimates by NASA researchers.", "paragraph_id": "5d701e4bc8e4820a9b66c9d4"} +{"question": "Who lost the Subway Series?", "paragraph": "But some telling evidence points to trouble for the Yankees and a boon for the Mets, suggesting that New York might be turning into a Mets town for the first time since their championship season of 1986. \u201cIt certainly feels like something\u2019s happening,\u201d said Greg Prince, a blogger for the website Faith and Fear in Flushing. \u201cWinning certainly can change the equation, especially winning that hasn\u2019t happened in a long time. It\u2019s not that the other team in New York isn\u2019t winning, but there doesn\u2019t seem to be a lot of spark to it, while what\u2019s happening to the Mets feels fresh and novel.\u201d It is not just a feeling. By the measures of attendance and television viewership, the Mets are surging while their crosstown rivals are sliding a bit. It is an improbable reversal of fortune, given that the Yankees have dominated the market so clearly since they won four World Series from 1996 to 2000, capped by a triumph over the Mets in the so-called Subway Series.", "answer": "capped by a triumph over the Mets", "sentence": "It is an improbable reversal of fortune, given that the Yankees have dominated the market so clearly since they won four World Series from 1996 to 2000, capped by a triumph over the Mets in the so-called Subway Series.", "paragraph_sentence": "But some telling evidence points to trouble for the Yankees and a boon for the Mets, suggesting that New York might be turning into a Mets town for the first time since their championship season of 1986. \u201cIt certainly feels like something\u2019s happening,\u201d said Greg Prince, a blogger for the website Faith and Fear in Flushing. \u201cWinning certainly can change the equation, especially winning that hasn\u2019t happened in a long time. It\u2019s not that the other team in New York isn\u2019t winning, but there doesn\u2019t seem to be a lot of spark to it, while what\u2019s happening to the Mets feels fresh and novel.\u201d It is not just a feeling. By the measures of attendance and television viewership, the Mets are surging while their crosstown rivals are sliding a bit. It is an improbable reversal of fortune, given that the Yankees have dominated the market so clearly since they won four World Series from 1996 to 2000, capped by a triumph over the Mets in the so-called Subway Series. ", "paragraph_answer": "But some telling evidence points to trouble for the Yankees and a boon for the Mets, suggesting that New York might be turning into a Mets town for the first time since their championship season of 1986. \u201cIt certainly feels like something\u2019s happening,\u201d said Greg Prince, a blogger for the website Faith and Fear in Flushing. \u201cWinning certainly can change the equation, especially winning that hasn\u2019t happened in a long time. It\u2019s not that the other team in New York isn\u2019t winning, but there doesn\u2019t seem to be a lot of spark to it, while what\u2019s happening to the Mets feels fresh and novel.\u201d It is not just a feeling. By the measures of attendance and television viewership, the Mets are surging while their crosstown rivals are sliding a bit. It is an improbable reversal of fortune, given that the Yankees have dominated the market so clearly since they won four World Series from 1996 to 2000, capped by a triumph over the Mets in the so-called Subway Series.", "sentence_answer": "It is an improbable reversal of fortune, given that the Yankees have dominated the market so clearly since they won four World Series from 1996 to 2000, capped by a triumph over the Mets in the so-called Subway Series.", "paragraph_id": "5d70094ac8e4820a9b66b1af"} +{"question": "What is Snow White allergic to?", "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": "apples", "sentence": "These heroines aren\u2019t like their traditional selves \u2014 Snow White, for instance, is allergic to apples \u2014 and neither are their princes, who may be more clumsy than charming.", "paragraph_sentence": "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": "These heroines aren\u2019t like their traditional selves \u2014 Snow White, for instance, is allergic to apples \u2014 and neither are their princes, who may be more clumsy than charming.", "paragraph_id": "5d70a39ec8e4820a9b66f68d"} +{"question": "Who's surname was misspelled?", "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": "Thomas de Maizi\u00e8re", "sentence": "He is Thomas de Maizi\u00e8re , not de Mazi\u00e8re.", "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": "He is Thomas de Maizi\u00e8re , not de Mazi\u00e8re.", "paragraph_id": "5d700791c8e4820a9b66ae14"} +{"question": "Who is Steve Elmendorf?", "paragraph": "Delta has its own array of lobbyists, including a former top aide of Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, and Steve Elmendorf, a former top Democratic aide in the House and one of Washington\u2019s pre-eminent schmoozers. The Republican lobbying firm Fierce, Isakowitz and Blalock was all-in for Delta until one of its chiefs, Mark Isakowitz, joined the staff of Senator Rob Portman, Republican of Ohio and a crucial vote on the issue. The renamed Fierce Government Relations soldiers on for Delta, with Kirk Blalock, a senior official in the George W. Bush White House, and Aleix Jarvis, a former aide to Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina, leading the charge.", "answer": "a former top Democratic aide in the House and one of Washington\u2019s pre-eminent schmoozers", "sentence": "Delta has its own array of lobbyists, including a former top aide of Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, and Steve Elmendorf, a former top Democratic aide in the House and one of Washington\u2019s pre-eminent schmoozers .", "paragraph_sentence": " Delta has its own array of lobbyists, including a former top aide of Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, and Steve Elmendorf, a former top Democratic aide in the House and one of Washington\u2019s pre-eminent schmoozers . The Republican lobbying firm Fierce, Isakowitz and Blalock was all-in for Delta until one of its chiefs, Mark Isakowitz, joined the staff of Senator Rob Portman, Republican of Ohio and a crucial vote on the issue. The renamed Fierce Government Relations soldiers on for Delta, with Kirk Blalock, a senior official in the George W. Bush White House, and Aleix Jarvis, a former aide to Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina, leading the charge.", "paragraph_answer": "Delta has its own array of lobbyists, including a former top aide of Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, and Steve Elmendorf, a former top Democratic aide in the House and one of Washington\u2019s pre-eminent schmoozers . The Republican lobbying firm Fierce, Isakowitz and Blalock was all-in for Delta until one of its chiefs, Mark Isakowitz, joined the staff of Senator Rob Portman, Republican of Ohio and a crucial vote on the issue. The renamed Fierce Government Relations soldiers on for Delta, with Kirk Blalock, a senior official in the George W. Bush White House, and Aleix Jarvis, a former aide to Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina, leading the charge.", "sentence_answer": "Delta has its own array of lobbyists, including a former top aide of Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, and Steve Elmendorf, a former top Democratic aide in the House and one of Washington\u2019s pre-eminent schmoozers .", "paragraph_id": "5d700951c8e4820a9b66b1ca"} +{"question": "How low has the rain levels been in CA over the past three years?", "paragraph": "LAKEPORT, Calif. \u2014 As firefighters on Wednesday embarked on their sixth day of battling the largest of the many wildfires that have flared across the state, fire officials said the Rocky Fire, which has grown to consume nearly 70,000 acres here in the northern reaches of wine country, was still nowhere near under control and may not be until perhaps Monday. The Rocky Fire, which was impeded slightly by humid overnight conditions, has already defied firefighters\u2019 expectations for how such blazes typically behave, and has crossed highways, fire lines and other barriers meant to contain it. Feeding on tinder-dry terrain and woodlands that have been parched by drought, the Rocky Fire is now 106 square miles and has forced the evacuation of 1,480 people; about 13,000 have been urged to leave their homes. More than 3,840 firefighters are deployed across the uneven landscape of several counties, including Yolo, Colusa and Lake. They are cutting back underbrush to make fire-blocking tracts, and dropping water and flame retardant from nearly two dozen aircraft that fly through the smoky sky. But the fire is still only 20 percent contained, according to fire officials, and the flames are surging with unusual speed. \u201cI\u2019ve got 30 years in, and in the last 10 years I have seen fire behavior that I had never seen in my entire career,\u201d said Capt. Ron Oatman, a public information officer for Cal Fire, the state firefighting operation, and a longtime wild-land firefighter. For example, he said, on Saturday the Rocky Fire grew by 22,000 acres, a plot of land that computer models indicated would take about a week to burn. But that plot was consumed in five hours. In the last three years, rain levels in California have been 24 to 30 inches below normal, according to the National Weather Service\u2019s Climate Prediction Center, meaning the state has been missing about two years\u2019 worth of rainfall. The drought has sapped moisture from underbrush and thick trees, dampness that would typically retard a fire.", "answer": "24 to 30 inches below normal", "sentence": "In the last three years, rain levels in California have been 24 to 30 inches below normal , according to the National Weather Service\u2019s Climate Prediction Center, meaning the state has been missing about two years\u2019 worth of rainfall.", "paragraph_sentence": "LAKEPORT, Calif. \u2014 As firefighters on Wednesday embarked on their sixth day of battling the largest of the many wildfires that have flared across the state, fire officials said the Rocky Fire, which has grown to consume nearly 70,000 acres here in the northern reaches of wine country, was still nowhere near under control and may not be until perhaps Monday. The Rocky Fire, which was impeded slightly by humid overnight conditions, has already defied firefighters\u2019 expectations for how such blazes typically behave, and has crossed highways, fire lines and other barriers meant to contain it. Feeding on tinder-dry terrain and woodlands that have been parched by drought, the Rocky Fire is now 106 square miles and has forced the evacuation of 1,480 people; about 13,000 have been urged to leave their homes. More than 3,840 firefighters are deployed across the uneven landscape of several counties, including Yolo, Colusa and Lake. They are cutting back underbrush to make fire-blocking tracts, and dropping water and flame retardant from nearly two dozen aircraft that fly through the smoky sky. But the fire is still only 20 percent contained, according to fire officials, and the flames are surging with unusual speed. \u201cI\u2019ve got 30 years in, and in the last 10 years I have seen fire behavior that I had never seen in my entire career,\u201d said Capt. Ron Oatman, a public information officer for Cal Fire, the state firefighting operation, and a longtime wild-land firefighter. For example, he said, on Saturday the Rocky Fire grew by 22,000 acres, a plot of land that computer models indicated would take about a week to burn. But that plot was consumed in five hours. In the last three years, rain levels in California have been 24 to 30 inches below normal , according to the National Weather Service\u2019s Climate Prediction Center, meaning the state has been missing about two years\u2019 worth of rainfall. The drought has sapped moisture from underbrush and thick trees, dampness that would typically retard a fire.", "paragraph_answer": "LAKEPORT, Calif. \u2014 As firefighters on Wednesday embarked on their sixth day of battling the largest of the many wildfires that have flared across the state, fire officials said the Rocky Fire, which has grown to consume nearly 70,000 acres here in the northern reaches of wine country, was still nowhere near under control and may not be until perhaps Monday. The Rocky Fire, which was impeded slightly by humid overnight conditions, has already defied firefighters\u2019 expectations for how such blazes typically behave, and has crossed highways, fire lines and other barriers meant to contain it. Feeding on tinder-dry terrain and woodlands that have been parched by drought, the Rocky Fire is now 106 square miles and has forced the evacuation of 1,480 people; about 13,000 have been urged to leave their homes. More than 3,840 firefighters are deployed across the uneven landscape of several counties, including Yolo, Colusa and Lake. They are cutting back underbrush to make fire-blocking tracts, and dropping water and flame retardant from nearly two dozen aircraft that fly through the smoky sky. But the fire is still only 20 percent contained, according to fire officials, and the flames are surging with unusual speed. \u201cI\u2019ve got 30 years in, and in the last 10 years I have seen fire behavior that I had never seen in my entire career,\u201d said Capt. Ron Oatman, a public information officer for Cal Fire, the state firefighting operation, and a longtime wild-land firefighter. For example, he said, on Saturday the Rocky Fire grew by 22,000 acres, a plot of land that computer models indicated would take about a week to burn. But that plot was consumed in five hours. In the last three years, rain levels in California have been 24 to 30 inches below normal , according to the National Weather Service\u2019s Climate Prediction Center, meaning the state has been missing about two years\u2019 worth of rainfall. The drought has sapped moisture from underbrush and thick trees, dampness that would typically retard a fire.", "sentence_answer": "In the last three years, rain levels in California have been 24 to 30 inches below normal , according to the National Weather Service\u2019s Climate Prediction Center, meaning the state has been missing about two years\u2019 worth of rainfall.", "paragraph_id": "5d702cd9c8e4820a9b66da4f"} +{"question": "Which nuts are highly regarded in Iran?", "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": "pistachios", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d701d5cc8e4820a9b66c8f7"} +{"question": "Did Dawkins listen to advice?", "paragraph": "With a sculpted physique, inordinate strength and an unusually accurate jump shot for a man his size, Dawkins was expected to be a star in the league for years to come, drawing comparisons to Wilt Chamberlain. He was mischievous and flamboyant \u2014 he was known to wear an electric lime-green suit \u2014 and fond of rhyming and hyperbolic fantasy musings. (He invented the Planet Lovetron business when he was in high school.) But immature, not technically adept around the basket and resistant to the entreaties of his coaches, Gene Shue and later Billy Cunningham \u2014 \u201cI was uncoachable,\u201d he admitted years later \u2014 he began his career in the shadows of other N.B.A. big men like Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Bob Lanier and Wesley Unseld.", "answer": "\u201cI was uncoachable,\u201d", "sentence": "But immature, not technically adept around the basket and resistant to the entreaties of his coaches, Gene Shue and later Billy Cunningham \u2014 \u201cI was uncoachable,\u201d he admitted years later \u2014 he began his career in the shadows of other N.B.A. big men like Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Bob Lanier and Wesley Unseld.", "paragraph_sentence": "With a sculpted physique, inordinate strength and an unusually accurate jump shot for a man his size, Dawkins was expected to be a star in the league for years to come, drawing comparisons to Wilt Chamberlain. He was mischievous and flamboyant \u2014 he was known to wear an electric lime-green suit \u2014 and fond of rhyming and hyperbolic fantasy musings. (He invented the Planet Lovetron business when he was in high school.) But immature, not technically adept around the basket and resistant to the entreaties of his coaches, Gene Shue and later Billy Cunningham \u2014 \u201cI was uncoachable,\u201d he admitted years later \u2014 he began his career in the shadows of other N.B.A. big men like Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Bob Lanier and Wesley Unseld. ", "paragraph_answer": "With a sculpted physique, inordinate strength and an unusually accurate jump shot for a man his size, Dawkins was expected to be a star in the league for years to come, drawing comparisons to Wilt Chamberlain. He was mischievous and flamboyant \u2014 he was known to wear an electric lime-green suit \u2014 and fond of rhyming and hyperbolic fantasy musings. (He invented the Planet Lovetron business when he was in high school.) But immature, not technically adept around the basket and resistant to the entreaties of his coaches, Gene Shue and later Billy Cunningham \u2014 \u201cI was uncoachable,\u201d he admitted years later \u2014 he began his career in the shadows of other N.B.A. big men like Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Bob Lanier and Wesley Unseld.", "sentence_answer": "But immature, not technically adept around the basket and resistant to the entreaties of his coaches, Gene Shue and later Billy Cunningham \u2014 \u201cI was uncoachable,\u201d he admitted years later \u2014 he began his career in the shadows of other N.B.A. big men like Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Bob Lanier and Wesley Unseld.", "paragraph_id": "5d704c45c8e4820a9b66e9ef"} +{"question": "Where did the student go for education?", "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": "Whitestone Academy", "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d702dd7c8e4820a9b66db4a"} +{"question": "What is the difficulty with the current system the country has?", "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 current system makes it hard to govern the country without elaborate deals", "sentence": "That is important because the current system makes it hard to govern the country without elaborate deals .", "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": "That is important because the current system makes it hard to govern the country without elaborate deals .", "paragraph_id": "5d702dd6c8e4820a9b66db39"} +{"question": "What is the name of what you should go through every chord of?", "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": "score", "sentence": "On a practical level it means you have to go through every chord when you go through a score .", "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": "On a practical level it means you have to go through every chord when you go through a score .", "paragraph_id": "5d705d54c8e4820a9b66ef69"} +{"question": "When will the stock come in handy?", "paragraph": "Are there some turkey wings in the butcher\u2019s aisle? Get a few of those and you can make some stock tomorrow afternoon. It will come in handy \u2014 and how \u2014 on Thursday.", "answer": "Thursday", "sentence": "It will come in handy \u2014 and how \u2014 on Thursday .", "paragraph_sentence": "Are there some turkey wings in the butcher\u2019s aisle? Get a few of those and you can make some stock tomorrow afternoon. It will come in handy \u2014 and how \u2014 on Thursday . ", "paragraph_answer": "Are there some turkey wings in the butcher\u2019s aisle? Get a few of those and you can make some stock tomorrow afternoon. It will come in handy \u2014 and how \u2014 on Thursday .", "sentence_answer": "It will come in handy \u2014 and how \u2014 on Thursday .", "paragraph_id": "5d7039b8c8e4820a9b66e1bd"} +{"question": "How many pistachio trees have been lost in Kerman?", "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": "More than 15 percent", "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.", "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": " 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.", "paragraph_id": "5d701e80c8e4820a9b66ca1c"} +{"question": "What team did Pep Guardiola coach?", "paragraph": "LONDON \u2014 Where now for Pep Guardiola and Bayern Munich? The coach and the club have been dodging the wrong questions this week as the club was blasted out of the Champions League by a Spanish opponent for the second straight year. Tuesday\u2019s victory was rendered Pyrrhic from the moment that the Barcelona front three sliced open Bayern\u2019s defense twice in the first half, allowing the Catalan club to rest its important players for other contests to come. It was right for Guardiola and Munich\u2019s chairman, Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, to say that their team went out with dignity against \u201cprobably the best side in the world.\u201d", "answer": "Bayern Munich", "sentence": "LONDON \u2014 Where now for Pep Guardiola and Bayern Munich ?", "paragraph_sentence": " LONDON \u2014 Where now for Pep Guardiola and Bayern Munich ? The coach and the club have been dodging the wrong questions this week as the club was blasted out of the Champions League by a Spanish opponent for the second straight year. Tuesday\u2019s victory was rendered Pyrrhic from the moment that the Barcelona front three sliced open Bayern\u2019s defense twice in the first half, allowing the Catalan club to rest its important players for other contests to come. It was right for Guardiola and Munich\u2019s chairman, Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, to say that their team went out with dignity against \u201cprobably the best side in the world.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "LONDON \u2014 Where now for Pep Guardiola and Bayern Munich ? The coach and the club have been dodging the wrong questions this week as the club was blasted out of the Champions League by a Spanish opponent for the second straight year. Tuesday\u2019s victory was rendered Pyrrhic from the moment that the Barcelona front three sliced open Bayern\u2019s defense twice in the first half, allowing the Catalan club to rest its important players for other contests to come. It was right for Guardiola and Munich\u2019s chairman, Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, to say that their team went out with dignity against \u201cprobably the best side in the world.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "LONDON \u2014 Where now for Pep Guardiola and Bayern Munich ?", "paragraph_id": "5d701e71c8e4820a9b66c9fe"} +{"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": "5d703385c8e4820a9b66deaa"} +{"question": "Who was the producer of Finding Neverland", "paragraph": "Gallows humor about being passed over by the Tony Awards has become a bit of a theme this year. The awards show, on June 7, opened with Kristin Chenoweth and Alan Cumming teasing a producer, Harvey Weinstein, about the lack of nominations for his big Broadway adventure, \u201cFinding Neverland,\u201d and closed with Larry David and Jason Alexander in an extended riff on the lack of nominations for their show, \u201cFish in the Dark.\u201d The producers of those shows can afford to make light of their losses because their productions are doing well financially. \u201cRotten!\u201d was tapped to perform the first musical number on the Tonys broadcast, which helped spur ticket sales of more than $750,000 two days in a row, and \u201cRotten!,\u201d \u201cNeverland\u201d and \u201cFish\u201d have each been grossing more than $1 million a week \u2014 a strong performance for Broadway.", "answer": "Harvey Weinstein", "sentence": "The awards show, on June 7, opened with Kristin Chenoweth and Alan Cumming teasing a producer, Harvey Weinstein , about the lack of nominations for his big Broadway adventure, \u201cFinding Neverland,\u201d and closed with Larry David and Jason Alexander in an extended riff on the lack of nominations for their show, \u201cFish in the Dark.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Gallows humor about being passed over by the Tony Awards has become a bit of a theme this year. The awards show, on June 7, opened with Kristin Chenoweth and Alan Cumming teasing a producer, Harvey Weinstein , about the lack of nominations for his big Broadway adventure, \u201cFinding Neverland,\u201d and closed with Larry David and Jason Alexander in an extended riff on the lack of nominations for their show, \u201cFish in the Dark.\u201d The producers of those shows can afford to make light of their losses because their productions are doing well financially. \u201cRotten!\u201d was tapped to perform the first musical number on the Tonys broadcast, which helped spur ticket sales of more than $750,000 two days in a row, and \u201cRotten!,\u201d \u201cNeverland\u201d and \u201cFish\u201d have each been grossing more than $1 million a week \u2014 a strong performance for Broadway.", "paragraph_answer": "Gallows humor about being passed over by the Tony Awards has become a bit of a theme this year. The awards show, on June 7, opened with Kristin Chenoweth and Alan Cumming teasing a producer, Harvey Weinstein , about the lack of nominations for his big Broadway adventure, \u201cFinding Neverland,\u201d and closed with Larry David and Jason Alexander in an extended riff on the lack of nominations for their show, \u201cFish in the Dark.\u201d The producers of those shows can afford to make light of their losses because their productions are doing well financially. \u201cRotten!\u201d was tapped to perform the first musical number on the Tonys broadcast, which helped spur ticket sales of more than $750,000 two days in a row, and \u201cRotten!,\u201d \u201cNeverland\u201d and \u201cFish\u201d have each been grossing more than $1 million a week \u2014 a strong performance for Broadway.", "sentence_answer": "The awards show, on June 7, opened with Kristin Chenoweth and Alan Cumming teasing a producer, Harvey Weinstein , about the lack of nominations for his big Broadway adventure, \u201cFinding Neverland,\u201d and closed with Larry David and Jason Alexander in an extended riff on the lack of nominations for their show, \u201cFish in the Dark.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d700aa6c8e4820a9b66b4b2"} +{"question": "Who (along with allies) enlisted the design company that estimated the demolition costs?", "paragraph": "\u201cLegislators owe it to the people of the county to listen to his plan, to test the assumptions and to compare it to the plan they are in such a hurry to implement,\u201d the editorial argued. The lawmakers should have second thoughts. Bids for demolition came in last week at nearly twice the price estimated by the design firm, Clark Patterson Lee, that Mr. Neuhaus and his allies have enlisted. Instead of $3.9 million, as Clark Patterson predicted, the two bids topped $7.4 million and $7.7 million, The Times Herald-Record reported on Saturday. Officials backing demolition say that debates over the Rudolph center have gone on too long. Entertaining an alternative now would mean more delays. It\u2019s a curious argument, since county legislators themselves are the ones who have the power to expedite, or drag out, consideration of Mr. Kaufman\u2019s plan. As the newspaper\u2019s editorial also noted, \u201cThis urge to move on has surfaced repeatedly.\u201d Each time, local officials have \u201cresisted, and each time they avoided doing something irrevocable and more costly than necessary,\u201d it said. \u201cThis time is no different.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Neuhaus", "sentence": "Bids for demolition came in last week at nearly twice the price estimated by the design firm, Clark Patterson Lee, that Mr. Neuhaus and his allies have enlisted.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cLegislators owe it to the people of the county to listen to his plan, to test the assumptions and to compare it to the plan they are in such a hurry to implement,\u201d the editorial argued. The lawmakers should have second thoughts. Bids for demolition came in last week at nearly twice the price estimated by the design firm, Clark Patterson Lee, that Mr. Neuhaus and his allies have enlisted. Instead of $3.9 million, as Clark Patterson predicted, the two bids topped $7.4 million and $7.7 million, The Times Herald-Record reported on Saturday. Officials backing demolition say that debates over the Rudolph center have gone on too long. Entertaining an alternative now would mean more delays. It\u2019s a curious argument, since county legislators themselves are the ones who have the power to expedite, or drag out, consideration of Mr. Kaufman\u2019s plan. As the newspaper\u2019s editorial also noted, \u201cThis urge to move on has surfaced repeatedly.\u201d Each time, local officials have \u201cresisted, and each time they avoided doing something irrevocable and more costly than necessary,\u201d it said. \u201cThis time is no different.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cLegislators owe it to the people of the county to listen to his plan, to test the assumptions and to compare it to the plan they are in such a hurry to implement,\u201d the editorial argued. The lawmakers should have second thoughts. Bids for demolition came in last week at nearly twice the price estimated by the design firm, Clark Patterson Lee, that Mr. Neuhaus and his allies have enlisted. Instead of $3.9 million, as Clark Patterson predicted, the two bids topped $7.4 million and $7.7 million, The Times Herald-Record reported on Saturday. Officials backing demolition say that debates over the Rudolph center have gone on too long. Entertaining an alternative now would mean more delays. It\u2019s a curious argument, since county legislators themselves are the ones who have the power to expedite, or drag out, consideration of Mr. Kaufman\u2019s plan. As the newspaper\u2019s editorial also noted, \u201cThis urge to move on has surfaced repeatedly.\u201d Each time, local officials have \u201cresisted, and each time they avoided doing something irrevocable and more costly than necessary,\u201d it said. \u201cThis time is no different.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Bids for demolition came in last week at nearly twice the price estimated by the design firm, Clark Patterson Lee, that Mr. Neuhaus and his allies have enlisted.", "paragraph_id": "5d7047cfc8e4820a9b66e8ad"} +{"question": "What counry violated internaional law?", "paragraph": "\u201cToday\u2019s action underscores our resolve to maintain pressure on Russia for violating international law and fueling the conflict in eastern Ukraine,\u201d said John E. Smith, the acting director of the Office of Foreign Assets Control at the Treasury Department. \u201cOur message is clear: We will continue to act to ensure the effectiveness of our sanctions.\u201d But senior administration officials said the new actions were a routine step, and not an escalation of economic sanctions aimed at pressuring Mr. Putin and the Russian government.", "answer": "Russia", "sentence": "\u201cToday\u2019s action underscores our resolve to maintain pressure on Russia for violating international law and fueling the conflict in eastern Ukraine,\u201d said John E. Smith, the acting director of the Office of Foreign Assets Control at the Treasury Department.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cToday\u2019s action underscores our resolve to maintain pressure on Russia for violating international law and fueling the conflict in eastern Ukraine,\u201d said John E. Smith, the acting director of the Office of Foreign Assets Control at the Treasury Department. \u201cOur message is clear: We will continue to act to ensure the effectiveness of our sanctions.\u201d But senior administration officials said the new actions were a routine step, and not an escalation of economic sanctions aimed at pressuring Mr. Putin and the Russian government.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cToday\u2019s action underscores our resolve to maintain pressure on Russia for violating international law and fueling the conflict in eastern Ukraine,\u201d said John E. Smith, the acting director of the Office of Foreign Assets Control at the Treasury Department. \u201cOur message is clear: We will continue to act to ensure the effectiveness of our sanctions.\u201d But senior administration officials said the new actions were a routine step, and not an escalation of economic sanctions aimed at pressuring Mr. Putin and the Russian government.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cToday\u2019s action underscores our resolve to maintain pressure on Russia for violating international law and fueling the conflict in eastern Ukraine,\u201d said John E. Smith, the acting director of the Office of Foreign Assets Control at the Treasury Department.", "paragraph_id": "5d706211c8e4820a9b66f049"} +{"question": "What was amount of questions that made Mr Putin linger?", "paragraph": "\u201cThere is no doubt that he is a very bright and talented man,\u201d the Russian leader said. \u201cIt is not our business to assess his merits; that is up to the U.S. voters. But he is an absolute leader of the presidential race.\u201d In Russian, the word for \u201cbright\u201d has several meanings, including outstanding, brilliant and even gaudy. Beneath the pyrotechnics, Mr. Putin seemed most concerned with driving home the point to his domestic audience that Russia\u2019s battered economy had bottomed out, an indication that Russia\u2019s recession had his full attention. Peppered with dozens of questions, Mr. Putin lingered, as he did at last year\u2019s session, on those that allowed him to reassure Russians that their living standards were not imperiled.", "answer": "dozens of questions", "sentence": "Peppered with dozens of questions , Mr. Putin lingered, as he did at last year\u2019s session, on those that allowed him to reassure Russians that their living standards were not imperiled.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThere is no doubt that he is a very bright and talented man,\u201d the Russian leader said. \u201cIt is not our business to assess his merits; that is up to the U.S. voters. But he is an absolute leader of the presidential race.\u201d In Russian, the word for \u201cbright\u201d has several meanings, including outstanding, brilliant and even gaudy. Beneath the pyrotechnics, Mr. Putin seemed most concerned with driving home the point to his domestic audience that Russia\u2019s battered economy had bottomed out, an indication that Russia\u2019s recession had his full attention. Peppered with dozens of questions , Mr. Putin lingered, as he did at last year\u2019s session, on those that allowed him to reassure Russians that their living standards were not imperiled. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThere is no doubt that he is a very bright and talented man,\u201d the Russian leader said. \u201cIt is not our business to assess his merits; that is up to the U.S. voters. But he is an absolute leader of the presidential race.\u201d In Russian, the word for \u201cbright\u201d has several meanings, including outstanding, brilliant and even gaudy. Beneath the pyrotechnics, Mr. Putin seemed most concerned with driving home the point to his domestic audience that Russia\u2019s battered economy had bottomed out, an indication that Russia\u2019s recession had his full attention. Peppered with dozens of questions , Mr. Putin lingered, as he did at last year\u2019s session, on those that allowed him to reassure Russians that their living standards were not imperiled.", "sentence_answer": "Peppered with dozens of questions , Mr. Putin lingered, as he did at last year\u2019s session, on those that allowed him to reassure Russians that their living standards were not imperiled.", "paragraph_id": "5d7012e9c8e4820a9b66bf49"} +{"question": "What color was the dribble of soaked basil seeds on the plate?", "paragraph": "The appetizers were more perplexing. As a lot, they looked more interesting than they were. Seared scallops got almost no assistance from a bright orange raw-carrot sauce. It didn\u2019t have the sweetness of cooked carrots, which might have underlined the shellfish\u2019s own sweetness. Maybe the chefs just like the color. This seemed to be the case with a salad of pink watermelon with green needles of okra. The flavors stayed stubbornly separate, the okra contributing only its interior sliminess. Inexplicably, the chefs also spurted a gray dribble of soaked basil seeds on the plate. It was a real goo party.", "answer": "gray", "sentence": "Inexplicably, the chefs also spurted a gray dribble of soaked basil seeds on the plate.", "paragraph_sentence": "The appetizers were more perplexing. As a lot, they looked more interesting than they were. Seared scallops got almost no assistance from a bright orange raw-carrot sauce. It didn\u2019t have the sweetness of cooked carrots, which might have underlined the shellfish\u2019s own sweetness. Maybe the chefs just like the color. This seemed to be the case with a salad of pink watermelon with green needles of okra. The flavors stayed stubbornly separate, the okra contributing only its interior sliminess. Inexplicably, the chefs also spurted a gray dribble of soaked basil seeds on the plate. It was a real goo party.", "paragraph_answer": "The appetizers were more perplexing. As a lot, they looked more interesting than they were. Seared scallops got almost no assistance from a bright orange raw-carrot sauce. It didn\u2019t have the sweetness of cooked carrots, which might have underlined the shellfish\u2019s own sweetness. Maybe the chefs just like the color. This seemed to be the case with a salad of pink watermelon with green needles of okra. The flavors stayed stubbornly separate, the okra contributing only its interior sliminess. Inexplicably, the chefs also spurted a gray dribble of soaked basil seeds on the plate. It was a real goo party.", "sentence_answer": "Inexplicably, the chefs also spurted a gray dribble of soaked basil seeds on the plate.", "paragraph_id": "5d701f8bc8e4820a9b66cb05"} +{"question": "what year did mullin win player of the year?", "paragraph": "\u201cYou would know just by his toughness and his moxie,\u201d said Kemba Walker, a star point guard for the Charlotte Hornets who was born in the Bronx, gained national prominence at Rice High School in Harlem and led the University of Connecticut to an N.C.A.A. title in 2011. Brooklyn-born Chris Mullin, who played his high school ball in the city and was the N.C.A.A.\u2019s player of the year for St. John\u2019s in Queens in 1985 before becoming an N.B.A. All-Star, said he often watches college games and finds himself thinking a player is likely to be from his old stamping grounds based on the way he carries himself on the court.", "answer": "N.C.A.A.\u2019s player of the year for St. John\u2019s in Queens in 1985", "sentence": "the N.C.A.A.\u2019s player of the year for St. John\u2019s in Queens in 1985 before becoming an N.B.A. All-Star, said he often watches college games and finds himself thinking a player is likely to be from his old stamping grounds based on the way he carries himself on the court.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cYou would know just by his toughness and his moxie,\u201d said Kemba Walker, a star point guard for the Charlotte Hornets who was born in the Bronx, gained national prominence at Rice High School in Harlem and led the University of Connecticut to an N.C.A.A. title in 2011. Brooklyn-born Chris Mullin, who played his high school ball in the city and was the N.C.A.A.\u2019s player of the year for St. John\u2019s in Queens in 1985 before becoming an N.B.A. All-Star, said he often watches college games and finds himself thinking a player is likely to be from his old stamping grounds based on the way he carries himself on the court. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cYou would know just by his toughness and his moxie,\u201d said Kemba Walker, a star point guard for the Charlotte Hornets who was born in the Bronx, gained national prominence at Rice High School in Harlem and led the University of Connecticut to an N.C.A.A. title in 2011. Brooklyn-born Chris Mullin, who played his high school ball in the city and was the N.C.A.A.\u2019s player of the year for St. John\u2019s in Queens in 1985 before becoming an N.B.A. All-Star, said he often watches college games and finds himself thinking a player is likely to be from his old stamping grounds based on the way he carries himself on the court.", "sentence_answer": "the N.C.A.A.\u2019s player of the year for St. John\u2019s in Queens in 1985 before becoming an N.B.A. All-Star, said he often watches college games and finds himself thinking a player is likely to be from his old stamping grounds based on the way he carries himself on the court.", "paragraph_id": "5d7023f2c8e4820a9b66d02d"} +{"question": "How big is Rocky Fire?", "paragraph": "LAKEPORT, Calif. \u2014 As firefighters on Wednesday embarked on their sixth day of battling the largest of the many wildfires that have flared across the state, fire officials said the Rocky Fire, which has grown to consume nearly 70,000 acres here in the northern reaches of wine country, was still nowhere near under control and may not be until perhaps Monday. The Rocky Fire, which was impeded slightly by humid overnight conditions, has already defied firefighters\u2019 expectations for how such blazes typically behave, and has crossed highways, fire lines and other barriers meant to contain it. Feeding on tinder-dry terrain and woodlands that have been parched by drought, the Rocky Fire is now 106 square miles and has forced the evacuation of 1,480 people; about 13,000 have been urged to leave their homes. More than 3,840 firefighters are deployed across the uneven landscape of several counties, including Yolo, Colusa and Lake. They are cutting back underbrush to make fire-blocking tracts, and dropping water and flame retardant from nearly two dozen aircraft that fly through the smoky sky. But the fire is still only 20 percent contained, according to fire officials, and the flames are surging with unusual speed. \u201cI\u2019ve got 30 years in, and in the last 10 years I have seen fire behavior that I had never seen in my entire career,\u201d said Capt. Ron Oatman, a public information officer for Cal Fire, the state firefighting operation, and a longtime wild-land firefighter. For example, he said, on Saturday the Rocky Fire grew by 22,000 acres, a plot of land that computer models indicated would take about a week to burn. But that plot was consumed in five hours. In the last three years, rain levels in California have been 24 to 30 inches below normal, according to the National Weather Service\u2019s Climate Prediction Center, meaning the state has been missing about two years\u2019 worth of rainfall. The drought has sapped moisture from underbrush and thick trees, dampness that would typically retard a fire.", "answer": "106 square miles", "sentence": "Feeding on tinder-dry terrain and woodlands that have been parched by drought, the Rocky Fire is now 106 square miles and has forced the evacuation of 1,480 people; about 13,000 have been urged to leave their homes.", "paragraph_sentence": "LAKEPORT, Calif. \u2014 As firefighters on Wednesday embarked on their sixth day of battling the largest of the many wildfires that have flared across the state, fire officials said the Rocky Fire, which has grown to consume nearly 70,000 acres here in the northern reaches of wine country, was still nowhere near under control and may not be until perhaps Monday. The Rocky Fire, which was impeded slightly by humid overnight conditions, has already defied firefighters\u2019 expectations for how such blazes typically behave, and has crossed highways, fire lines and other barriers meant to contain it. Feeding on tinder-dry terrain and woodlands that have been parched by drought, the Rocky Fire is now 106 square miles and has forced the evacuation of 1,480 people; about 13,000 have been urged to leave their homes. More than 3,840 firefighters are deployed across the uneven landscape of several counties, including Yolo, Colusa and Lake. They are cutting back underbrush to make fire-blocking tracts, and dropping water and flame retardant from nearly two dozen aircraft that fly through the smoky sky. But the fire is still only 20 percent contained, according to fire officials, and the flames are surging with unusual speed. \u201cI\u2019ve got 30 years in, and in the last 10 years I have seen fire behavior that I had never seen in my entire career,\u201d said Capt. Ron Oatman, a public information officer for Cal Fire, the state firefighting operation, and a longtime wild-land firefighter. For example, he said, on Saturday the Rocky Fire grew by 22,000 acres, a plot of land that computer models indicated would take about a week to burn. But that plot was consumed in five hours. In the last three years, rain levels in California have been 24 to 30 inches below normal, according to the National Weather Service\u2019s Climate Prediction Center, meaning the state has been missing about two years\u2019 worth of rainfall. The drought has sapped moisture from underbrush and thick trees, dampness that would typically retard a fire.", "paragraph_answer": "LAKEPORT, Calif. \u2014 As firefighters on Wednesday embarked on their sixth day of battling the largest of the many wildfires that have flared across the state, fire officials said the Rocky Fire, which has grown to consume nearly 70,000 acres here in the northern reaches of wine country, was still nowhere near under control and may not be until perhaps Monday. The Rocky Fire, which was impeded slightly by humid overnight conditions, has already defied firefighters\u2019 expectations for how such blazes typically behave, and has crossed highways, fire lines and other barriers meant to contain it. Feeding on tinder-dry terrain and woodlands that have been parched by drought, the Rocky Fire is now 106 square miles and has forced the evacuation of 1,480 people; about 13,000 have been urged to leave their homes. More than 3,840 firefighters are deployed across the uneven landscape of several counties, including Yolo, Colusa and Lake. They are cutting back underbrush to make fire-blocking tracts, and dropping water and flame retardant from nearly two dozen aircraft that fly through the smoky sky. But the fire is still only 20 percent contained, according to fire officials, and the flames are surging with unusual speed. \u201cI\u2019ve got 30 years in, and in the last 10 years I have seen fire behavior that I had never seen in my entire career,\u201d said Capt. Ron Oatman, a public information officer for Cal Fire, the state firefighting operation, and a longtime wild-land firefighter. For example, he said, on Saturday the Rocky Fire grew by 22,000 acres, a plot of land that computer models indicated would take about a week to burn. But that plot was consumed in five hours. In the last three years, rain levels in California have been 24 to 30 inches below normal, according to the National Weather Service\u2019s Climate Prediction Center, meaning the state has been missing about two years\u2019 worth of rainfall. The drought has sapped moisture from underbrush and thick trees, dampness that would typically retard a fire.", "sentence_answer": "Feeding on tinder-dry terrain and woodlands that have been parched by drought, the Rocky Fire is now 106 square miles and has forced the evacuation of 1,480 people; about 13,000 have been urged to leave their homes.", "paragraph_id": "5d702cd9c8e4820a9b66da4d"} +{"question": "What disease did Natalie have?", "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": "pneumonia", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700703c8e4820a9b66acb2"} +{"question": "who took the lead in the first-round of the Texas Open?", "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": "Charley Hoffman", "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": "5d700659c8e4820a9b66ab1b"} +{"question": "How would you feel if you thought our reason is not great?", "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": "amazed life has managed to be as sweet as it is", "sentence": "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 .", "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": "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 .", "paragraph_id": "5d7005d2c8e4820a9b66a9a9"} +{"question": "On what day of the week will \"Paris\" premier?", "paragraph": "And it\u2019s not yet noon in \u201cParis,\u201d a six-part French mini-series that traverses 24 hours as a dozen seemingly random residents dodge, dart and finally collide. Created by the writer Virginie Brac and the director Gilles Bannier of the labyrinthine crime drama \u201cSpiral,\u201d and starting Tuesday, Nov. 3, at 11 p.m. Eastern on TV5Monde, it\u2019s a moody mashup of cool and grit featuring the C\u00e9sar-winning actor \u00c9ric Caravaca, the Swiss model Julie Ordon and the French rapper Kool Shen; a score by the keyboardist Herv\u00e9 Salters; and a graphic intro that soars through the innards of the Eiffel Tower. Oh \u2014 and subtitles.", "answer": "Tuesday", "sentence": "Created by the writer Virginie Brac and the director Gilles Bannier of the labyrinthine crime drama \u201cSpiral,\u201d and starting Tuesday , Nov. 3, at 11 p.m. Eastern on TV5Monde, it\u2019s a moody mashup of cool and grit featuring the C\u00e9sar-winning actor \u00c9ric Caravaca, the Swiss model Julie Ordon and the French rapper Kool Shen; a score by the keyboardist Herv\u00e9 Salters; and a graphic intro that soars through the innards of the Eiffel Tower.", "paragraph_sentence": "And it\u2019s not yet noon in \u201cParis,\u201d a six-part French mini-series that traverses 24 hours as a dozen seemingly random residents dodge, dart and finally collide. Created by the writer Virginie Brac and the director Gilles Bannier of the labyrinthine crime drama \u201cSpiral,\u201d and starting Tuesday , Nov. 3, at 11 p.m. Eastern on TV5Monde, it\u2019s a moody mashup of cool and grit featuring the C\u00e9sar-winning actor \u00c9ric Caravaca, the Swiss model Julie Ordon and the French rapper Kool Shen; a score by the keyboardist Herv\u00e9 Salters; and a graphic intro that soars through the innards of the Eiffel Tower. Oh \u2014 and subtitles.", "paragraph_answer": "And it\u2019s not yet noon in \u201cParis,\u201d a six-part French mini-series that traverses 24 hours as a dozen seemingly random residents dodge, dart and finally collide. Created by the writer Virginie Brac and the director Gilles Bannier of the labyrinthine crime drama \u201cSpiral,\u201d and starting Tuesday , Nov. 3, at 11 p.m. Eastern on TV5Monde, it\u2019s a moody mashup of cool and grit featuring the C\u00e9sar-winning actor \u00c9ric Caravaca, the Swiss model Julie Ordon and the French rapper Kool Shen; a score by the keyboardist Herv\u00e9 Salters; and a graphic intro that soars through the innards of the Eiffel Tower. Oh \u2014 and subtitles.", "sentence_answer": "Created by the writer Virginie Brac and the director Gilles Bannier of the labyrinthine crime drama \u201cSpiral,\u201d and starting Tuesday , Nov. 3, at 11 p.m. Eastern on TV5Monde, it\u2019s a moody mashup of cool and grit featuring the C\u00e9sar-winning actor \u00c9ric Caravaca, the Swiss model Julie Ordon and the French rapper Kool Shen; a score by the keyboardist Herv\u00e9 Salters; and a graphic intro that soars through the innards of the Eiffel Tower.", "paragraph_id": "5d700b2ac8e4820a9b66b59c"} +{"question": "What was the purpose of the Indiegogo crowdfunding campaign?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt\u2019s scattered, we\u2019re still sorting through\u201d about eight boxes of new material, said Philip Hallman, curator of the university\u2019s Screen Arts Mavericks and Makers collection. The papers arrived last week from Croatia, where they had been kept by Ms. Kodar, Mr. Hallman said. University officials declined to disclose the purchase price of the papers. The discovery comes amid renewed interest in Welles coinciding with the 100th anniversary of his birth earlier this month. Most prominently, a group of producers are working to complete \u201cThe Other Side of the Wind,\u201d a film shot by Welles in the 1970s. The producers unveiled an Indiegogo crowdfunding campaign on May 7 to raise funds for editing, music and other postproduction costs.", "answer": "editing, music and other postproduction costs.", "sentence": "The producers unveiled an Indiegogo crowdfunding campaign on May 7 to raise funds for editing, music and other postproduction costs.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s scattered, we\u2019re still sorting through\u201d about eight boxes of new material, said Philip Hallman, curator of the university\u2019s Screen Arts Mavericks and Makers collection. The papers arrived last week from Croatia, where they had been kept by Ms. Kodar, Mr. Hallman said. University officials declined to disclose the purchase price of the papers. The discovery comes amid renewed interest in Welles coinciding with the 100th anniversary of his birth earlier this month. Most prominently, a group of producers are working to complete \u201cThe Other Side of the Wind,\u201d a film shot by Welles in the 1970s. The producers unveiled an Indiegogo crowdfunding campaign on May 7 to raise funds for editing, music and other postproduction costs. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s scattered, we\u2019re still sorting through\u201d about eight boxes of new material, said Philip Hallman, curator of the university\u2019s Screen Arts Mavericks and Makers collection. The papers arrived last week from Croatia, where they had been kept by Ms. Kodar, Mr. Hallman said. University officials declined to disclose the purchase price of the papers. The discovery comes amid renewed interest in Welles coinciding with the 100th anniversary of his birth earlier this month. Most prominently, a group of producers are working to complete \u201cThe Other Side of the Wind,\u201d a film shot by Welles in the 1970s. The producers unveiled an Indiegogo crowdfunding campaign on May 7 to raise funds for editing, music and other postproduction costs. ", "sentence_answer": "The producers unveiled an Indiegogo crowdfunding campaign on May 7 to raise funds for editing, music and other postproduction costs. ", "paragraph_id": "5d708439c8e4820a9b66f42f"} +{"question": "Where were hundred of migrants diverted to on Saturday?", "paragraph": "SPIELFELD, Austria \u2014 The small, alpine state of Slovenia became the latest focus of Europe\u2019s continuing migration crisis, when hundreds of migrants were diverted there on Saturday, after Hungary blocked a main transit route by closing its frontier with Croatia. The Slovenian prime minister, Miro Cerar, said that the army would be used to help deal with the flow of refugees from Croatia, who began arriving at the Slovenian border town of Petisovci and were being transferred to, and then across, the Austrian border.", "answer": "Slovenia", "sentence": "SPIELFELD, Austria \u2014 The small, alpine state of Slovenia became the latest focus of Europe\u2019s continuing migration crisis, when hundreds of migrants were diverted there on Saturday, after Hungary blocked a main transit route by closing its frontier with Croatia.", "paragraph_sentence": " SPIELFELD, Austria \u2014 The small, alpine state of Slovenia became the latest focus of Europe\u2019s continuing migration crisis, when hundreds of migrants were diverted there on Saturday, after Hungary blocked a main transit route by closing its frontier with Croatia. The Slovenian prime minister, Miro Cerar, said that the army would be used to help deal with the flow of refugees from Croatia, who began arriving at the Slovenian border town of Petisovci and were being transferred to, and then across, the Austrian border.", "paragraph_answer": "SPIELFELD, Austria \u2014 The small, alpine state of Slovenia became the latest focus of Europe\u2019s continuing migration crisis, when hundreds of migrants were diverted there on Saturday, after Hungary blocked a main transit route by closing its frontier with Croatia. The Slovenian prime minister, Miro Cerar, said that the army would be used to help deal with the flow of refugees from Croatia, who began arriving at the Slovenian border town of Petisovci and were being transferred to, and then across, the Austrian border.", "sentence_answer": "SPIELFELD, Austria \u2014 The small, alpine state of Slovenia became the latest focus of Europe\u2019s continuing migration crisis, when hundreds of migrants were diverted there on Saturday, after Hungary blocked a main transit route by closing its frontier with Croatia.", "paragraph_id": "5d701be3c8e4820a9b66c75f"} +{"question": "The voters with out a college degree supported which candidate?", "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": "Mr. Trump", "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": "5d70811cc8e4820a9b66f3df"} +{"question": "What is the name of the monk?", "paragraph": "Let\u2019s start with an update from our last episode, which you may recall concerned a battle between a monk and United Airlines. The confrontation between a tranquillity-seeking man and an immovable corporation proved irresistible to websites like Yahoo News, Gawker and Boing Boing, to name a few. And a reporter from a local TV station was dispatched to the Monastery of Christ in the Desert, in Abiquiu, N.M., where the monk, Brother Noah, was asked to repeat his not very hostile kiss-off to an unyielding United phone rep: \u201cThank you for speaking. God bless you. I will pray for you. But you have not been helpful.\u201d The column reverberated enough that the Haggler worried it had disturbed the otherwise placid life of the monastery. But Brother Noah emailed a few days after publication with reassuring words. \u201cI am sure that nobody enters a monastery to become an Internet meme,\u201d he wrote, \u201cbut the brothers and I are doing O.K.\u201d", "answer": "Brother Noah", "sentence": "And a reporter from a local TV station was dispatched to the Monastery of Christ in the Desert, in Abiquiu, N.M., where the monk, Brother Noah , was asked to repeat his not very hostile kiss-off to an unyielding United phone rep: \u201cThank you for speaking.", "paragraph_sentence": "Let\u2019s start with an update from our last episode, which you may recall concerned a battle between a monk and United Airlines. The confrontation between a tranquillity-seeking man and an immovable corporation proved irresistible to websites like Yahoo News, Gawker and Boing Boing, to name a few. And a reporter from a local TV station was dispatched to the Monastery of Christ in the Desert, in Abiquiu, N.M., where the monk, Brother Noah , was asked to repeat his not very hostile kiss-off to an unyielding United phone rep: \u201cThank you for speaking. God bless you. I will pray for you. But you have not been helpful.\u201d The column reverberated enough that the Haggler worried it had disturbed the otherwise placid life of the monastery. But Brother Noah emailed a few days after publication with reassuring words. \u201cI am sure that nobody enters a monastery to become an Internet meme,\u201d he wrote, \u201cbut the brothers and I are doing O.K.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Let\u2019s start with an update from our last episode, which you may recall concerned a battle between a monk and United Airlines. The confrontation between a tranquillity-seeking man and an immovable corporation proved irresistible to websites like Yahoo News, Gawker and Boing Boing, to name a few. And a reporter from a local TV station was dispatched to the Monastery of Christ in the Desert, in Abiquiu, N.M., where the monk, Brother Noah , was asked to repeat his not very hostile kiss-off to an unyielding United phone rep: \u201cThank you for speaking. God bless you. I will pray for you. But you have not been helpful.\u201d The column reverberated enough that the Haggler worried it had disturbed the otherwise placid life of the monastery. But Brother Noah emailed a few days after publication with reassuring words. \u201cI am sure that nobody enters a monastery to become an Internet meme,\u201d he wrote, \u201cbut the brothers and I are doing O.K.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "And a reporter from a local TV station was dispatched to the Monastery of Christ in the Desert, in Abiquiu, N.M., where the monk, Brother Noah , was asked to repeat his not very hostile kiss-off to an unyielding United phone rep: \u201cThank you for speaking.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026c5c8e4820a9b66d32a"} +{"question": "What unit are these patients in?", "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": "behavior unit", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d703555c8e4820a9b66df75"} +{"question": "Who was called Smiling Jack?", "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. Connell", "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": "5d7017f8c8e4820a9b66c3e7"} +{"question": "What is the name of the prison?", "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": "Clinton", "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": "5d707874c8e4820a9b66f2ce"} +{"question": "Pratt Institute's brick pathways lead through what?", "paragraph": "The boundaries of the neighborhood, which is about 0.6 square mile, are roughly Flushing Avenue to the north, Atlantic Avenue to the south, Vanderbilt Avenue to the west and Classon Avenue to the east. The United States Census Bureau\u2019s 2009-2013 American Community Survey estimated the population as 39 percent white, 36 percent black, 16 percent Hispanic and 5 percent Asian. The 2010 census showed a 149 percent increase in the white population over 2000 and a decline of 29 percent in the number of blacks. The architecture is a mix of wood-frame houses predating the Civil War, Italianate mansions, carriage houses, brownstones, midrise apartment buildings and three- to five-story brick rowhouses. Some are scrupulously restored while others are shedding paint. Here and there, a featureless tower pierces the sky. Pratt Institute is the neighborhood\u2019s centerpiece, its greensward campus\u2019s brick pathways braiding through a sculpture garden.", "answer": "sculpture garden", "sentence": "a sculpture garden .", "paragraph_sentence": "The boundaries of the neighborhood, which is about 0.6 square mile, are roughly Flushing Avenue to the north, Atlantic Avenue to the south, Vanderbilt Avenue to the west and Classon Avenue to the east. The United States Census Bureau\u2019s 2009-2013 American Community Survey estimated the population as 39 percent white, 36 percent black, 16 percent Hispanic and 5 percent Asian. The 2010 census showed a 149 percent increase in the white population over 2000 and a decline of 29 percent in the number of blacks. The architecture is a mix of wood-frame houses predating the Civil War, Italianate mansions, carriage houses, brownstones, midrise apartment buildings and three- to five-story brick rowhouses. Some are scrupulously restored while others are shedding paint. Here and there, a featureless tower pierces the sky. Pratt Institute is the neighborhood\u2019s centerpiece, its greensward campus\u2019s brick pathways braiding through a sculpture garden . ", "paragraph_answer": "The boundaries of the neighborhood, which is about 0.6 square mile, are roughly Flushing Avenue to the north, Atlantic Avenue to the south, Vanderbilt Avenue to the west and Classon Avenue to the east. The United States Census Bureau\u2019s 2009-2013 American Community Survey estimated the population as 39 percent white, 36 percent black, 16 percent Hispanic and 5 percent Asian. The 2010 census showed a 149 percent increase in the white population over 2000 and a decline of 29 percent in the number of blacks. The architecture is a mix of wood-frame houses predating the Civil War, Italianate mansions, carriage houses, brownstones, midrise apartment buildings and three- to five-story brick rowhouses. Some are scrupulously restored while others are shedding paint. Here and there, a featureless tower pierces the sky. Pratt Institute is the neighborhood\u2019s centerpiece, its greensward campus\u2019s brick pathways braiding through a sculpture garden .", "sentence_answer": "a sculpture garden .", "paragraph_id": "5d70098bc8e4820a9b66b24d"} +{"question": "Who plays Mohamed?", "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": "Reda Kateb", "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": "5d708fd2c8e4820a9b66f574"} +{"question": "Which HBO movie was Steve Cainas involved with?", "paragraph": "Steve Cainas, 43, who received an associate\u2019s degree in film from Full Sail in 1992, makes his living in Atlanta as a production coordinator. An inductee to Full Sail\u2019s Hall of Fame, honoring its most successful alums, Mr. Cainas has production coordinator credits on several films and TV series, including Parts 1 and 2 of \u201cThe Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn\u201d and HBO\u2019s \u201cTrue Detective.\u201d \u201cA lot of these kids coming out now think they can just send a couple emails and get a great job,\u201d he said. \u201cIt doesn\u2019t work that way. If you network like crazy and put what you learn into action, you will be just fine.\u201d", "answer": "HBO\u2019s \u201cTrue Detective.\u201d", "sentence": "An inductee to Full Sail\u2019s Hall of Fame, honoring its most successful alums, Mr. Cainas has production coordinator credits on several films and TV series, including Parts 1 and 2 of \u201cThe Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn\u201d and HBO\u2019s \u201cTrue Detective.\u201d \u201cA lot of these kids coming out now think they can just send a couple emails and get a great job,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_sentence": "Steve Cainas, 43, who received an associate\u2019s degree in film from Full Sail in 1992, makes his living in Atlanta as a production coordinator. An inductee to Full Sail\u2019s Hall of Fame, honoring its most successful alums, Mr. Cainas has production coordinator credits on several films and TV series, including Parts 1 and 2 of \u201cThe Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn\u201d and HBO\u2019s \u201cTrue Detective.\u201d \u201cA lot of these kids coming out now think they can just send a couple emails and get a great job,\u201d he said. \u201cIt doesn\u2019t work that way. If you network like crazy and put what you learn into action, you will be just fine.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Steve Cainas, 43, who received an associate\u2019s degree in film from Full Sail in 1992, makes his living in Atlanta as a production coordinator. An inductee to Full Sail\u2019s Hall of Fame, honoring its most successful alums, Mr. Cainas has production coordinator credits on several films and TV series, including Parts 1 and 2 of \u201cThe Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn\u201d and HBO\u2019s \u201cTrue Detective.\u201d \u201cA lot of these kids coming out now think they can just send a couple emails and get a great job,\u201d he said. \u201cIt doesn\u2019t work that way. If you network like crazy and put what you learn into action, you will be just fine.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "An inductee to Full Sail\u2019s Hall of Fame, honoring its most successful alums, Mr. Cainas has production coordinator credits on several films and TV series, including Parts 1 and 2 of \u201cThe Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn\u201d and HBO\u2019s \u201cTrue Detective.\u201d \u201cA lot of these kids coming out now think they can just send a couple emails and get a great job,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_id": "5d702c2ac8e4820a9b66d9b4"} +{"question": "What is Marcelo studying to be?", "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 doctor", "sentence": "He works nights so he can study days; he wants to be a doctor .", "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 works nights so he can study days; he wants to be a doctor .", "paragraph_id": "5d703385c8e4820a9b66de97"} +{"question": "Who is attacking 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": "lawmakers of both parties", "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": "5d705d59c8e4820a9b66ef6f"} +{"question": "What is a way of reducing your risk that a thief will file a fake return with your name?", "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": "filing your tax return as soon as possible", "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": "5d704110c8e4820a9b66e559"} +{"question": "What did the canine", "paragraph": "I took my sweet little dog for a walk. He got agitated by a cat sitting on a porch, pulled free of me and raced toward the house, knocking over (and breaking) a large ceramic urn. I acknowledge that I am partly responsible for the damage. But don\u2019t the homeowners have some responsibility, too, letting their cat sit out in the open? ANONYMOUS You break it; you bought it. \u201cAnd your little dog, too,\u201d growled the Wicked Witch of the West. The cat is free to sit on its porch with regal impunity.", "answer": "knocking over (and breaking) a large ceramic urn", "sentence": "He got agitated by a cat sitting on a porch, pulled free of me and raced toward the house, knocking over (and breaking) a large ceramic urn .", "paragraph_sentence": "I took my sweet little dog for a walk. He got agitated by a cat sitting on a porch, pulled free of me and raced toward the house, knocking over (and breaking) a large ceramic urn . I acknowledge that I am partly responsible for the damage. But don\u2019t the homeowners have some responsibility, too, letting their cat sit out in the open? ANONYMOUS You break it; you bought it. \u201cAnd your little dog, too,\u201d growled the Wicked Witch of the West. The cat is free to sit on its porch with regal impunity.", "paragraph_answer": "I took my sweet little dog for a walk. He got agitated by a cat sitting on a porch, pulled free of me and raced toward the house, knocking over (and breaking) a large ceramic urn . I acknowledge that I am partly responsible for the damage. But don\u2019t the homeowners have some responsibility, too, letting their cat sit out in the open? ANONYMOUS You break it; you bought it. \u201cAnd your little dog, too,\u201d growled the Wicked Witch of the West. The cat is free to sit on its porch with regal impunity.", "sentence_answer": "He got agitated by a cat sitting on a porch, pulled free of me and raced toward the house, knocking over (and breaking) a large ceramic urn .", "paragraph_id": "5d7025ecc8e4820a9b66d231"} +{"question": "What type of flour is needed for the gravy?", "paragraph": "Here is the plan for the next few days. Settle the Thanksgiving menu. (Our menu planner will help with that, and our guide to cooking the meal will answer any questions you have on how to execute it.) Pick up your turkey and set it in the refrigerator to thaw or keep. If you\u2019re brining the bird, you can do that on Tuesday. There\u2019s no need to start now. Go shopping: potatoes both white and sweet; squash; onions; bacon; cauliflower; apples; cranberries; a lot of unsalted butter; flour, both of the all-purpose variety (for pies) and of the finely milled sort (for gravy, because it doesn\u2019t lump); cornmeal; eggs; a case of sparkling water; wine; bourbon; anything you\u2019ll need that will keep for a few days in the pantry or fridge. You can lay in herbs and other perishables on Tuesday or Wednesday.", "answer": "finely milled", "sentence": "Go shopping: potatoes both white and sweet; squash; onions; bacon; cauliflower; apples; cranberries; a lot of unsalted butter; flour, both of the all-purpose variety (for pies) and of the finely milled sort (for gravy, because it doesn\u2019t lump); cornmeal; eggs; a case of sparkling water; wine; bourbon; anything you\u2019ll need that will keep for a few days in the pantry or fridge.", "paragraph_sentence": "Here is the plan for the next few days. Settle the Thanksgiving menu. (Our menu planner will help with that, and our guide to cooking the meal will answer any questions you have on how to execute it.) Pick up your turkey and set it in the refrigerator to thaw or keep. If you\u2019re brining the bird, you can do that on Tuesday. There\u2019s no need to start now. Go shopping: potatoes both white and sweet; squash; onions; bacon; cauliflower; apples; cranberries; a lot of unsalted butter; flour, both of the all-purpose variety (for pies) and of the finely milled sort (for gravy, because it doesn\u2019t lump); cornmeal; eggs; a case of sparkling water; wine; bourbon; anything you\u2019ll need that will keep for a few days in the pantry or fridge. You can lay in herbs and other perishables on Tuesday or Wednesday.", "paragraph_answer": "Here is the plan for the next few days. Settle the Thanksgiving menu. (Our menu planner will help with that, and our guide to cooking the meal will answer any questions you have on how to execute it.) Pick up your turkey and set it in the refrigerator to thaw or keep. If you\u2019re brining the bird, you can do that on Tuesday. There\u2019s no need to start now. Go shopping: potatoes both white and sweet; squash; onions; bacon; cauliflower; apples; cranberries; a lot of unsalted butter; flour, both of the all-purpose variety (for pies) and of the finely milled sort (for gravy, because it doesn\u2019t lump); cornmeal; eggs; a case of sparkling water; wine; bourbon; anything you\u2019ll need that will keep for a few days in the pantry or fridge. You can lay in herbs and other perishables on Tuesday or Wednesday.", "sentence_answer": "Go shopping: potatoes both white and sweet; squash; onions; bacon; cauliflower; apples; cranberries; a lot of unsalted butter; flour, both of the all-purpose variety (for pies) and of the finely milled sort (for gravy, because it doesn\u2019t lump); cornmeal; eggs; a case of sparkling water; wine; bourbon; anything you\u2019ll need that will keep for a few days in the pantry or fridge.", "paragraph_id": "5d70390bc8e4820a9b66e16e"} +{"question": "Who is the first African-American principle dancer?", "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": "Ms. Copeland", "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d70a3d0c8e4820a9b66f692"} +{"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": "5d7026e8c8e4820a9b66d409"} +{"question": "Who narrates ELLES \u00c9TAIENT EN GUERRE?", "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": "Nathalie Baye", "sentence": "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_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": "8:30 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_id": "5d7050dec8e4820a9b66eb66"} +{"question": "how many rebounds did Russell Westbrook have?", "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": "16", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d7007ebc8e4820a9b66aee2"} +{"question": "From which country was the wolverine being sent?", "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": "Norway", "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": "5d702ce9c8e4820a9b66da6c"} +{"question": "How long after Sandy was initially diagnosed did her disease develop into Alzheimer's?", "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": "5d704083c8e4820a9b66e50d"} +{"question": "What is a central promise of the internet that is being broken by users disconnecting themselves from others with different views?", "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": "offering people a diverse marketplace of challenging ideas", "sentence": "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_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": "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_id": "5d702a95c8e4820a9b66d830"} +{"question": "Why are audiences consuming shows differently?", "paragraph": "With the rise of DVDs and streaming sources, audiences are consuming shows differently. They binge-watch and read recaps. And television conventions have loosened. HBO series like \u201cThe Comeback\u201d and \u201cGirls\u201d have fleshed-out character arcs, and the fourth season of \u201cArrested Development,\u201d released online all at once by Netflix, featured complex plotting with shifts of perspective that would have been hard to imagine a decade ago.", "answer": "rise of DVDs and streaming sources", "sentence": "With the rise of DVDs and streaming sources , audiences are consuming shows differently.", "paragraph_sentence": " With the rise of DVDs and streaming sources , audiences are consuming shows differently. They binge-watch and read recaps. And television conventions have loosened. HBO series like \u201cThe Comeback\u201d and \u201cGirls\u201d have fleshed-out character arcs, and the fourth season of \u201cArrested Development,\u201d released online all at once by Netflix, featured complex plotting with shifts of perspective that would have been hard to imagine a decade ago.", "paragraph_answer": "With the rise of DVDs and streaming sources , audiences are consuming shows differently. They binge-watch and read recaps. And television conventions have loosened. HBO series like \u201cThe Comeback\u201d and \u201cGirls\u201d have fleshed-out character arcs, and the fourth season of \u201cArrested Development,\u201d released online all at once by Netflix, featured complex plotting with shifts of perspective that would have been hard to imagine a decade ago.", "sentence_answer": "With the rise of DVDs and streaming sources , audiences are consuming shows differently.", "paragraph_id": "5d701dccc8e4820a9b66c937"} +{"question": "What caused Putin to be removed from the G-8 countries?", "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 Ukraine crisis", "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": "5d701bcec8e4820a9b66c74c"} +{"question": "How can I find the White Gallery web site?", "paragraph": "LAKEVILLE The White Gallery \u201cFor the Love of Making Art: The Work of Robert Baras.\u201d Through July 12. Saturdays and Sundays, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., and by appointment. The White Gallery, 344 Main Street. thewhitegalleryart.com; 860-435-1029. LITCHFIELD Oliver Wolcott Library Oil paintings by Victor Leger. Through June 26. Mondays, noon to 5 p.m.; Tuesdays through Thursdays, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Fridays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; Sundays, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Oliver Wolcott Library, 160 South Street. 860-567-8030; owlibrary.org.", "answer": "thewhitegalleryart.com", "sentence": "thewhitegalleryart.com ; 860-435-1029.", "paragraph_sentence": "LAKEVILLE The White Gallery \u201cFor the Love of Making Art: The Work of Robert Baras.\u201d Through July 12. Saturdays and Sundays, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., and by appointment. The White Gallery, 344 Main Street. thewhitegalleryart.com ; 860-435-1029. LITCHFIELD Oliver Wolcott Library Oil paintings by Victor Leger. Through June 26. Mondays, noon to 5 p.m.; Tuesdays through Thursdays, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Fridays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; Sundays, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Oliver Wolcott Library, 160 South Street. 860-567-8030; owlibrary.org.", "paragraph_answer": "LAKEVILLE The White Gallery \u201cFor the Love of Making Art: The Work of Robert Baras.\u201d Through July 12. Saturdays and Sundays, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., and by appointment. The White Gallery, 344 Main Street. thewhitegalleryart.com ; 860-435-1029. LITCHFIELD Oliver Wolcott Library Oil paintings by Victor Leger. Through June 26. Mondays, noon to 5 p.m.; Tuesdays through Thursdays, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Fridays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; Sundays, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Oliver Wolcott Library, 160 South Street. 860-567-8030; owlibrary.org.", "sentence_answer": " thewhitegalleryart.com ; 860-435-1029.", "paragraph_id": "5d704197c8e4820a9b66e5aa"} +{"question": "What kind of talking device for communication was the unschool troops learned?", "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": "encrypted walkie-talkie", "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": "5d7026e0c8e4820a9b66d393"} +{"question": "What size are the Oreos?", "paragraph": "That said, his more forward-looking items \u2014 I tried on an excellent bomber with an embroidered bee on the chest ($1,890) \u2014 show a possible pathway through the tension. But several of the other shops here feel deeply superfluous: say, the Herm\u00e8s perfumery, which is right next to a Davidoff of Geneva cigar shop. A newsstand sells magazines like Sleek and The Great Discontent along with matcha-flavored mini Oreos. And truly functional stores seem like outliers. What will become of humble, excellent Kamakura Shirts, relegated to a side corridor on the second floor, if the local business crowd doesn\u2019t find it? No one is coming to ground zero to buy an expertly cut oxford shirt.", "answer": "mini", "sentence": "A newsstand sells magazines like Sleek and The Great Discontent along with matcha-flavored mini Oreos.", "paragraph_sentence": "That said, his more forward-looking items \u2014 I tried on an excellent bomber with an embroidered bee on the chest ($1,890) \u2014 show a possible pathway through the tension. But several of the other shops here feel deeply superfluous: say, the Herm\u00e8s perfumery, which is right next to a Davidoff of Geneva cigar shop. A newsstand sells magazines like Sleek and The Great Discontent along with matcha-flavored mini Oreos. And truly functional stores seem like outliers. What will become of humble, excellent Kamakura Shirts, relegated to a side corridor on the second floor, if the local business crowd doesn\u2019t find it? No one is coming to ground zero to buy an expertly cut oxford shirt.", "paragraph_answer": "That said, his more forward-looking items \u2014 I tried on an excellent bomber with an embroidered bee on the chest ($1,890) \u2014 show a possible pathway through the tension. But several of the other shops here feel deeply superfluous: say, the Herm\u00e8s perfumery, which is right next to a Davidoff of Geneva cigar shop. A newsstand sells magazines like Sleek and The Great Discontent along with matcha-flavored mini Oreos. And truly functional stores seem like outliers. What will become of humble, excellent Kamakura Shirts, relegated to a side corridor on the second floor, if the local business crowd doesn\u2019t find it? No one is coming to ground zero to buy an expertly cut oxford shirt.", "sentence_answer": "A newsstand sells magazines like Sleek and The Great Discontent along with matcha-flavored mini Oreos.", "paragraph_id": "5d700950c8e4820a9b66b1c3"} +{"question": "How much money do criminals sometimes ask of the victims?", "paragraph": "In the old days, criminals liked their ransom payments in briefcases full of unmarked bills. These days, there\u2019s a new preferred method for hostage takers: the virtual currency Bitcoin. In a modern day version of a mob shakedown, hackers around the world have seized files on millions of computers, taken down public websites and even, in a few cases, threatened physical harm. The victims \u2014 who have ranged from ordinary computer users to financial firms and police departments \u2014 are told that their only way out is through a Bitcoin payment that is sometimes more than $20,000.", "answer": "sometimes more than $20,000", "sentence": "The victims \u2014 who have ranged from ordinary computer users to financial firms and police departments \u2014 are told that their only way out is through a Bitcoin payment that is sometimes more than $20,000 .", "paragraph_sentence": "In the old days, criminals liked their ransom payments in briefcases full of unmarked bills. These days, there\u2019s a new preferred method for hostage takers: the virtual currency Bitcoin. In a modern day version of a mob shakedown, hackers around the world have seized files on millions of computers, taken down public websites and even, in a few cases, threatened physical harm. The victims \u2014 who have ranged from ordinary computer users to financial firms and police departments \u2014 are told that their only way out is through a Bitcoin payment that is sometimes more than $20,000 . ", "paragraph_answer": "In the old days, criminals liked their ransom payments in briefcases full of unmarked bills. These days, there\u2019s a new preferred method for hostage takers: the virtual currency Bitcoin. In a modern day version of a mob shakedown, hackers around the world have seized files on millions of computers, taken down public websites and even, in a few cases, threatened physical harm. The victims \u2014 who have ranged from ordinary computer users to financial firms and police departments \u2014 are told that their only way out is through a Bitcoin payment that is sometimes more than $20,000 .", "sentence_answer": "The victims \u2014 who have ranged from ordinary computer users to financial firms and police departments \u2014 are told that their only way out is through a Bitcoin payment that is sometimes more than $20,000 .", "paragraph_id": "5d7036e5c8e4820a9b66e057"} +{"question": "What sport has players who are finally being paid as professional athletes?", "paragraph": "Women\u2019s hockey is a growing sport, evolving through quicker and stronger players who are finally being rewarded for their talents as paid professional athletes. But concussions have kept some of the best players away from the ice for extended periods as the sport struggles to combat an issue that football and men\u2019s hockey have failed at times to properly address. The N.H.L. is facing litigation, with former players accusing the league of glorifying violence and ignoring the dangers of repeated head injuries. \u201cThe amount of players still getting concussions on the national level and college level, it\u2019s too many,\u201d said Pucci, whose sister\u2019s hockey career was also ended by a concussion.", "answer": "Women\u2019s hockey", "sentence": "Women\u2019s hockey is a growing sport, evolving through quicker and stronger players who are finally being rewarded for their talents as paid professional athletes.", "paragraph_sentence": " Women\u2019s hockey is a growing sport, evolving through quicker and stronger players who are finally being rewarded for their talents as paid professional athletes. But concussions have kept some of the best players away from the ice for extended periods as the sport struggles to combat an issue that football and men\u2019s hockey have failed at times to properly address. The N.H.L. is facing litigation, with former players accusing the league of glorifying violence and ignoring the dangers of repeated head injuries. \u201cThe amount of players still getting concussions on the national level and college level, it\u2019s too many,\u201d said Pucci, whose sister\u2019s hockey career was also ended by a concussion.", "paragraph_answer": " Women\u2019s hockey is a growing sport, evolving through quicker and stronger players who are finally being rewarded for their talents as paid professional athletes. But concussions have kept some of the best players away from the ice for extended periods as the sport struggles to combat an issue that football and men\u2019s hockey have failed at times to properly address. The N.H.L. is facing litigation, with former players accusing the league of glorifying violence and ignoring the dangers of repeated head injuries. \u201cThe amount of players still getting concussions on the national level and college level, it\u2019s too many,\u201d said Pucci, whose sister\u2019s hockey career was also ended by a concussion.", "sentence_answer": " Women\u2019s hockey is a growing sport, evolving through quicker and stronger players who are finally being rewarded for their talents as paid professional athletes.", "paragraph_id": "5d702048c8e4820a9b66cc00"} +{"question": "What does Fiorina claim is not the subject of the story?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe evil genius of Fiorina,\u201d Stan wrote, \u201cis her uncanny ability to play the gender warrior within the GOP while promoting the party\u2019s misogyny.\u201d Stan continued: \u201cBut her feminism seems to begin and end with the fortunes of Fiorina herself, and seeing as she probably doesn\u2019t rely on Planned Parenthood for her health care, she\u2019s happy to deprive millions of women of that care by promoting outright lies about the organization, as in her false description of the video she referenced.\u201d This distancing herself from the realities of less fortunate women is not new for Fiorina. When she became C.E.O. of Hewlett-Packard in 1999, she made the preposterous claim that \u201cthere is not a glass ceiling\u2026 My gender is interesting but really not the subject of the story here.\u201d", "answer": "My gender is interesting but really not the subject", "sentence": "When she became C.E.O. of Hewlett-Packard in 1999, she made the preposterous claim that \u201cthere is not a glass ceiling\u2026 My gender is interesting but really not the subject of the story here.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe evil genius of Fiorina,\u201d Stan wrote, \u201cis her uncanny ability to play the gender warrior within the GOP while promoting the party\u2019s misogyny.\u201d Stan continued: \u201cBut her feminism seems to begin and end with the fortunes of Fiorina herself, and seeing as she probably doesn\u2019t rely on Planned Parenthood for her health care, she\u2019s happy to deprive millions of women of that care by promoting outright lies about the organization, as in her false description of the video she referenced.\u201d This distancing herself from the realities of less fortunate women is not new for Fiorina. When she became C.E.O. of Hewlett-Packard in 1999, she made the preposterous claim that \u201cthere is not a glass ceiling\u2026 My gender is interesting but really not the subject of the story here.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe evil genius of Fiorina,\u201d Stan wrote, \u201cis her uncanny ability to play the gender warrior within the GOP while promoting the party\u2019s misogyny.\u201d Stan continued: \u201cBut her feminism seems to begin and end with the fortunes of Fiorina herself, and seeing as she probably doesn\u2019t rely on Planned Parenthood for her health care, she\u2019s happy to deprive millions of women of that care by promoting outright lies about the organization, as in her false description of the video she referenced.\u201d This distancing herself from the realities of less fortunate women is not new for Fiorina. When she became C.E.O. of Hewlett-Packard in 1999, she made the preposterous claim that \u201cthere is not a glass ceiling\u2026 My gender is interesting but really not the subject of the story here.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "When she became C.E.O. of Hewlett-Packard in 1999, she made the preposterous claim that \u201cthere is not a glass ceiling\u2026 My gender is interesting but really not the subject of the story here.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d702cb9c8e4820a9b66da3b"} +{"question": "Which institute found Republicans three times more likely to be upset with the federal government than Democrats?", "paragraph": "His older brother was also the beneficiary of hardball politics. In 2000, George W. Bush defeated Senator John McCain in the South Carolina primary after fliers falsely accusing Mr. McCain of fathering a black baby out of wedlock began circulating in the state. Then, in the 2004 general election, he received a boost when Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, an outside group, ran a television ad accusing Senator John Kerry, a decorated Vietnam War veteran, of lying about his war record. And now, with Republicans nearly three times as likely as Democrats to describe themselves as angry with the federal government, according to a recent Pew Research Center study, Jeb Bush may need to get more comfortable \u2014 and quickly \u2014 with personally going on the attack and channeling a sense of passionate outrage.", "answer": "Pew Research Center", "sentence": "And now, with Republicans nearly three times as likely as Democrats to describe themselves as angry with the federal government, according to a recent Pew Research Center study, Jeb Bush may need to get more comfortable \u2014 and quickly \u2014 with personally going on the attack and channeling a sense of passionate outrage.", "paragraph_sentence": "His older brother was also the beneficiary of hardball politics. In 2000, George W. Bush defeated Senator John McCain in the South Carolina primary after fliers falsely accusing Mr. McCain of fathering a black baby out of wedlock began circulating in the state. Then, in the 2004 general election, he received a boost when Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, an outside group, ran a television ad accusing Senator John Kerry, a decorated Vietnam War veteran, of lying about his war record. And now, with Republicans nearly three times as likely as Democrats to describe themselves as angry with the federal government, according to a recent Pew Research Center study, Jeb Bush may need to get more comfortable \u2014 and quickly \u2014 with personally going on the attack and channeling a sense of passionate outrage. ", "paragraph_answer": "His older brother was also the beneficiary of hardball politics. In 2000, George W. Bush defeated Senator John McCain in the South Carolina primary after fliers falsely accusing Mr. McCain of fathering a black baby out of wedlock began circulating in the state. Then, in the 2004 general election, he received a boost when Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, an outside group, ran a television ad accusing Senator John Kerry, a decorated Vietnam War veteran, of lying about his war record. And now, with Republicans nearly three times as likely as Democrats to describe themselves as angry with the federal government, according to a recent Pew Research Center study, Jeb Bush may need to get more comfortable \u2014 and quickly \u2014 with personally going on the attack and channeling a sense of passionate outrage.", "sentence_answer": "And now, with Republicans nearly three times as likely as Democrats to describe themselves as angry with the federal government, according to a recent Pew Research Center study, Jeb Bush may need to get more comfortable \u2014 and quickly \u2014 with personally going on the attack and channeling a sense of passionate outrage.", "paragraph_id": "5d700bc4c8e4820a9b66b6b3"} +{"question": "Who will review the evidence?", "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": "the grand jury", "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 .", "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 .", "paragraph_id": "5d700c63c8e4820a9b66b778"} +{"question": "Which screenwriter for \"The Heat\" wrote jokes to be passed along to Mr. Feig?", "paragraph": "In Budapest last June, Kent Sublette, a veteran of \u201cSaturday Night Live,\u201d and Katie Dippold, the screenwriter for \u201cThe Heat\u201d and now co-writer of the new \u201cGhostbusters,\u201d watched the action and scribbled jokes on sticky notes, which were handed to Mr. Feig, who also shouted extra one-liners to his cast. In the editing room, these \u201calts,\u201d as they\u2019re known, are assembled into multiple cuts, which Mr. Feig test-screens religiously. In Hollywood, test screening is done grudgingly, considered a pernicious studio tool and the enemy of the auteur. \u201cIt doesn\u2019t work very well if a movie is supposed to make you feel difficult emotions,\u201d Mr. Apatow said. \u201cIf you\u2019re making a David Lynch movie, it doesn\u2019t work at all.\u201d But for comedy, he continued, it\u2019s often the best way to refine jokes. Their semi-scientific process involves recording viewers\u2019 laughter across different versions. Mr. Feig, a former stand-up comic, compared it with road-testing an act. \u201cSpy\u201d has had about 10 test screenings, he said, although unlike \u201cBridesmaids,\u201d it scored well with audiences out of the gate. In a South by Southwest preview, one critic called it \u201ca home run.\u201d", "answer": "Katie Dippold", "sentence": "In Budapest last June, Kent Sublette, a veteran of \u201cSaturday Night Live,\u201d and Katie Dippold , the screenwriter for \u201cThe Heat\u201d and now co-writer of the new \u201cGhostbusters,\u201d watched the action and scribbled jokes on sticky notes, which were handed to Mr. Feig, who also shouted extra one-liners to his cast.", "paragraph_sentence": " In Budapest last June, Kent Sublette, a veteran of \u201cSaturday Night Live,\u201d and Katie Dippold , the screenwriter for \u201cThe Heat\u201d and now co-writer of the new \u201cGhostbusters,\u201d watched the action and scribbled jokes on sticky notes, which were handed to Mr. Feig, who also shouted extra one-liners to his cast. In the editing room, these \u201calts,\u201d as they\u2019re known, are assembled into multiple cuts, which Mr. Feig test-screens religiously. In Hollywood, test screening is done grudgingly, considered a pernicious studio tool and the enemy of the auteur. \u201cIt doesn\u2019t work very well if a movie is supposed to make you feel difficult emotions,\u201d Mr. Apatow said. \u201cIf you\u2019re making a David Lynch movie, it doesn\u2019t work at all.\u201d But for comedy, he continued, it\u2019s often the best way to refine jokes. Their semi-scientific process involves recording viewers\u2019 laughter across different versions. Mr. Feig, a former stand-up comic, compared it with road-testing an act. \u201cSpy\u201d has had about 10 test screenings, he said, although unlike \u201cBridesmaids,\u201d it scored well with audiences out of the gate. In a South by Southwest preview, one critic called it \u201ca home run.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "In Budapest last June, Kent Sublette, a veteran of \u201cSaturday Night Live,\u201d and Katie Dippold , the screenwriter for \u201cThe Heat\u201d and now co-writer of the new \u201cGhostbusters,\u201d watched the action and scribbled jokes on sticky notes, which were handed to Mr. Feig, who also shouted extra one-liners to his cast. In the editing room, these \u201calts,\u201d as they\u2019re known, are assembled into multiple cuts, which Mr. Feig test-screens religiously. In Hollywood, test screening is done grudgingly, considered a pernicious studio tool and the enemy of the auteur. \u201cIt doesn\u2019t work very well if a movie is supposed to make you feel difficult emotions,\u201d Mr. Apatow said. \u201cIf you\u2019re making a David Lynch movie, it doesn\u2019t work at all.\u201d But for comedy, he continued, it\u2019s often the best way to refine jokes. Their semi-scientific process involves recording viewers\u2019 laughter across different versions. Mr. Feig, a former stand-up comic, compared it with road-testing an act. \u201cSpy\u201d has had about 10 test screenings, he said, although unlike \u201cBridesmaids,\u201d it scored well with audiences out of the gate. In a South by Southwest preview, one critic called it \u201ca home run.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In Budapest last June, Kent Sublette, a veteran of \u201cSaturday Night Live,\u201d and Katie Dippold , the screenwriter for \u201cThe Heat\u201d and now co-writer of the new \u201cGhostbusters,\u201d watched the action and scribbled jokes on sticky notes, which were handed to Mr. Feig, who also shouted extra one-liners to his cast.", "paragraph_id": "5d701666c8e4820a9b66c26e"} +{"question": "What country is Rabat in?", "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": "Morocco", "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700bccc8e4820a9b66b6c3"} +{"question": "Where does the event mentioned in the passage take place?", "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": "CHANTILLY, Va", "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": "5d7020d5c8e4820a9b66ccc4"} +{"question": "Who became the youngest winner of the Ted Hughes poetry prize?", "paragraph": "A wunderkind rapper and spoken word performer equally influenced by Wu-Tang Clan and Joyce, Bukowski and Blake; an English poet whose musical sense of language bridges the worlds of rap and traditional lyric verse; a fan favorite at the Glastonbury music festival who became the youngest winner of the Ted Hughes poetry prize. Such dichotomies not only attest to the 29-year-old Kate Tempest\u2019s gift for shattering \u2014 and transcending \u2014 convention and conventional genres, but they also underscore the tensions and contradictions that fuel her dynamic art. Tiresias, the blind seer in Greek mythology who lived as a man and a woman, is the presiding figure in her collection \u201cHold Your Own,\u201d and the contemporary characters in her dazzling story-poem \u201cBrand New Ancients\u201d are also conflicted beings in search of a self. They are torn between confidence and self-loathing, between aching loneliness and the tumult of love, between ambition and a revulsion for the phony accouterments of fame. Ms. Tempest describes these ordinary people as gods, and their quarrels \u2014 so reminiscent of the squabbling among the Greek gods on Mount Olympus \u2014 are both petty and profound.", "answer": "Kate Tempest", "sentence": "Such dichotomies not only attest to the 29-year-old Kate Tempest \u2019s gift for shattering \u2014 and transcending \u2014 convention and conventional genres, but they also underscore the tensions and contradictions that fuel her dynamic art.", "paragraph_sentence": "A wunderkind rapper and spoken word performer equally influenced by Wu-Tang Clan and Joyce, Bukowski and Blake; an English poet whose musical sense of language bridges the worlds of rap and traditional lyric verse; a fan favorite at the Glastonbury music festival who became the youngest winner of the Ted Hughes poetry prize. Such dichotomies not only attest to the 29-year-old Kate Tempest \u2019s gift for shattering \u2014 and transcending \u2014 convention and conventional genres, but they also underscore the tensions and contradictions that fuel her dynamic art. Tiresias, the blind seer in Greek mythology who lived as a man and a woman, is the presiding figure in her collection \u201cHold Your Own,\u201d and the contemporary characters in her dazzling story-poem \u201cBrand New Ancients\u201d are also conflicted beings in search of a self. They are torn between confidence and self-loathing, between aching loneliness and the tumult of love, between ambition and a revulsion for the phony accouterments of fame. Ms. Tempest describes these ordinary people as gods, and their quarrels \u2014 so reminiscent of the squabbling among the Greek gods on Mount Olympus \u2014 are both petty and profound.", "paragraph_answer": "A wunderkind rapper and spoken word performer equally influenced by Wu-Tang Clan and Joyce, Bukowski and Blake; an English poet whose musical sense of language bridges the worlds of rap and traditional lyric verse; a fan favorite at the Glastonbury music festival who became the youngest winner of the Ted Hughes poetry prize. Such dichotomies not only attest to the 29-year-old Kate Tempest \u2019s gift for shattering \u2014 and transcending \u2014 convention and conventional genres, but they also underscore the tensions and contradictions that fuel her dynamic art. Tiresias, the blind seer in Greek mythology who lived as a man and a woman, is the presiding figure in her collection \u201cHold Your Own,\u201d and the contemporary characters in her dazzling story-poem \u201cBrand New Ancients\u201d are also conflicted beings in search of a self. They are torn between confidence and self-loathing, between aching loneliness and the tumult of love, between ambition and a revulsion for the phony accouterments of fame. Ms. Tempest describes these ordinary people as gods, and their quarrels \u2014 so reminiscent of the squabbling among the Greek gods on Mount Olympus \u2014 are both petty and profound.", "sentence_answer": "Such dichotomies not only attest to the 29-year-old Kate Tempest \u2019s gift for shattering \u2014 and transcending \u2014 convention and conventional genres, but they also underscore the tensions and contradictions that fuel her dynamic art.", "paragraph_id": "5d702159c8e4820a9b66cd3e"} +{"question": "How many people are watching on TV on average this season?", "paragraph": "The Mets\u2019 average television audience, which reached a high of 314,171 in 2007, bottomed out at 138,627 in 2013 before a slight revival to just over 144,000 last season. But so far this season, viewership is up 62 percent, to 240,091 a game. And games are averaging 324,195 viewers since the Mets acquired the slugging outfielder Yoenis Cespedes on July 31. For the season, the Yankees\u2019 lead over the Mets in average viewership is about 20,000 \u2014 a far cry from four years ago, when the difference was more than 200,000.", "answer": "240,091", "sentence": "But so far this season, viewership is up 62 percent, to 240,091 a game.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Mets\u2019 average television audience, which reached a high of 314,171 in 2007, bottomed out at 138,627 in 2013 before a slight revival to just over 144,000 last season. But so far this season, viewership is up 62 percent, to 240,091 a game. And games are averaging 324,195 viewers since the Mets acquired the slugging outfielder Yoenis Cespedes on July 31. For the season, the Yankees\u2019 lead over the Mets in average viewership is about 20,000 \u2014 a far cry from four years ago, when the difference was more than 200,000.", "paragraph_answer": "The Mets\u2019 average television audience, which reached a high of 314,171 in 2007, bottomed out at 138,627 in 2013 before a slight revival to just over 144,000 last season. But so far this season, viewership is up 62 percent, to 240,091 a game. And games are averaging 324,195 viewers since the Mets acquired the slugging outfielder Yoenis Cespedes on July 31. For the season, the Yankees\u2019 lead over the Mets in average viewership is about 20,000 \u2014 a far cry from four years ago, when the difference was more than 200,000.", "sentence_answer": "But so far this season, viewership is up 62 percent, to 240,091 a game.", "paragraph_id": "5d700a76c8e4820a9b66b440"} +{"question": "Who is the Greek finance minister?", "paragraph": "But the strategy has been controversial, and it was criticized by none other than Yanis Varoufakis, the Greek finance minister, who, a year ago described the practice as a \u201chidden bailout from European taxpayers.\u201d Mr. Varoufakis, then a relatively unknown economist, argued that the loans were a potent risk for Greece, which would have to assume responsibility for them if the banks failed. The practice has also been flagged by two German economists as a questionable way for troubled eurozone economies to extract funding from the central bank.", "answer": "Yanis Varoufakis", "sentence": "But the strategy has been controversial, and it was criticized by none other than Yanis Varoufakis , the Greek finance minister, who, a year ago described the practice as a \u201chidden bailout from European taxpayers.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " But the strategy has been controversial, and it was criticized by none other than Yanis Varoufakis , the Greek finance minister, who, a year ago described the practice as a \u201chidden bailout from European taxpayers.\u201d Mr. Varoufakis, then a relatively unknown economist, argued that the loans were a potent risk for Greece, which would have to assume responsibility for them if the banks failed. The practice has also been flagged by two German economists as a questionable way for troubled eurozone economies to extract funding from the central bank.", "paragraph_answer": "But the strategy has been controversial, and it was criticized by none other than Yanis Varoufakis , the Greek finance minister, who, a year ago described the practice as a \u201chidden bailout from European taxpayers.\u201d Mr. Varoufakis, then a relatively unknown economist, argued that the loans were a potent risk for Greece, which would have to assume responsibility for them if the banks failed. The practice has also been flagged by two German economists as a questionable way for troubled eurozone economies to extract funding from the central bank.", "sentence_answer": "But the strategy has been controversial, and it was criticized by none other than Yanis Varoufakis , the Greek finance minister, who, a year ago described the practice as a \u201chidden bailout from European taxpayers.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d70274ac8e4820a9b66d51f"} +{"question": "Who is Tony Dutzik?", "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": "a senior policy analyst at the Frontier Group, a research company in Boston.", "sentence": "\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_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": "\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_id": "5d704bffc8e4820a9b66e9c9"} +{"question": "How old is Nadal?", "paragraph": "Rafael Nadal expressed a similar sentiment. \u201cBeing young or not, I think, is not an excuse at all,\u201d Nadal, 29, said of the 20-year-old Kyrgios. \u201cI have been 16 when I arrived to this tour. A lot of top players that are there arrived at younger ages than some of them that are there.\u201d He added: \u201cThe real thing is, when we are on court and we are saying things outside of court, we are in front of the cameras, in front of the audience. And the most important thing: We are in front of kids. Our sport is a gentleman\u2019s sport. It\u2019s a sport about respect.\u201d", "answer": "29", "sentence": "\u201cBeing young or not, I think, is not an excuse at all,\u201d Nadal, 29 , said of the 20-year-old Kyrgios.", "paragraph_sentence": "Rafael Nadal expressed a similar sentiment. \u201cBeing young or not, I think, is not an excuse at all,\u201d Nadal, 29 , said of the 20-year-old Kyrgios. \u201cI have been 16 when I arrived to this tour. A lot of top players that are there arrived at younger ages than some of them that are there.\u201d He added: \u201cThe real thing is, when we are on court and we are saying things outside of court, we are in front of the cameras, in front of the audience. And the most important thing: We are in front of kids. Our sport is a gentleman\u2019s sport. It\u2019s a sport about respect.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Rafael Nadal expressed a similar sentiment. \u201cBeing young or not, I think, is not an excuse at all,\u201d Nadal, 29 , said of the 20-year-old Kyrgios. \u201cI have been 16 when I arrived to this tour. A lot of top players that are there arrived at younger ages than some of them that are there.\u201d He added: \u201cThe real thing is, when we are on court and we are saying things outside of court, we are in front of the cameras, in front of the audience. And the most important thing: We are in front of kids. Our sport is a gentleman\u2019s sport. It\u2019s a sport about respect.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cBeing young or not, I think, is not an excuse at all,\u201d Nadal, 29 , said of the 20-year-old Kyrgios.", "paragraph_id": "5d7089f3c8e4820a9b66f4c9"} +{"question": "who did not approve of the white buck shoes ?", "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": "the British crew", "sentence": "\u201cHe was wearing white bucks and the British crew did not approve of white buck shoes, so he gave himself away,\u201d she recalled.", "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": "\u201cHe was wearing white bucks and the British crew did not approve of white buck shoes, so he gave himself away,\u201d she recalled.", "paragraph_id": "5d70229fc8e4820a9b66ceb6"} +{"question": "Which other movies of Swanberg's also have appealing honesty and low-key comedy?", "paragraph": "\u201cDigging for Fire,\u201d Joe Swanberg\u2019s new feature is, like many of his previous movies, a case study in heterosexual ethics. Its scope is narrow and, the title notwithstanding, it plumbs no great depths. But like Mr. Swanberg\u2019s \u201cDrinking Buddies\u201d and \u201cHappy Christmas,\u201d the film has an appealing honesty and an enjoyably low-key comic style. The opening titles promise a big ensemble, and a good deal of suspense comes from wondering just when some of those intriguing names will show up. It would almost be a spoiler to tell you when and in what capacity they do, but it\u2019s fun to anticipate the arrival of Melanie Lynskey, Sam Elliott, Brie Larson, Chris Messina (who gets naked) and Anna Kendrick (who almost does). Orlando Bloom appears at almost the precise moment you\u2019ve forgotten he was supposed to, wearing a man-bun and an air of rugged weariness.", "answer": "\u201cDrinking Buddies\u201d and \u201cHappy Christmas,\u201d", "sentence": "But like Mr. Swanberg\u2019s \u201cDrinking Buddies\u201d and \u201cHappy Christmas,\u201d the film has an appealing honesty and an enjoyably low-key comic style.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cDigging for Fire,\u201d Joe Swanberg\u2019s new feature is, like many of his previous movies, a case study in heterosexual ethics. Its scope is narrow and, the title notwithstanding, it plumbs no great depths. But like Mr. Swanberg\u2019s \u201cDrinking Buddies\u201d and \u201cHappy Christmas,\u201d the film has an appealing honesty and an enjoyably low-key comic style. The opening titles promise a big ensemble, and a good deal of suspense comes from wondering just when some of those intriguing names will show up. It would almost be a spoiler to tell you when and in what capacity they do, but it\u2019s fun to anticipate the arrival of Melanie Lynskey, Sam Elliott, Brie Larson, Chris Messina (who gets naked) and Anna Kendrick (who almost does). Orlando Bloom appears at almost the precise moment you\u2019ve forgotten he was supposed to, wearing a man-bun and an air of rugged weariness.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cDigging for Fire,\u201d Joe Swanberg\u2019s new feature is, like many of his previous movies, a case study in heterosexual ethics. Its scope is narrow and, the title notwithstanding, it plumbs no great depths. But like Mr. Swanberg\u2019s \u201cDrinking Buddies\u201d and \u201cHappy Christmas,\u201d the film has an appealing honesty and an enjoyably low-key comic style. The opening titles promise a big ensemble, and a good deal of suspense comes from wondering just when some of those intriguing names will show up. It would almost be a spoiler to tell you when and in what capacity they do, but it\u2019s fun to anticipate the arrival of Melanie Lynskey, Sam Elliott, Brie Larson, Chris Messina (who gets naked) and Anna Kendrick (who almost does). Orlando Bloom appears at almost the precise moment you\u2019ve forgotten he was supposed to, wearing a man-bun and an air of rugged weariness.", "sentence_answer": "But like Mr. Swanberg\u2019s \u201cDrinking Buddies\u201d and \u201cHappy Christmas,\u201d the film has an appealing honesty and an enjoyably low-key comic style.", "paragraph_id": "5d70635fc8e4820a9b66f063"} +{"question": "How long did bad weather delay the start of the game?", "paragraph": "The rain led to a 21-minute delay from the scheduled start time of 1:10 p.m. Even after the Mets recorded the first three outs of the day, bringing about an early seventh-inning stretch, patrons were still trickling in, a mix of fans taking advantage of the opportunity to watch 11-plus innings of baseball and others anticipating the debut of Steven Matz in the second game. Saturday\u2019s attendees were allowed to exchange their tickets for Sunday but were placed in different locations. The confusion even affected those not at the park: WPIX broadcast the end of Saturday\u2019s game before SNY took over for the second game. Collins said his players\u2019 routines would not change much, but the unorthodox circumstances befuddled him to a degree. He was not certain of the technicalities of the rule, but he said he planned to carry Matz as a 26th player because the team was playing an extra game on Sunday and therefore did not have to make a corresponding move to make room for him.", "answer": "21-minute", "sentence": "The rain led to a 21-minute delay from the scheduled start time of 1:10 p.m. Even after the Mets recorded the first three outs of the day, bringing about an early seventh-inning stretch, patrons were still trickling in, a mix of fans taking advantage of the opportunity to watch 11-plus innings of baseball and others anticipating the debut of Steven Matz in the second game.", "paragraph_sentence": " The rain led to a 21-minute delay from the scheduled start time of 1:10 p.m. Even after the Mets recorded the first three outs of the day, bringing about an early seventh-inning stretch, patrons were still trickling in, a mix of fans taking advantage of the opportunity to watch 11-plus innings of baseball and others anticipating the debut of Steven Matz in the second game. Saturday\u2019s attendees were allowed to exchange their tickets for Sunday but were placed in different locations. The confusion even affected those not at the park: WPIX broadcast the end of Saturday\u2019s game before SNY took over for the second game. Collins said his players\u2019 routines would not change much, but the unorthodox circumstances befuddled him to a degree. He was not certain of the technicalities of the rule, but he said he planned to carry Matz as a 26th player because the team was playing an extra game on Sunday and therefore did not have to make a corresponding move to make room for him.", "paragraph_answer": "The rain led to a 21-minute delay from the scheduled start time of 1:10 p.m. Even after the Mets recorded the first three outs of the day, bringing about an early seventh-inning stretch, patrons were still trickling in, a mix of fans taking advantage of the opportunity to watch 11-plus innings of baseball and others anticipating the debut of Steven Matz in the second game. Saturday\u2019s attendees were allowed to exchange their tickets for Sunday but were placed in different locations. The confusion even affected those not at the park: WPIX broadcast the end of Saturday\u2019s game before SNY took over for the second game. Collins said his players\u2019 routines would not change much, but the unorthodox circumstances befuddled him to a degree. He was not certain of the technicalities of the rule, but he said he planned to carry Matz as a 26th player because the team was playing an extra game on Sunday and therefore did not have to make a corresponding move to make room for him.", "sentence_answer": "The rain led to a 21-minute delay from the scheduled start time of 1:10 p.m. Even after the Mets recorded the first three outs of the day, bringing about an early seventh-inning stretch, patrons were still trickling in, a mix of fans taking advantage of the opportunity to watch 11-plus innings of baseball and others anticipating the debut of Steven Matz in the second game.", "paragraph_id": "5d702605c8e4820a9b66d243"} +{"question": "What did Mr. Hai say in regards to possible repercussions?", "paragraph": "Last week, he posted online a letter he sent to Chinese leaders that accused the Ministry of Public Security of illegally detaining lawyers. A few days later, he added his name to a petition, addressed to Mr. Xi, demanding that the police be held accountable for their role in the detentions. Cheng Hai, 63, an acquaintance of Mr. Yu who also signed the letter, said he thought the police might be seeking to punish him for openly criticizing the authorities. Mr. Cheng added that he himself was unafraid of the possible repercussions of signing. \u201cSafeguarding rule of law has its price,\u201d he said in an interview.", "answer": "\u201cSafeguarding rule of law has its price,\u201d", "sentence": "\u201cSafeguarding rule of law has its price,\u201d he said in an interview.", "paragraph_sentence": "Last week, he posted online a letter he sent to Chinese leaders that accused the Ministry of Public Security of illegally detaining lawyers. A few days later, he added his name to a petition, addressed to Mr. Xi, demanding that the police be held accountable for their role in the detentions. Cheng Hai, 63, an acquaintance of Mr. Yu who also signed the letter, said he thought the police might be seeking to punish him for openly criticizing the authorities. Mr. Cheng added that he himself was unafraid of the possible repercussions of signing. \u201cSafeguarding rule of law has its price,\u201d he said in an interview. ", "paragraph_answer": "Last week, he posted online a letter he sent to Chinese leaders that accused the Ministry of Public Security of illegally detaining lawyers. A few days later, he added his name to a petition, addressed to Mr. Xi, demanding that the police be held accountable for their role in the detentions. Cheng Hai, 63, an acquaintance of Mr. Yu who also signed the letter, said he thought the police might be seeking to punish him for openly criticizing the authorities. Mr. Cheng added that he himself was unafraid of the possible repercussions of signing. \u201cSafeguarding rule of law has its price,\u201d he said in an interview.", "sentence_answer": " \u201cSafeguarding rule of law has its price,\u201d he said in an interview.", "paragraph_id": "5d708099c8e4820a9b66f3cc"} +{"question": "Who is the executive director of the National Association for Law Placement?", "paragraph": "During the recession, the legal sector \u2014 which is not confined to lawyers \u2014 shed about 60,000 jobs, and only about 20,000 have been added back, said James G. Leipold, executive director of the National Association for Law Placement, citing data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Among the lawyers affected by the cuts, those with two to three years of experience were hit particularly hard, said David P. Miranda, president of the New York State Bar Association. As a result, he said, recent law school graduates have found themselves competing for work not only with classmates, but also with seasoned lawyers. The difficulty in finding jobs appears to have discouraged some people from pursuing legal careers, he added. Indeed, law school enrollment across the country dropped 30 percent over the past four years, Mr. Leipold said.", "answer": "James G. Leipold", "sentence": "During the recession, the legal sector \u2014 which is not confined to lawyers \u2014 shed about 60,000 jobs, and only about 20,000 have been added back, said James G. Leipold , executive director of the National Association for Law Placement, citing data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.", "paragraph_sentence": " During the recession, the legal sector \u2014 which is not confined to lawyers \u2014 shed about 60,000 jobs, and only about 20,000 have been added back, said James G. Leipold , executive director of the National Association for Law Placement, citing data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Among the lawyers affected by the cuts, those with two to three years of experience were hit particularly hard, said David P. Miranda, president of the New York State Bar Association. As a result, he said, recent law school graduates have found themselves competing for work not only with classmates, but also with seasoned lawyers. The difficulty in finding jobs appears to have discouraged some people from pursuing legal careers, he added. Indeed, law school enrollment across the country dropped 30 percent over the past four years, Mr. Leipold said.", "paragraph_answer": "During the recession, the legal sector \u2014 which is not confined to lawyers \u2014 shed about 60,000 jobs, and only about 20,000 have been added back, said James G. Leipold , executive director of the National Association for Law Placement, citing data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Among the lawyers affected by the cuts, those with two to three years of experience were hit particularly hard, said David P. Miranda, president of the New York State Bar Association. As a result, he said, recent law school graduates have found themselves competing for work not only with classmates, but also with seasoned lawyers. The difficulty in finding jobs appears to have discouraged some people from pursuing legal careers, he added. Indeed, law school enrollment across the country dropped 30 percent over the past four years, Mr. Leipold said.", "sentence_answer": "During the recession, the legal sector \u2014 which is not confined to lawyers \u2014 shed about 60,000 jobs, and only about 20,000 have been added back, said James G. Leipold , executive director of the National Association for Law Placement, citing data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.", "paragraph_id": "5d704235c8e4820a9b66e617"} +{"question": "What assessment of the A.L.P. did Mr. Ghani order?", "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": "personnel asset inventory", "sentence": "The widespread nature of the problem has prompted Mr. Ghani to order an immediate \u201c personnel asset inventory ,\u201d official said.", "paragraph_sentence": " The widespread nature of the problem has prompted Mr. Ghani to order an immediate \u201c personnel 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 \u201c personnel 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": "The widespread nature of the problem has prompted Mr. Ghani to order an immediate \u201c personnel asset inventory ,\u201d official said.", "paragraph_id": "5d7017a6c8e4820a9b66c3ba"} +{"question": "What is one example of an indication for gun violence?", "paragraph": "No single law usually could have prevented mass shootings, which remain rare. Gun violence experts are increasingly interested in changing laws to better target those who have a demonstrated propensity for gun violence. For instance, a nonviolent felony conviction from two decades ago may well be less predictive of gun violence than a domestic violence protection order or drunken-driving conviction, said Daniel Webster, director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Policy and Research.", "answer": "domestic violence protection order", "sentence": "For instance, a nonviolent felony conviction from two decades ago may well be less predictive of gun violence than a domestic violence protection order or drunken-driving conviction, said Daniel Webster, director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Policy and Research.", "paragraph_sentence": "No single law usually could have prevented mass shootings, which remain rare. Gun violence experts are increasingly interested in changing laws to better target those who have a demonstrated propensity for gun violence. For instance, a nonviolent felony conviction from two decades ago may well be less predictive of gun violence than a domestic violence protection order or drunken-driving conviction, said Daniel Webster, director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Policy and Research. ", "paragraph_answer": "No single law usually could have prevented mass shootings, which remain rare. Gun violence experts are increasingly interested in changing laws to better target those who have a demonstrated propensity for gun violence. For instance, a nonviolent felony conviction from two decades ago may well be less predictive of gun violence than a domestic violence protection order or drunken-driving conviction, said Daniel Webster, director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Policy and Research.", "sentence_answer": "For instance, a nonviolent felony conviction from two decades ago may well be less predictive of gun violence than a domestic violence protection order or drunken-driving conviction, said Daniel Webster, director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Policy and Research.", "paragraph_id": "5d702d0fc8e4820a9b66da92"} +{"question": "do players favor lobbying or public campaings?", "paragraph": "In the end, it was close. The merger was backed by 69.53 percent of the shareholders who voted on Friday, narrowly above the amount needed. Investor activism like the Samsung fight is relatively uncommon in Asia. Publicly traded companies often remain under the control of close-knit family groups or state-backed shareholders, and legal protections for minority investors can be patchy. In many cases, activism in Asia plays out over a longer horizon, with players favoring persistent behind-the scenes lobbying over public campaigns.", "answer": "lobbying", "sentence": "In many cases, activism in Asia plays out over a longer horizon, with players favoring persistent behind-the scenes lobbying over public campaigns.", "paragraph_sentence": "In the end, it was close. The merger was backed by 69.53 percent of the shareholders who voted on Friday, narrowly above the amount needed. Investor activism like the Samsung fight is relatively uncommon in Asia. Publicly traded companies often remain under the control of close-knit family groups or state-backed shareholders, and legal protections for minority investors can be patchy. In many cases, activism in Asia plays out over a longer horizon, with players favoring persistent behind-the scenes lobbying over public campaigns. ", "paragraph_answer": "In the end, it was close. The merger was backed by 69.53 percent of the shareholders who voted on Friday, narrowly above the amount needed. Investor activism like the Samsung fight is relatively uncommon in Asia. Publicly traded companies often remain under the control of close-knit family groups or state-backed shareholders, and legal protections for minority investors can be patchy. In many cases, activism in Asia plays out over a longer horizon, with players favoring persistent behind-the scenes lobbying over public campaigns.", "sentence_answer": "In many cases, activism in Asia plays out over a longer horizon, with players favoring persistent behind-the scenes lobbying over public campaigns.", "paragraph_id": "5d701541c8e4820a9b66c147"} +{"question": "When was Sandy's birthday?", "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": "June 22", "sentence": "\u201cWe just thought that with your mother turning 70 on June 22 , that might be a good time.\u201d", "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": "\u201cWe just thought that with your mother turning 70 on June 22 , that might be a good time.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d70431fc8e4820a9b66e681"} +{"question": "When did the house vote take place?", "paragraph": "\u201cWithout these unions in the state, you\u2019re not going to make what you should,\u201d said Josh Weeks, a union carpenter from Meta, Mo., who was in the audience for Mr. Nixon\u2019s speech. \u201cIn my opinion, if you want to be in a right-to-work state, you should move to one.\u201d The override effort will hinge on whether supporters of the legislation can persuade enough Republicans who sided with the unions during the regular session to join their cause. Two-thirds majorities are needed in both chambers to overturn Mr. Nixon\u2019s veto. The House vote in May fell 17 votes short of that mark.", "answer": "May", "sentence": "The House vote in May fell 17 votes short of that mark.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWithout these unions in the state, you\u2019re not going to make what you should,\u201d said Josh Weeks, a union carpenter from Meta, Mo., who was in the audience for Mr. Nixon\u2019s speech. \u201cIn my opinion, if you want to be in a right-to-work state, you should move to one.\u201d The override effort will hinge on whether supporters of the legislation can persuade enough Republicans who sided with the unions during the regular session to join their cause. Two-thirds majorities are needed in both chambers to overturn Mr. Nixon\u2019s veto. The House vote in May fell 17 votes short of that mark. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWithout these unions in the state, you\u2019re not going to make what you should,\u201d said Josh Weeks, a union carpenter from Meta, Mo., who was in the audience for Mr. Nixon\u2019s speech. \u201cIn my opinion, if you want to be in a right-to-work state, you should move to one.\u201d The override effort will hinge on whether supporters of the legislation can persuade enough Republicans who sided with the unions during the regular session to join their cause. Two-thirds majorities are needed in both chambers to overturn Mr. Nixon\u2019s veto. The House vote in May fell 17 votes short of that mark.", "sentence_answer": "The House vote in May fell 17 votes short of that mark.", "paragraph_id": "5d7018e2c8e4820a9b66c4f6"} +{"question": "What did the subject's sister study in 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": "gemology", "sentence": "I think for women it wasn\u2019t expected in my family, even though my sister ended up studying gemology .", "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": "I think for women it wasn\u2019t expected in my family, even though my sister ended up studying gemology .", "paragraph_id": "5d70289ec8e4820a9b66d637"} +{"question": "Who was the author of the book, \"Passionate Marriage\", as shown in \"Digging for Fire\"?", "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": "Dr. David Schnarch", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d70858dc8e4820a9b66f435"} +{"question": "Who reported the lifting of the moratorium?", "paragraph": "HONG KONG \u2014 China\u2019s securities regulator plans to lift its moratorium on new stock market listings before the end of the year, the official news agency Xinhua said on Friday. A spokesman for the regulator said that after \u201cperfecting\u201d the system for initial public offerings, China would allow an initial group of 28 companies to proceed with listings in the coming weeks and would seek to streamline and strengthen oversight of the listing process, Xinhua said.", "answer": "official news agency Xinhua", "sentence": "HONG KONG \u2014 China\u2019s securities regulator plans to lift its moratorium on new stock market listings before the end of the year, the official news agency Xinhua said on Friday.", "paragraph_sentence": " HONG KONG \u2014 China\u2019s securities regulator plans to lift its moratorium on new stock market listings before the end of the year, the official news agency Xinhua said on Friday. A spokesman for the regulator said that after \u201cperfecting\u201d the system for initial public offerings, China would allow an initial group of 28 companies to proceed with listings in the coming weeks and would seek to streamline and strengthen oversight of the listing process, Xinhua said.", "paragraph_answer": "HONG KONG \u2014 China\u2019s securities regulator plans to lift its moratorium on new stock market listings before the end of the year, the official news agency Xinhua said on Friday. A spokesman for the regulator said that after \u201cperfecting\u201d the system for initial public offerings, China would allow an initial group of 28 companies to proceed with listings in the coming weeks and would seek to streamline and strengthen oversight of the listing process, Xinhua said.", "sentence_answer": "HONG KONG \u2014 China\u2019s securities regulator plans to lift its moratorium on new stock market listings before the end of the year, the official news agency Xinhua said on Friday.", "paragraph_id": "5d702c02c8e4820a9b66d97b"} +{"question": "What did the research study?", "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": "hundreds of matters ranging from political views to exercise habits", "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": "5d70055bc8e4820a9b66a8c2"} +{"question": "What is the bonus based on?", "paragraph": "The message is that you recognize a problem and how to fix it \u2014 and that it\u2019s in everyone\u2019s interest to do so. I\u2019m actively looking for a new job. I\u2019m well connected within my field, good at what I do and have excellent references. I have already turned down one offer that was good but not the right next step for me. I\u2019m confident that something better will pop up soon. However, we\u2019re approaching the end of the year, and my organization hands out modest, but not insignificant, performance bonuses. What\u2019s the optimal timing to leave but still collect my bonus? If I line up a position that starts in early January, can I still request a bonus for the (very good) work I\u2019ve done this year? WASHINGTON", "answer": "performance bonuses", "sentence": "However, we\u2019re approaching the end of the year, and my organization hands out modest, but not insignificant, performance bonuses .", "paragraph_sentence": "The message is that you recognize a problem and how to fix it \u2014 and that it\u2019s in everyone\u2019s interest to do so. I\u2019m actively looking for a new job. I\u2019m well connected within my field, good at what I do and have excellent references. I have already turned down one offer that was good but not the right next step for me. I\u2019m confident that something better will pop up soon. However, we\u2019re approaching the end of the year, and my organization hands out modest, but not insignificant, performance bonuses . What\u2019s the optimal timing to leave but still collect my bonus? If I line up a position that starts in early January, can I still request a bonus for the (very good) work I\u2019ve done this year? WASHINGTON", "paragraph_answer": "The message is that you recognize a problem and how to fix it \u2014 and that it\u2019s in everyone\u2019s interest to do so. I\u2019m actively looking for a new job. I\u2019m well connected within my field, good at what I do and have excellent references. I have already turned down one offer that was good but not the right next step for me. I\u2019m confident that something better will pop up soon. However, we\u2019re approaching the end of the year, and my organization hands out modest, but not insignificant, performance bonuses . What\u2019s the optimal timing to leave but still collect my bonus? If I line up a position that starts in early January, can I still request a bonus for the (very good) work I\u2019ve done this year? WASHINGTON", "sentence_answer": "However, we\u2019re approaching the end of the year, and my organization hands out modest, but not insignificant, performance bonuses .", "paragraph_id": "5d70123dc8e4820a9b66be99"} +{"question": "What color flag was the decision to enter NATO?", "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": "red flag", "sentence": "Another was Russia, where Ukraine\u2019s entry into NATO has always been a red flag .", "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": "Another was Russia, where Ukraine\u2019s entry into NATO has always been a red flag .", "paragraph_id": "5d700dc7c8e4820a9b66b96a"} +{"question": "What did supporters of the bill argue?", "paragraph": "Hundreds of Vermonters packed the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday for a committee hearing on legislation that would expand background checks for gun buyers and impose other new firearms restrictions. Several opponents argued that the bill is not needed, pointing to Vermont\u2019s rank in F.B.I. statistics as the safest state. Supporters argued that Vermont is not immune from domestic violence and is not an island from the rest of the country. The bill would expand federal background checks to cover gun sales between private parties. It also would step up reporting to the federal background check system when a court adjudicates someone as mentally ill.", "answer": "Vermont is not immune from domestic violence and is not an island from the rest of the country", "sentence": "Supporters argued that Vermont is not immune from domestic violence and is not an island from the rest of the country .", "paragraph_sentence": "Hundreds of Vermonters packed the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday for a committee hearing on legislation that would expand background checks for gun buyers and impose other new firearms restrictions. Several opponents argued that the bill is not needed, pointing to Vermont\u2019s rank in F.B.I. statistics as the safest state. Supporters argued that Vermont is not immune from domestic violence and is not an island from the rest of the country . The bill would expand federal background checks to cover gun sales between private parties. It also would step up reporting to the federal background check system when a court adjudicates someone as mentally ill.", "paragraph_answer": "Hundreds of Vermonters packed the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday for a committee hearing on legislation that would expand background checks for gun buyers and impose other new firearms restrictions. Several opponents argued that the bill is not needed, pointing to Vermont\u2019s rank in F.B.I. statistics as the safest state. Supporters argued that Vermont is not immune from domestic violence and is not an island from the rest of the country . The bill would expand federal background checks to cover gun sales between private parties. It also would step up reporting to the federal background check system when a court adjudicates someone as mentally ill.", "sentence_answer": "Supporters argued that Vermont is not immune from domestic violence and is not an island from the rest of the country .", "paragraph_id": "5d700986c8e4820a9b66b238"} +{"question": "What was the name of the event?", "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": "Color Play Asia", "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": "5d704cb9c8e4820a9b66ea07"} +{"question": "Did anyone provide medical assistance on the scene?", "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": "A Palestinian doctor from a nearby clinic gave first aid.", "sentence": "A Palestinian doctor from a nearby clinic gave first aid. Police officers at the scene fatally shot the assailant.", "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": " A Palestinian doctor from a nearby clinic gave first aid. Police officers at the scene fatally shot the assailant.", "paragraph_id": "5d701c7bc8e4820a9b66c7dd"} +{"question": "Where did they eat dinner?", "paragraph": "We were eating dinner at Houseman, a restaurant opened by the chef Ned Baldwin on the once-quiet far-western side of SoHo, now called Hudson Square. It is a spare, welcoming room, with walls of white brick, warm lighting, smooth wooden tables the color of Bridgehampton sand \u2014 a neighborhood restaurant for those who live amid art and commerce, who travel widely, who want to eat simply and well. There was succulent roast chicken in front of us, and a confitted turkey leg accompanied by bacon and prunes and a slab of grilled bread, a shatteringly crisp fist of fried haddock, a few fingers of juicy sausage. There was a plate of roasted carrots with cottage cheese and pumpkin seeds. There were soft, perfect leeks with fried cauliflower, anchovies and bread crumbs that caught the light from the flickering votive candles on the table. This all made for superb eating.", "answer": "Houseman", "sentence": "We were eating dinner at Houseman , a restaurant opened by the chef Ned Baldwin on the once-quiet far-western side of SoHo, now called Hudson Square.", "paragraph_sentence": " We were eating dinner at Houseman , a restaurant opened by the chef Ned Baldwin on the once-quiet far-western side of SoHo, now called Hudson Square. It is a spare, welcoming room, with walls of white brick, warm lighting, smooth wooden tables the color of Bridgehampton sand \u2014 a neighborhood restaurant for those who live amid art and commerce, who travel widely, who want to eat simply and well. There was succulent roast chicken in front of us, and a confitted turkey leg accompanied by bacon and prunes and a slab of grilled bread, a shatteringly crisp fist of fried haddock, a few fingers of juicy sausage. There was a plate of roasted carrots with cottage cheese and pumpkin seeds. There were soft, perfect leeks with fried cauliflower, anchovies and bread crumbs that caught the light from the flickering votive candles on the table. This all made for superb eating.", "paragraph_answer": "We were eating dinner at Houseman , a restaurant opened by the chef Ned Baldwin on the once-quiet far-western side of SoHo, now called Hudson Square. It is a spare, welcoming room, with walls of white brick, warm lighting, smooth wooden tables the color of Bridgehampton sand \u2014 a neighborhood restaurant for those who live amid art and commerce, who travel widely, who want to eat simply and well. There was succulent roast chicken in front of us, and a confitted turkey leg accompanied by bacon and prunes and a slab of grilled bread, a shatteringly crisp fist of fried haddock, a few fingers of juicy sausage. There was a plate of roasted carrots with cottage cheese and pumpkin seeds. There were soft, perfect leeks with fried cauliflower, anchovies and bread crumbs that caught the light from the flickering votive candles on the table. This all made for superb eating.", "sentence_answer": "We were eating dinner at Houseman , a restaurant opened by the chef Ned Baldwin on the once-quiet far-western side of SoHo, now called Hudson Square.", "paragraph_id": "5d700563c8e4820a9b66a8d5"} +{"question": "Who plays the derelict?", "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": "Dave Attell", "sentence": "(This is, after all, a woman who, when she cuts back on her drinking, donates her booze to a derelict played by Dave Attell .)", "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": "(This is, after all, a woman who, when she cuts back on her drinking, donates her booze to a derelict played by Dave Attell .)", "paragraph_id": "5d7012c5c8e4820a9b66bf0c"} +{"question": "Who stated that death of the black woman in police custody would bring renewed attention to the anger between white and blacks?", "paragraph": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Attorney General Loretta E. Lynch said Sunday that the recent arrest of a black woman in Texas and her death while in police custody were bringing renewed attention to the fear and anger that characterize the relationship of blacks with the police. \u201cI think that it highlights the concern of many in the black community that a routine stop for many of the members of the black community is not handled with the same professionalism and courtesy that other people may get from the police,\u201d she said in an interview on the ABC News program \u201cThis Week.\u201d", "answer": "Attorney General Loretta E. Lynch", "sentence": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Attorney General Loretta E. Lynch said Sunday that the recent arrest of a black woman in Texas and her death while in police custody were bringing renewed attention to the fear and anger that characterize the relationship of blacks with the police.", "paragraph_sentence": " WASHINGTON \u2014 Attorney General Loretta E. Lynch said Sunday that the recent arrest of a black woman in Texas and her death while in police custody were bringing renewed attention to the fear and anger that characterize the relationship of blacks with the police. \u201cI think that it highlights the concern of many in the black community that a routine stop for many of the members of the black community is not handled with the same professionalism and courtesy that other people may get from the police,\u201d she said in an interview on the ABC News program \u201cThis Week.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Attorney General Loretta E. Lynch said Sunday that the recent arrest of a black woman in Texas and her death while in police custody were bringing renewed attention to the fear and anger that characterize the relationship of blacks with the police. \u201cI think that it highlights the concern of many in the black community that a routine stop for many of the members of the black community is not handled with the same professionalism and courtesy that other people may get from the police,\u201d she said in an interview on the ABC News program \u201cThis Week.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Attorney General Loretta E. Lynch said Sunday that the recent arrest of a black woman in Texas and her death while in police custody were bringing renewed attention to the fear and anger that characterize the relationship of blacks with the police.", "paragraph_id": "5d701badc8e4820a9b66c71d"} +{"question": "What was Dean Crutchfield said about the moving company ad?", "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": "clearly depicted sexual activity", "sentence": "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_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": "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_id": "5d70157ac8e4820a9b66c1a0"} +{"question": "What has been shaky even with the moves?", "paragraph": "Despite the moves, the markets have been shaky. On July 27, stocks in Shanghai dropped 8.5 percent, which was the market\u2019s biggest daily drop in eight years.", "answer": "markets", "sentence": "Despite the moves, the markets have been shaky.", "paragraph_sentence": " Despite the moves, the markets have been shaky. On July 27, stocks in Shanghai dropped 8.5 percent, which was the market\u2019s biggest daily drop in eight years.", "paragraph_answer": "Despite the moves, the markets have been shaky. On July 27, stocks in Shanghai dropped 8.5 percent, which was the market\u2019s biggest daily drop in eight years.", "sentence_answer": "Despite the moves, the markets have been shaky.", "paragraph_id": "5d7043f6c8e4820a9b66e72f"} +{"question": "Where did a couple saw a crossing gate lowered in front of them?", "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": "Brentwood, N.Y", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d704fe3c8e4820a9b66eb0e"} +{"question": "What team did Sather lead as general manager?", "paragraph": "Glen Sather, who has been at the helm of the Rangers since 2000, said Wednesday that he was relinquishing his role as general manager in favor of his assistant Jeff Gorton. Sather, 71, will remain team president. After missing the playoffs in Sather\u2019s first four seasons, the Rangers have reached the postseason in nine of the last 10 years. They advanced to the Eastern Conference finals three times in the last four seasons, including a trip to the Stanley Cup finals in 2014, when they lost to the Los Angeles Kings in five games.", "answer": "the Rangers", "sentence": "Glen Sather, who has been at the helm of the Rangers since 2000, said Wednesday that he was relinquishing his role as general manager in favor of his assistant Jeff Gorton.", "paragraph_sentence": " Glen Sather, who has been at the helm of the Rangers since 2000, said Wednesday that he was relinquishing his role as general manager in favor of his assistant Jeff Gorton. Sather, 71, will remain team president. After missing the playoffs in Sather\u2019s first four seasons, the Rangers have reached the postseason in nine of the last 10 years. They advanced to the Eastern Conference finals three times in the last four seasons, including a trip to the Stanley Cup finals in 2014, when they lost to the Los Angeles Kings in five games.", "paragraph_answer": "Glen Sather, who has been at the helm of the Rangers since 2000, said Wednesday that he was relinquishing his role as general manager in favor of his assistant Jeff Gorton. Sather, 71, will remain team president. After missing the playoffs in Sather\u2019s first four seasons, the Rangers have reached the postseason in nine of the last 10 years. They advanced to the Eastern Conference finals three times in the last four seasons, including a trip to the Stanley Cup finals in 2014, when they lost to the Los Angeles Kings in five games.", "sentence_answer": "Glen Sather, who has been at the helm of the Rangers since 2000, said Wednesday that he was relinquishing his role as general manager in favor of his assistant Jeff Gorton.", "paragraph_id": "5d703c52c8e4820a9b66e2fd"} +{"question": "Who does the movie show Mohamed having an at-odds relationship with?", "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": "Daru", "sentence": "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_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": "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_id": "5d709167c8e4820a9b66f5a6"} +{"question": "Which law firm employs Mr. Lieberman?", "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": "Pomerantz law firm", "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.", "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": "\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.", "paragraph_id": "5d701c88c8e4820a9b66c803"} +{"question": "Where was the maximum security prison that housed Mr. Sweat located?", "paragraph": "Mr. Sweat, 35, has revealed those details and more to investigators reviewing his stunning June 6 escape with another inmate from the maximum-security prison in Dannemora, N.Y., according to several people briefed on his account. He has gone into the planning and execution of his bid for freedom in extraordinarily specific terms, portraying himself as the driving force. It is a story of patience, timing, determination and physical strength \u2014 born perhaps of a life of incarceration \u2014 along with good luck, and a MacGyver-like sense of ingenuity. For example, when Mr. Sweat was trying to cut through a concrete wall and heat from steam pipes in the underground passage became unbearable, he rigged a fan taken from his cell using electricity from the tunnel\u2019s lights.", "answer": "Dannemora, N.Y.", "sentence": "Mr. Sweat, 35, has revealed those details and more to investigators reviewing his stunning June 6 escape with another inmate from the maximum-security prison in Dannemora, N.Y. , according to several people briefed on his account.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Sweat, 35, has revealed those details and more to investigators reviewing his stunning June 6 escape with another inmate from the maximum-security prison in Dannemora, N.Y. , according to several people briefed on his account. He has gone into the planning and execution of his bid for freedom in extraordinarily specific terms, portraying himself as the driving force. It is a story of patience, timing, determination and physical strength \u2014 born perhaps of a life of incarceration \u2014 along with good luck, and a MacGyver-like sense of ingenuity. For example, when Mr. Sweat was trying to cut through a concrete wall and heat from steam pipes in the underground passage became unbearable, he rigged a fan taken from his cell using electricity from the tunnel\u2019s lights.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Sweat, 35, has revealed those details and more to investigators reviewing his stunning June 6 escape with another inmate from the maximum-security prison in Dannemora, N.Y. , according to several people briefed on his account. He has gone into the planning and execution of his bid for freedom in extraordinarily specific terms, portraying himself as the driving force. It is a story of patience, timing, determination and physical strength \u2014 born perhaps of a life of incarceration \u2014 along with good luck, and a MacGyver-like sense of ingenuity. For example, when Mr. Sweat was trying to cut through a concrete wall and heat from steam pipes in the underground passage became unbearable, he rigged a fan taken from his cell using electricity from the tunnel\u2019s lights.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Sweat, 35, has revealed those details and more to investigators reviewing his stunning June 6 escape with another inmate from the maximum-security prison in Dannemora, N.Y. , according to several people briefed on his account.", "paragraph_id": "5d7056b8c8e4820a9b66ed28"} +{"question": "What is erratic about California climate?", "paragraph": "California is able to supply a third of America\u2019s vegetables and two-thirds of its fruits and nuts because it is one of only five major growing regions of the world with what is known as a Mediterranean climate. That means it is cold and wet in the winter, then dry and sunny in the summer. The bright, clear days create ideal growing conditions. The hitch is water. Precipitation is erratic, and when it comes, it tends to fall in the mountainous northern and eastern parts of the state, while much of the population and farming are in the south and west. Winter snows in the Sierra Nevada are crucial, sending billions of gallons of water racing down the state\u2019s rivers with the spring snowmelt. In the mid-20th century, two enormous government projects \u2014 the federal Central Valley Project and the State Water Project \u2014 were built to capture those flows. They move water over hills and through deserts, delivering it as far south as the San Diego neighborhoods bordering Mexico. Much of the water is pumped from the great delta where the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers converge on their way to the ocean through the Golden Gate, and that pumping has become a focus of intractable conflict.", "answer": "Precipitation", "sentence": "Precipitation is erratic, and when it comes, it tends to fall in the mountainous northern and eastern parts of the state, while much of the population and farming are in the south and west.", "paragraph_sentence": "California is able to supply a third of America\u2019s vegetables and two-thirds of its fruits and nuts because it is one of only five major growing regions of the world with what is known as a Mediterranean climate. That means it is cold and wet in the winter, then dry and sunny in the summer. The bright, clear days create ideal growing conditions. The hitch is water. Precipitation is erratic, and when it comes, it tends to fall in the mountainous northern and eastern parts of the state, while much of the population and farming are in the south and west. Winter snows in the Sierra Nevada are crucial, sending billions of gallons of water racing down the state\u2019s rivers with the spring snowmelt. In the mid-20th century, two enormous government projects \u2014 the federal Central Valley Project and the State Water Project \u2014 were built to capture those flows. They move water over hills and through deserts, delivering it as far south as the San Diego neighborhoods bordering Mexico. Much of the water is pumped from the great delta where the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers converge on their way to the ocean through the Golden Gate, and that pumping has become a focus of intractable conflict.", "paragraph_answer": "California is able to supply a third of America\u2019s vegetables and two-thirds of its fruits and nuts because it is one of only five major growing regions of the world with what is known as a Mediterranean climate. That means it is cold and wet in the winter, then dry and sunny in the summer. The bright, clear days create ideal growing conditions. The hitch is water. Precipitation is erratic, and when it comes, it tends to fall in the mountainous northern and eastern parts of the state, while much of the population and farming are in the south and west. Winter snows in the Sierra Nevada are crucial, sending billions of gallons of water racing down the state\u2019s rivers with the spring snowmelt. In the mid-20th century, two enormous government projects \u2014 the federal Central Valley Project and the State Water Project \u2014 were built to capture those flows. They move water over hills and through deserts, delivering it as far south as the San Diego neighborhoods bordering Mexico. Much of the water is pumped from the great delta where the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers converge on their way to the ocean through the Golden Gate, and that pumping has become a focus of intractable conflict.", "sentence_answer": " Precipitation is erratic, and when it comes, it tends to fall in the mountainous northern and eastern parts of the state, while much of the population and farming are in the south and west.", "paragraph_id": "5d700b4ac8e4820a9b66b5f4"} +{"question": "In what country is the customer always wrong?", "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": "France", "sentence": "What startled France , a country where the customer is always wrong, was the revolt of the taxi rider.", "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": "What startled France , a country where the customer is always wrong, was the revolt of the taxi rider.", "paragraph_id": "5d703523c8e4820a9b66df55"} +{"question": "What type of transaction is Freescale Seminconductors", "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": "cash-and-stock transaction", "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": "5d700b4ac8e4820a9b66b5fc"} +{"question": "How long ago does the oldest sections of the jail date back to?", "paragraph": "Many inmates do not get the required medical care, the motion says. \u201cIt must be remembered that the great majority of those confined in B.C.D.C. are awaiting trial, and so, under our Constitution, may not be punished,\u201d the motion said, referring to the Baltimore City Detention Center. \u201cMoreover, even for those confined in the jail who have been convicted, the Constitution does not permit them to be punished by denial of medical or mental health care, or by subjecting them to conditions of confinement that are unreasonably dangerous or inconsistent with human dignity.\u201d The problem has been long in the making as Baltimore did not invest in upkeep of the jail, the oldest sections of which date from the 1850s, said Elizabeth Alexander, the former director of the National Prison Project of the A.C.L.U. and one of the lawyers who filed the motion. \u201cThere have been decades of neglect; this didn\u2019t just happen in a day,\u201d she said. \u201cLack of staff, lack of resources and ultimately a lack of priority for people who don\u2019t have much influence in society all led to this.\u201d", "answer": "the 1850s", "sentence": "The problem has been long in the making as Baltimore did not invest in upkeep of the jail, the oldest sections of which date from the 1850s , said Elizabeth Alexander, the former director of the National Prison Project of the A.C.L.U. and one of the lawyers who filed the motion.", "paragraph_sentence": "Many inmates do not get the required medical care, the motion says. \u201cIt must be remembered that the great majority of those confined in B.C.D.C. are awaiting trial, and so, under our Constitution, may not be punished,\u201d the motion said, referring to the Baltimore City Detention Center. \u201cMoreover, even for those confined in the jail who have been convicted, the Constitution does not permit them to be punished by denial of medical or mental health care, or by subjecting them to conditions of confinement that are unreasonably dangerous or inconsistent with human dignity.\u201d The problem has been long in the making as Baltimore did not invest in upkeep of the jail, the oldest sections of which date from the 1850s , said Elizabeth Alexander, the former director of the National Prison Project of the A.C.L.U. and one of the lawyers who filed the motion. \u201cThere have been decades of neglect; this didn\u2019t just happen in a day,\u201d she said. \u201cLack of staff, lack of resources and ultimately a lack of priority for people who don\u2019t have much influence in society all led to this.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Many inmates do not get the required medical care, the motion says. \u201cIt must be remembered that the great majority of those confined in B.C.D.C. are awaiting trial, and so, under our Constitution, may not be punished,\u201d the motion said, referring to the Baltimore City Detention Center. \u201cMoreover, even for those confined in the jail who have been convicted, the Constitution does not permit them to be punished by denial of medical or mental health care, or by subjecting them to conditions of confinement that are unreasonably dangerous or inconsistent with human dignity.\u201d The problem has been long in the making as Baltimore did not invest in upkeep of the jail, the oldest sections of which date from the 1850s , said Elizabeth Alexander, the former director of the National Prison Project of the A.C.L.U. and one of the lawyers who filed the motion. \u201cThere have been decades of neglect; this didn\u2019t just happen in a day,\u201d she said. \u201cLack of staff, lack of resources and ultimately a lack of priority for people who don\u2019t have much influence in society all led to this.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The problem has been long in the making as Baltimore did not invest in upkeep of the jail, the oldest sections of which date from the 1850s , said Elizabeth Alexander, the former director of the National Prison Project of the A.C.L.U. and one of the lawyers who filed the motion.", "paragraph_id": "5d700a2cc8e4820a9b66b3ac"} +{"question": "What is Giorgio Morandi the master of?", "paragraph": "\u2605 \u2018Swedish Wooden Toys\u2019 (through Feb. 28) This presentation of more than 300 playthings from the late 16th to the early 21st centuries will be catnip for anyone into antique toys. The show features diminutive vehicles of all kinds from old-time wagons, trains and fully-rigged sailboats, to futuristic cars and a rocket ship. There are naturalistic and anthropomorphic animals, weapons, puzzles, games, dollhouses and architectural construction kits. While many of these items were produced by big manufacturers like BRIO and Playsam, many others are one-of-a-kind wonders like a miniature baking set from around 1900 that includes rolling pins, spatulas and other implements all lovingly carved from wood and fitting into a tray just eight inches long. Bard Graduate Center Gallery, 18 West 86th Street, Manhattan, 212-501-3011, bgc.bard.edu. (Johnson) \u2605 Gil Batle: \u2018Hatched in Prison\u2019 (through Jan. 9) Mr. Batle, 53, served a total of 20 years in five California prisons for fraud and forgery. Now living in the Philippines, he has been recounting his experiences in an unlikely medium. Using a high-speed dental drill, he carves miniature narratives of prison life into the surfaces of ostrich eggs. The 19 examples in this show, all made in the past two years, are amazing for their meticulous craftsmanship and detailed story telling. Ricco Maresca, 529 West 20th Street, Chelsea, 212-627-4819, riccomaresca.com. (Johnson) \u2605 Annu Palakunnathu Matthew: \u2018Indelible Memories\u2019 (through Jan. 16) Ms. Matthew was born in England to Indian parents, spent her adolescence and early adulthood in India, and has lived in the United States since. The mostly album-size photographs in this compact but far-ranging gallery survey are about the intensities and confusions of a cultural mixing that makes the artist, psychologically, both a global citizen and an outsider, at home and in transit, wherever she is. And it\u2019s about photography as document and fiction: souvenir, re-enactment and imaginative projection. (Closed Dec. 24 through Jan. 4.) A beautiful show that could too easily slip away. sepiaEYE, 547 West 27th Street, Chelsea, 212-967-0738, sepiaeye.com. (Cotter) \u2605 Robert Ryman (through June 18) For nearly 60s years, the Minimalist painter Robert Ryman has had few equals when it comes to doing more with less. White has been his primary, if not quite his only, color, the square his typical format. And yet within these seeming limitations a remarkably fecund and resonant body of work has evolved as demonstrated with unusual clarity (and in natural light) by this small but comprehensive exhibition. Dia: Chelsea, 535 West 22nd Street, 212-989-5566, diaart.org. (Smith) \u2605 Giorgio Morandi (through June 25) The Italian master of modern still life, and closet abstractionist, is celebrated in a large show devoted foremost to his painting from the 1930s, which are not well known in this country. They reveal a period of struggle during which the artist had settled on what to paint, how to paint was still very much up for grabs. Joel Meyerowitz\u2019s large color photographs of Morandi\u2019s still life objects \u2013 which he sometimes altered \u2013 are also on view. Reservations are required. Center for Italian Modern Art, 421 Broome Street, near Crosby Street, SoHo, 646-370-3596, italianmodernart.org. (Smith)", "answer": "modern still life", "sentence": "The Italian master of modern still life ,", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2605 \u2018Swedish Wooden Toys\u2019 (through Feb. 28) This presentation of more than 300 playthings from the late 16th to the early 21st centuries will be catnip for anyone into antique toys. The show features diminutive vehicles of all kinds from old-time wagons, trains and fully-rigged sailboats, to futuristic cars and a rocket ship. There are naturalistic and anthropomorphic animals, weapons, puzzles, games, dollhouses and architectural construction kits. While many of these items were produced by big manufacturers like BRIO and Playsam, many others are one-of-a-kind wonders like a miniature baking set from around 1900 that includes rolling pins, spatulas and other implements all lovingly carved from wood and fitting into a tray just eight inches long. Bard Graduate Center Gallery, 18 West 86th Street, Manhattan, 212-501-3011, bgc.bard.edu. (Johnson) \u2605 Gil Batle: \u2018Hatched in Prison\u2019 (through Jan. 9) Mr. Batle, 53, served a total of 20 years in five California prisons for fraud and forgery. Now living in the Philippines, he has been recounting his experiences in an unlikely medium. Using a high-speed dental drill, he carves miniature narratives of prison life into the surfaces of ostrich eggs. The 19 examples in this show, all made in the past two years, are amazing for their meticulous craftsmanship and detailed story telling. Ricco Maresca, 529 West 20th Street, Chelsea, 212-627-4819, riccomaresca.com. (Johnson) \u2605 Annu Palakunnathu Matthew: \u2018Indelible Memories\u2019 (through Jan. 16) Ms. Matthew was born in England to Indian parents, spent her adolescence and early adulthood in India, and has lived in the United States since. The mostly album-size photographs in this compact but far-ranging gallery survey are about the intensities and confusions of a cultural mixing that makes the artist, psychologically, both a global citizen and an outsider, at home and in transit, wherever she is. And it\u2019s about photography as document and fiction: souvenir, re-enactment and imaginative projection. (Closed Dec. 24 through Jan. 4.) A beautiful show that could too easily slip away. sepiaEYE, 547 West 27th Street, Chelsea, 212-967-0738, sepiaeye.com. (Cotter) \u2605 Robert Ryman (through June 18) For nearly 60s years, the Minimalist painter Robert Ryman has had few equals when it comes to doing more with less. White has been his primary, if not quite his only, color, the square his typical format. And yet within these seeming limitations a remarkably fecund and resonant body of work has evolved as demonstrated with unusual clarity (and in natural light) by this small but comprehensive exhibition. Dia: Chelsea, 535 West 22nd Street, 212-989-5566, diaart.org. (Smith) \u2605 Giorgio Morandi (through June 25) The Italian master of modern still life , and closet abstractionist, is celebrated in a large show devoted foremost to his painting from the 1930s, which are not well known in this country. They reveal a period of struggle during which the artist had settled on what to paint, how to paint was still very much up for grabs. Joel Meyerowitz\u2019s large color photographs of Morandi\u2019s still life objects \u2013 which he sometimes altered \u2013 are also on view. Reservations are required. Center for Italian Modern Art, 421 Broome Street, near Crosby Street, SoHo, 646-370-3596, italianmodernart.org. (Smith)", "paragraph_answer": "\u2605 \u2018Swedish Wooden Toys\u2019 (through Feb. 28) This presentation of more than 300 playthings from the late 16th to the early 21st centuries will be catnip for anyone into antique toys. The show features diminutive vehicles of all kinds from old-time wagons, trains and fully-rigged sailboats, to futuristic cars and a rocket ship. There are naturalistic and anthropomorphic animals, weapons, puzzles, games, dollhouses and architectural construction kits. While many of these items were produced by big manufacturers like BRIO and Playsam, many others are one-of-a-kind wonders like a miniature baking set from around 1900 that includes rolling pins, spatulas and other implements all lovingly carved from wood and fitting into a tray just eight inches long. Bard Graduate Center Gallery, 18 West 86th Street, Manhattan, 212-501-3011, bgc.bard.edu. (Johnson) \u2605 Gil Batle: \u2018Hatched in Prison\u2019 (through Jan. 9) Mr. Batle, 53, served a total of 20 years in five California prisons for fraud and forgery. Now living in the Philippines, he has been recounting his experiences in an unlikely medium. Using a high-speed dental drill, he carves miniature narratives of prison life into the surfaces of ostrich eggs. The 19 examples in this show, all made in the past two years, are amazing for their meticulous craftsmanship and detailed story telling. Ricco Maresca, 529 West 20th Street, Chelsea, 212-627-4819, riccomaresca.com. (Johnson) \u2605 Annu Palakunnathu Matthew: \u2018Indelible Memories\u2019 (through Jan. 16) Ms. Matthew was born in England to Indian parents, spent her adolescence and early adulthood in India, and has lived in the United States since. The mostly album-size photographs in this compact but far-ranging gallery survey are about the intensities and confusions of a cultural mixing that makes the artist, psychologically, both a global citizen and an outsider, at home and in transit, wherever she is. And it\u2019s about photography as document and fiction: souvenir, re-enactment and imaginative projection. (Closed Dec. 24 through Jan. 4.) A beautiful show that could too easily slip away. sepiaEYE, 547 West 27th Street, Chelsea, 212-967-0738, sepiaeye.com. (Cotter) \u2605 Robert Ryman (through June 18) For nearly 60s years, the Minimalist painter Robert Ryman has had few equals when it comes to doing more with less. White has been his primary, if not quite his only, color, the square his typical format. And yet within these seeming limitations a remarkably fecund and resonant body of work has evolved as demonstrated with unusual clarity (and in natural light) by this small but comprehensive exhibition. Dia: Chelsea, 535 West 22nd Street, 212-989-5566, diaart.org. (Smith) \u2605 Giorgio Morandi (through June 25) The Italian master of modern still life , and closet abstractionist, is celebrated in a large show devoted foremost to his painting from the 1930s, which are not well known in this country. They reveal a period of struggle during which the artist had settled on what to paint, how to paint was still very much up for grabs. Joel Meyerowitz\u2019s large color photographs of Morandi\u2019s still life objects \u2013 which he sometimes altered \u2013 are also on view. Reservations are required. Center for Italian Modern Art, 421 Broome Street, near Crosby Street, SoHo, 646-370-3596, italianmodernart.org. (Smith)", "sentence_answer": "The Italian master of modern still life ,", "paragraph_id": "5d701005c8e4820a9b66bc15"} +{"question": "What did members of Congress call the breach at O.P.M.?", "paragraph": "During Mr. Xi\u2019s visit to Washington, he and Mr. Obama are expected to announce, at a minimum, that they are working on a set of rules for cyberspace that would amount to a first effort at a digital arms control agreement. But that would not cover traditional espionage, which both sides conduct against each other. So the theft of personnel files, which the administration has never publicly blamed on China, would not be covered. In fact, the director of national intelligence, James R. Clapper Jr., said over the summer that if the United States had the opportunity to steal that much data about an adversary, it would probably try to do it. And testifying to Congress alongside Admiral Rogers recently, he pushed back at members of Congress who called the breach at O.P.M. an \u201cattack.\u201d Instead, he suggested, it was ordinary espionage. But despite those public statements, several officials have said in background briefings that the scale of the breach was so vast that it might require some kind of government response. Hackers did not just get the data on federal employees, but also on job applicants, contractors and many others who have been subjected to government background checks.", "answer": "\u201cattack.\u201d", "sentence": "And testifying to Congress alongside Admiral Rogers recently, he pushed back at members of Congress who called the breach at O.P.M. an \u201cattack.\u201d Instead, he suggested, it was ordinary espionage.", "paragraph_sentence": "During Mr. Xi\u2019s visit to Washington, he and Mr. Obama are expected to announce, at a minimum, that they are working on a set of rules for cyberspace that would amount to a first effort at a digital arms control agreement. But that would not cover traditional espionage, which both sides conduct against each other. So the theft of personnel files, which the administration has never publicly blamed on China, would not be covered. In fact, the director of national intelligence, James R. Clapper Jr., said over the summer that if the United States had the opportunity to steal that much data about an adversary, it would probably try to do it. And testifying to Congress alongside Admiral Rogers recently, he pushed back at members of Congress who called the breach at O.P.M. an \u201cattack.\u201d Instead, he suggested, it was ordinary espionage. But despite those public statements, several officials have said in background briefings that the scale of the breach was so vast that it might require some kind of government response. Hackers did not just get the data on federal employees, but also on job applicants, contractors and many others who have been subjected to government background checks.", "paragraph_answer": "During Mr. Xi\u2019s visit to Washington, he and Mr. Obama are expected to announce, at a minimum, that they are working on a set of rules for cyberspace that would amount to a first effort at a digital arms control agreement. But that would not cover traditional espionage, which both sides conduct against each other. So the theft of personnel files, which the administration has never publicly blamed on China, would not be covered. In fact, the director of national intelligence, James R. Clapper Jr., said over the summer that if the United States had the opportunity to steal that much data about an adversary, it would probably try to do it. And testifying to Congress alongside Admiral Rogers recently, he pushed back at members of Congress who called the breach at O.P.M. an \u201cattack.\u201d Instead, he suggested, it was ordinary espionage. But despite those public statements, several officials have said in background briefings that the scale of the breach was so vast that it might require some kind of government response. Hackers did not just get the data on federal employees, but also on job applicants, contractors and many others who have been subjected to government background checks.", "sentence_answer": "And testifying to Congress alongside Admiral Rogers recently, he pushed back at members of Congress who called the breach at O.P.M. an \u201cattack.\u201d Instead, he suggested, it was ordinary espionage.", "paragraph_id": "5d700dddc8e4820a9b66b989"} +{"question": "Who won the game?", "paragraph": "For the first time since 1998, and for the fifth time in league history, the All-Star Game made a stop in New York, infusing the arena with a dose of the basketball skill, celebrity presence and general sense of occasion it has lacked for the last three months, given the struggles of the hometown Knicks. The game capped a multiborough weekend spree of brand-sponsored parties, in-store promotional appearances, charity events and various activities vaguely related to basketball, some of which took place at Barclays Center in Brooklyn. In a leisurely game that grew mildly competitive only in the final minutes, the Western Conference beat the Eastern Conference, 163-158, in front of a well-dressed, sellout crowd. The N.B.A. distributed two-thirds of the tickets to its marketing and broadcast partners and affiliates, the participating players and the players\u2019 union, as well as league alumni. The league said that around 1,800 credentials were issued to various media outlets.", "answer": "the Western Conference", "sentence": "In a leisurely game that grew mildly competitive only in the final minutes, the Western Conference beat the Eastern Conference, 163-158, in front of a well-dressed, sellout crowd.", "paragraph_sentence": "For the first time since 1998, and for the fifth time in league history, the All-Star Game made a stop in New York, infusing the arena with a dose of the basketball skill, celebrity presence and general sense of occasion it has lacked for the last three months, given the struggles of the hometown Knicks. The game capped a multiborough weekend spree of brand-sponsored parties, in-store promotional appearances, charity events and various activities vaguely related to basketball, some of which took place at Barclays Center in Brooklyn. In a leisurely game that grew mildly competitive only in the final minutes, the Western Conference beat the Eastern Conference, 163-158, in front of a well-dressed, sellout crowd. The N.B.A. distributed two-thirds of the tickets to its marketing and broadcast partners and affiliates, the participating players and the players\u2019 union, as well as league alumni. The league said that around 1,800 credentials were issued to various media outlets.", "paragraph_answer": "For the first time since 1998, and for the fifth time in league history, the All-Star Game made a stop in New York, infusing the arena with a dose of the basketball skill, celebrity presence and general sense of occasion it has lacked for the last three months, given the struggles of the hometown Knicks. The game capped a multiborough weekend spree of brand-sponsored parties, in-store promotional appearances, charity events and various activities vaguely related to basketball, some of which took place at Barclays Center in Brooklyn. In a leisurely game that grew mildly competitive only in the final minutes, the Western Conference beat the Eastern Conference, 163-158, in front of a well-dressed, sellout crowd. The N.B.A. distributed two-thirds of the tickets to its marketing and broadcast partners and affiliates, the participating players and the players\u2019 union, as well as league alumni. The league said that around 1,800 credentials were issued to various media outlets.", "sentence_answer": "In a leisurely game that grew mildly competitive only in the final minutes, the Western Conference beat the Eastern Conference, 163-158, in front of a well-dressed, sellout crowd.", "paragraph_id": "5d7008e6c8e4820a9b66b111"} +{"question": "Where does Mrs. Sooy work?", "paragraph": "Abigail Elizabeth Lee Chambers and Alexander Hartman Sooy were married Saturday. Judge Sidney H. Stein of the Federal District Court for the Southern District of New York officiated at the Museum of the City of New York. Mrs. Sooy, 30, is the manager for product support operations at Facebook in Menlo Park, Calif., overseeing teams that work to improve product quality and usability. She graduated summa cum laude from Princeton and received an M.B.A. degree from Harvard. She is the daughter of Andrea L. Chambers and Dr. William J. Chambers of New York. The bride\u2019s father is a child and adolescent psychiatrist in New York. Her mother is the director of the Center for Publishing at the N.Y.U. School of Professional Studies.", "answer": "Facebook", "sentence": "Mrs. Sooy, 30, is the manager for product support operations at Facebook in Menlo Park, Calif., overseeing teams that work to improve product quality and usability.", "paragraph_sentence": "Abigail Elizabeth Lee Chambers and Alexander Hartman Sooy were married Saturday. Judge Sidney H. Stein of the Federal District Court for the Southern District of New York officiated at the Museum of the City of New York. Mrs. Sooy, 30, is the manager for product support operations at Facebook in Menlo Park, Calif., overseeing teams that work to improve product quality and usability. She graduated summa cum laude from Princeton and received an M.B.A. degree from Harvard. She is the daughter of Andrea L. Chambers and Dr. William J. Chambers of New York. The bride\u2019s father is a child and adolescent psychiatrist in New York. Her mother is the director of the Center for Publishing at the N.Y.U. School of Professional Studies.", "paragraph_answer": "Abigail Elizabeth Lee Chambers and Alexander Hartman Sooy were married Saturday. Judge Sidney H. Stein of the Federal District Court for the Southern District of New York officiated at the Museum of the City of New York. Mrs. Sooy, 30, is the manager for product support operations at Facebook in Menlo Park, Calif., overseeing teams that work to improve product quality and usability. She graduated summa cum laude from Princeton and received an M.B.A. degree from Harvard. She is the daughter of Andrea L. Chambers and Dr. William J. Chambers of New York. The bride\u2019s father is a child and adolescent psychiatrist in New York. Her mother is the director of the Center for Publishing at the N.Y.U. School of Professional Studies.", "sentence_answer": "Mrs. Sooy, 30, is the manager for product support operations at Facebook in Menlo Park, Calif., overseeing teams that work to improve product quality and usability.", "paragraph_id": "5d70157ec8e4820a9b66c1a7"} +{"question": "Who collected things that was juxtaposed?", "paragraph": "\u201cOne of the most interesting, significant and unique things is that the art collection, which is fabulous in and of itself, is in a domestic setting, so you see how it was juxtaposed with all the other things that Mr. Pope collected,\u201d Ms. Bourbeau said. \u201cThis is where he lived with it, where he enjoyed it himself, where he shared it with family and friends. That was his motivation for collecting in the first place. He wasn\u2019t buying for investment purposes. It was because he loved the stuff.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Pope", "sentence": "\u201cOne of the most interesting, significant and unique things is that the art collection, which is fabulous in and of itself, is in a domestic setting, so you see how it was juxtaposed with all the other things that Mr. Pope collected,\u201d Ms. Bourbeau said.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cOne of the most interesting, significant and unique things is that the art collection, which is fabulous in and of itself, is in a domestic setting, so you see how it was juxtaposed with all the other things that Mr. Pope collected,\u201d Ms. Bourbeau said. \u201cThis is where he lived with it, where he enjoyed it himself, where he shared it with family and friends. That was his motivation for collecting in the first place. He wasn\u2019t buying for investment purposes. It was because he loved the stuff.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cOne of the most interesting, significant and unique things is that the art collection, which is fabulous in and of itself, is in a domestic setting, so you see how it was juxtaposed with all the other things that Mr. Pope collected,\u201d Ms. Bourbeau said. \u201cThis is where he lived with it, where he enjoyed it himself, where he shared it with family and friends. That was his motivation for collecting in the first place. He wasn\u2019t buying for investment purposes. It was because he loved the stuff.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cOne of the most interesting, significant and unique things is that the art collection, which is fabulous in and of itself, is in a domestic setting, so you see how it was juxtaposed with all the other things that Mr. Pope collected,\u201d Ms. Bourbeau said.", "paragraph_id": "5d7029a1c8e4820a9b66d75a"} +{"question": "Who told a joke?", "paragraph": "\u201cI\u2019ve heard that,\u201d Clinton said. \u201cWho knows? Life is so unpredictable.\u201d (On the Jimmy Kimmel show, Clinton confided that if her husband had not been barred from seeking a third term, he\u2019d have gone for it. And if she ran against him, \u201cwould I win? Yeah.\u201d) Thinking about the spouse question a little bit more, Clinton told a joke about a successful businessman and his wife who drive into a gas station where her old boyfriend is working. The husband notes with satisfaction that if she\u2019d married him, she\u2019d be the wife of a gas station attendant. \u201cAnd then,\u201d Clinton concluded, \u201cthe wife says: \u2018No, if I\u2019d married him he\u2019d be a big success like you.\u2019\u201d", "answer": "Clinton", "sentence": "\u201cI\u2019ve heard that,\u201d Clinton said.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cI\u2019ve heard that,\u201d Clinton said. \u201cWho knows? Life is so unpredictable.\u201d (On the Jimmy Kimmel show, Clinton confided that if her husband had not been barred from seeking a third term, he\u2019d have gone for it. And if she ran against him, \u201cwould I win? Yeah.\u201d) Thinking about the spouse question a little bit more, Clinton told a joke about a successful businessman and his wife who drive into a gas station where her old boyfriend is working. The husband notes with satisfaction that if she\u2019d married him, she\u2019d be the wife of a gas station attendant. \u201cAnd then,\u201d Clinton concluded, \u201cthe wife says: \u2018No, if I\u2019d married him he\u2019d be a big success like you.\u2019\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI\u2019ve heard that,\u201d Clinton said. \u201cWho knows? Life is so unpredictable.\u201d (On the Jimmy Kimmel show, Clinton confided that if her husband had not been barred from seeking a third term, he\u2019d have gone for it. And if she ran against him, \u201cwould I win? Yeah.\u201d) Thinking about the spouse question a little bit more, Clinton told a joke about a successful businessman and his wife who drive into a gas station where her old boyfriend is working. The husband notes with satisfaction that if she\u2019d married him, she\u2019d be the wife of a gas station attendant. \u201cAnd then,\u201d Clinton concluded, \u201cthe wife says: \u2018No, if I\u2019d married him he\u2019d be a big success like you.\u2019\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI\u2019ve heard that,\u201d Clinton said.", "paragraph_id": "5d700763c8e4820a9b66ad74"} +{"question": "What was the target inflation in the eurozone 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": "2 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": "5d6fb1ecc8e4820a9b66a799"} +{"question": "Does or doesn't the reviewer seem to have met the types of women who are happy being unattached?", "paragraph": "I liked this review, although it said a lot about the reviewer\u2019s biases, too. For one thing, there are many women who are and are not conventionally attractive, and who do and do not have men throwing themselves at them, but who are still very happily single. But the reviewer doesn\u2019t seem to have met those women. I have, and they\u2019re not hard to find.", "answer": "doesn\u2019t", "sentence": "But the reviewer doesn\u2019t seem to have met those women.", "paragraph_sentence": "I liked this review, although it said a lot about the reviewer\u2019s biases, too. For one thing, there are many women who are and are not conventionally attractive, and who do and do not have men throwing themselves at them, but who are still very happily single. But the reviewer doesn\u2019t seem to have met those women. I have, and they\u2019re not hard to find.", "paragraph_answer": "I liked this review, although it said a lot about the reviewer\u2019s biases, too. For one thing, there are many women who are and are not conventionally attractive, and who do and do not have men throwing themselves at them, but who are still very happily single. But the reviewer doesn\u2019t seem to have met those women. I have, and they\u2019re not hard to find.", "sentence_answer": "But the reviewer doesn\u2019t seem to have met those women.", "paragraph_id": "5d7014b0c8e4820a9b66c0d4"} +{"question": "What infrastructure was the United States focused on?", "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": "road transport", "sentence": "The development of United States infrastructure, meanwhile, was centered on road transport .", "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": "The development of United States infrastructure, meanwhile, was centered on road transport .", "paragraph_id": "5d703859c8e4820a9b66e107"} +{"question": "Who made two shots for the Warriors?", "paragraph": "And on Sunday night, neither seemed to be able to make a basket. The Cavaliers shot 1 for 8 in overtime, and they won the game. Iman Shumpert hit their one bucket, a 3-pointer that put them on the board 1 minute 13 seconds in, but he also had a layup blocked. LeBron James was 0 for 3. Matthew Dellavedova and J.R. Smith both missed. James Jones missed a wide-open 3 that would have put his team ahead with 11 seconds left. The Warriors made just two shots, both by Draymond Green from inside two feet. Stephen Curry was 0 for 4, had two turnovers and put up an air ball with a chance to retake the lead with seven seconds left. Over all in the game, Curry was 5 for 23 from the floor and 2 for 15 from 3-point range, bringing up memories of John Starks\u2019s 2-for-18 and 0-for-11 performance for the Knicks in Game 7 of the 1994 finals.", "answer": "Draymond Green", "sentence": "The Warriors made just two shots, both by Draymond Green from inside two feet.", "paragraph_sentence": "And on Sunday night, neither seemed to be able to make a basket. The Cavaliers shot 1 for 8 in overtime, and they won the game. Iman Shumpert hit their one bucket, a 3-pointer that put them on the board 1 minute 13 seconds in, but he also had a layup blocked. LeBron James was 0 for 3. Matthew Dellavedova and J.R. Smith both missed. James Jones missed a wide-open 3 that would have put his team ahead with 11 seconds left. The Warriors made just two shots, both by Draymond Green from inside two feet. Stephen Curry was 0 for 4, had two turnovers and put up an air ball with a chance to retake the lead with seven seconds left. Over all in the game, Curry was 5 for 23 from the floor and 2 for 15 from 3-point range, bringing up memories of John Starks\u2019s 2-for-18 and 0-for-11 performance for the Knicks in Game 7 of the 1994 finals.", "paragraph_answer": "And on Sunday night, neither seemed to be able to make a basket. The Cavaliers shot 1 for 8 in overtime, and they won the game. Iman Shumpert hit their one bucket, a 3-pointer that put them on the board 1 minute 13 seconds in, but he also had a layup blocked. LeBron James was 0 for 3. Matthew Dellavedova and J.R. Smith both missed. James Jones missed a wide-open 3 that would have put his team ahead with 11 seconds left. The Warriors made just two shots, both by Draymond Green from inside two feet. Stephen Curry was 0 for 4, had two turnovers and put up an air ball with a chance to retake the lead with seven seconds left. Over all in the game, Curry was 5 for 23 from the floor and 2 for 15 from 3-point range, bringing up memories of John Starks\u2019s 2-for-18 and 0-for-11 performance for the Knicks in Game 7 of the 1994 finals.", "sentence_answer": "The Warriors made just two shots, both by Draymond Green from inside two feet.", "paragraph_id": "5d701e72c8e4820a9b66ca11"} +{"question": "Which horse had a fever during the weekend?", "paragraph": "5. Materiality Trainer: Todd Pletcher Jockey: John Velazquez Record: 3-3-0-0 Points: 100 Odds: 12-1 J.D.: Materiality, the Florida Derby champion, is trying to do an awful lot in little time. I\u2019m betting against his winning the Run for the Roses on such a small foundation. M.H.: A son of Afleet Alex, he looked impressive in staying perfect at the Florida Derby. But long odds remain: Since 1882, no horse has won the Derby without racing at 2. 6. Upstart Trainer: Rick Violette Jockey: Jose Ortiz Record: 7-3-3-1 Points: 76 Odds: 18-1 J.D.: Melissa likes this horse better than I do. He spiked a fever over the weekend and missed a workout, which is not an ideal way to head into the Derby.", "answer": "Upstart", "sentence": "Upstart Trainer: Rick Violette Jockey: Jose Ortiz Record: 7-3-3-1 Points: 76 Odds: 18-1 J.D.: Melissa likes this horse better than I do.", "paragraph_sentence": "5. Materiality Trainer: Todd Pletcher Jockey: John Velazquez Record: 3-3-0-0 Points: 100 Odds: 12-1 J.D.: Materiality, the Florida Derby champion, is trying to do an awful lot in little time. I\u2019m betting against his winning the Run for the Roses on such a small foundation. M.H.: A son of Afleet Alex, he looked impressive in staying perfect at the Florida Derby. But long odds remain: Since 1882, no horse has won the Derby without racing at 2. 6. Upstart Trainer: Rick Violette Jockey: Jose Ortiz Record: 7-3-3-1 Points: 76 Odds: 18-1 J.D.: Melissa likes this horse better than I do. He spiked a fever over the weekend and missed a workout, which is not an ideal way to head into the Derby.", "paragraph_answer": "5. Materiality Trainer: Todd Pletcher Jockey: John Velazquez Record: 3-3-0-0 Points: 100 Odds: 12-1 J.D.: Materiality, the Florida Derby champion, is trying to do an awful lot in little time. I\u2019m betting against his winning the Run for the Roses on such a small foundation. M.H.: A son of Afleet Alex, he looked impressive in staying perfect at the Florida Derby. But long odds remain: Since 1882, no horse has won the Derby without racing at 2. 6. Upstart Trainer: Rick Violette Jockey: Jose Ortiz Record: 7-3-3-1 Points: 76 Odds: 18-1 J.D.: Melissa likes this horse better than I do. He spiked a fever over the weekend and missed a workout, which is not an ideal way to head into the Derby.", "sentence_answer": " Upstart Trainer: Rick Violette Jockey: Jose Ortiz Record: 7-3-3-1 Points: 76 Odds: 18-1 J.D.: Melissa likes this horse better than I do.", "paragraph_id": "5d702b7dc8e4820a9b66d91b"} +{"question": "What is Aya Jones' profession?", "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": "model", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d702a7fc8e4820a9b66d81f"} +{"question": "What is the profession of Azza Soliman?", "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": "prominent human rights lawyer", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d703557c8e4820a9b66df7b"} +{"question": "Ms. Clyne wrote her program with what choreographer in mind?", "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": "Kitty McNamee", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d704d0ac8e4820a9b66ea38"} +{"question": "How much money has the NFL agreed to pay out in the lawsuit?", "paragraph": "But Robert Stern, one of the scientists at the Boston University center, told me that he expected a test to be developed within a decade that will be able to diagnose C.T.E. in living people. As for symptoms, the real problem is that plenty of people suffer from lost impulse control and depression without having C.T.E. Even so, the primary symptoms the settlement will reward financially are those that suggest cognitive impairment, rather than the behavioral and mood symptoms of C.T.E. \u201cAt a minimum,\u201d said Stern, \u201cformer players whose behavior changes in ways that suggest C.T.E. should have full evaluations paid for by the settlement. And treatment would be nice, too.\u201d It\u2019s hard not to view the settlement as the cynical effort by the N.F.L. to contain its potential C.T.E. liability; indeed, once the settlement is final, it will be nearly impossible for players \u2014 past, present and future \u2014 to be compensated if they are found to have the disease. Even the plaintiffs\u2019 expert has said that only 17 percent of the roughly 21,000 former players who have become part of the class will ever see any money. Oh, and did I mention that the N.F.L. has agreed to pay the plaintiffs\u2019 lawyers over $112 million? It\u2019s not the nation\u2019s dominant sports league for nothing.", "answer": "$112 million", "sentence": "Oh, and did I mention that the N.F.L. has agreed to pay the plaintiffs\u2019 lawyers over $112 million ?", "paragraph_sentence": "But Robert Stern, one of the scientists at the Boston University center, told me that he expected a test to be developed within a decade that will be able to diagnose C.T.E. in living people. As for symptoms, the real problem is that plenty of people suffer from lost impulse control and depression without having C.T.E. Even so, the primary symptoms the settlement will reward financially are those that suggest cognitive impairment, rather than the behavioral and mood symptoms of C.T.E. \u201cAt a minimum,\u201d said Stern, \u201cformer players whose behavior changes in ways that suggest C.T.E. should have full evaluations paid for by the settlement. And treatment would be nice, too.\u201d It\u2019s hard not to view the settlement as the cynical effort by the N.F.L. to contain its potential C.T.E. liability; indeed, once the settlement is final, it will be nearly impossible for players \u2014 past, present and future \u2014 to be compensated if they are found to have the disease. Even the plaintiffs\u2019 expert has said that only 17 percent of the roughly 21,000 former players who have become part of the class will ever see any money. Oh, and did I mention that the N.F.L. has agreed to pay the plaintiffs\u2019 lawyers over $112 million ? It\u2019s not the nation\u2019s dominant sports league for nothing.", "paragraph_answer": "But Robert Stern, one of the scientists at the Boston University center, told me that he expected a test to be developed within a decade that will be able to diagnose C.T.E. in living people. As for symptoms, the real problem is that plenty of people suffer from lost impulse control and depression without having C.T.E. Even so, the primary symptoms the settlement will reward financially are those that suggest cognitive impairment, rather than the behavioral and mood symptoms of C.T.E. \u201cAt a minimum,\u201d said Stern, \u201cformer players whose behavior changes in ways that suggest C.T.E. should have full evaluations paid for by the settlement. And treatment would be nice, too.\u201d It\u2019s hard not to view the settlement as the cynical effort by the N.F.L. to contain its potential C.T.E. liability; indeed, once the settlement is final, it will be nearly impossible for players \u2014 past, present and future \u2014 to be compensated if they are found to have the disease. Even the plaintiffs\u2019 expert has said that only 17 percent of the roughly 21,000 former players who have become part of the class will ever see any money. Oh, and did I mention that the N.F.L. has agreed to pay the plaintiffs\u2019 lawyers over $112 million ? It\u2019s not the nation\u2019s dominant sports league for nothing.", "sentence_answer": "Oh, and did I mention that the N.F.L. has agreed to pay the plaintiffs\u2019 lawyers over $112 million ?", "paragraph_id": "5d7037c0c8e4820a9b66e0e1"} +{"question": "What does the book \"The Reel Truth\" contain in terms of content?", "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": "a guide for aspiring filmmakers", "sentence": "\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 .", "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": "\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 .", "paragraph_id": "5d70290cc8e4820a9b66d6d7"} +{"question": "Which direction is being looked in?", "paragraph": "That said, his more forward-looking items \u2014 I tried on an excellent bomber with an embroidered bee on the chest ($1,890) \u2014 show a possible pathway through the tension. But several of the other shops here feel deeply superfluous: say, the Herm\u00e8s perfumery, which is right next to a Davidoff of Geneva cigar shop. A newsstand sells magazines like Sleek and The Great Discontent along with matcha-flavored mini Oreos. And truly functional stores seem like outliers. What will become of humble, excellent Kamakura Shirts, relegated to a side corridor on the second floor, if the local business crowd doesn\u2019t find it? No one is coming to ground zero to buy an expertly cut oxford shirt.", "answer": "forward", "sentence": "That said, his more forward -looking items \u2014 I tried on an excellent bomber with an embroidered bee on the chest ($1,890) \u2014 show a possible pathway through the tension.", "paragraph_sentence": " That said, his more forward -looking items \u2014 I tried on an excellent bomber with an embroidered bee on the chest ($1,890) \u2014 show a possible pathway through the tension. But several of the other shops here feel deeply superfluous: say, the Herm\u00e8s perfumery, which is right next to a Davidoff of Geneva cigar shop. A newsstand sells magazines like Sleek and The Great Discontent along with matcha-flavored mini Oreos. And truly functional stores seem like outliers. What will become of humble, excellent Kamakura Shirts, relegated to a side corridor on the second floor, if the local business crowd doesn\u2019t find it? No one is coming to ground zero to buy an expertly cut oxford shirt.", "paragraph_answer": "That said, his more forward -looking items \u2014 I tried on an excellent bomber with an embroidered bee on the chest ($1,890) \u2014 show a possible pathway through the tension. But several of the other shops here feel deeply superfluous: say, the Herm\u00e8s perfumery, which is right next to a Davidoff of Geneva cigar shop. A newsstand sells magazines like Sleek and The Great Discontent along with matcha-flavored mini Oreos. And truly functional stores seem like outliers. What will become of humble, excellent Kamakura Shirts, relegated to a side corridor on the second floor, if the local business crowd doesn\u2019t find it? No one is coming to ground zero to buy an expertly cut oxford shirt.", "sentence_answer": "That said, his more forward -looking items \u2014 I tried on an excellent bomber with an embroidered bee on the chest ($1,890) \u2014 show a possible pathway through the tension.", "paragraph_id": "5d700950c8e4820a9b66b1bf"} +{"question": "Whose pass did Danny Trevathan intercept?", "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": "Philip Rivers", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d7030c6c8e4820a9b66dcea"} +{"question": "The citizenship program raises more than a quarter of Malta's what?", "paragraph": "Malta\u2019s citizenship program, which offers a passport to those willing to pay 1.2 million euros, about $1.3 million, has been controversial since it was introduced more than a year ago. But the residency requirements, meant to make the program more palatable, are only increasing the consternation among critics, who say the program has resulted in the sale of citizenship to the global 0.1 percent. Applicants must show they have rented a property in Malta for 12 months. But they do not necessarily have to spend any time in this Mediterranean island nation, raising the question of what genuine links they are establishing. \u201cIt is questionable how the residency requirement is being applied,\u201d said Tonio Fenech, a member of Malta\u2019s Parliament Lawyers, accountants and real estate agents say the citizenship program has catapulted Malta onto the radar of the global elite. Applications are pouring in, and the program aims to raise \u20ac2 billion, more than a quarter of Malta\u2019s gross domestic product. \u201cWe want to attract individuals who can add value to our country because of their ideas, and their networks and their businesses and their talent,\u201d said Jonathan Cardona, chief executive of Identity Malta, which administers the Individual Investor Program. Housed in a sprawling, fortresslike 16th-century building once used as a hospital, the Malta citizenship program nods to the country\u2019s multicultural past, punctuated over the years by invasion. The Phoenicians, Carthaginians, Romans, Byzantines, Fatimids, Normans, Sicilians, Spanish, French, a European lay religious order and the British all tried to conquer or rule Malta, and many succeeded. Maltese, the official language with English, looks and sounds Arabic, but its speakers are primarily Roman Catholics who pray to Allah, or God.", "answer": "gross domestic product", "sentence": "Applications are pouring in, and the program aims to raise \u20ac2 billion, more than a quarter of Malta\u2019s gross domestic product .", "paragraph_sentence": "Malta\u2019s citizenship program, which offers a passport to those willing to pay 1.2 million euros, about $1.3 million, has been controversial since it was introduced more than a year ago. But the residency requirements, meant to make the program more palatable, are only increasing the consternation among critics, who say the program has resulted in the sale of citizenship to the global 0.1 percent. Applicants must show they have rented a property in Malta for 12 months. But they do not necessarily have to spend any time in this Mediterranean island nation, raising the question of what genuine links they are establishing. \u201cIt is questionable how the residency requirement is being applied,\u201d said Tonio Fenech, a member of Malta\u2019s Parliament Lawyers, accountants and real estate agents say the citizenship program has catapulted Malta onto the radar of the global elite. Applications are pouring in, and the program aims to raise \u20ac2 billion, more than a quarter of Malta\u2019s gross domestic product . \u201cWe want to attract individuals who can add value to our country because of their ideas, and their networks and their businesses and their talent,\u201d said Jonathan Cardona, chief executive of Identity Malta, which administers the Individual Investor Program. Housed in a sprawling, fortresslike 16th-century building once used as a hospital, the Malta citizenship program nods to the country\u2019s multicultural past, punctuated over the years by invasion. The Phoenicians, Carthaginians, Romans, Byzantines, Fatimids, Normans, Sicilians, Spanish, French, a European lay religious order and the British all tried to conquer or rule Malta, and many succeeded. Maltese, the official language with English, looks and sounds Arabic, but its speakers are primarily Roman Catholics who pray to Allah, or God.", "paragraph_answer": "Malta\u2019s citizenship program, which offers a passport to those willing to pay 1.2 million euros, about $1.3 million, has been controversial since it was introduced more than a year ago. But the residency requirements, meant to make the program more palatable, are only increasing the consternation among critics, who say the program has resulted in the sale of citizenship to the global 0.1 percent. Applicants must show they have rented a property in Malta for 12 months. But they do not necessarily have to spend any time in this Mediterranean island nation, raising the question of what genuine links they are establishing. \u201cIt is questionable how the residency requirement is being applied,\u201d said Tonio Fenech, a member of Malta\u2019s Parliament Lawyers, accountants and real estate agents say the citizenship program has catapulted Malta onto the radar of the global elite. Applications are pouring in, and the program aims to raise \u20ac2 billion, more than a quarter of Malta\u2019s gross domestic product . \u201cWe want to attract individuals who can add value to our country because of their ideas, and their networks and their businesses and their talent,\u201d said Jonathan Cardona, chief executive of Identity Malta, which administers the Individual Investor Program. Housed in a sprawling, fortresslike 16th-century building once used as a hospital, the Malta citizenship program nods to the country\u2019s multicultural past, punctuated over the years by invasion. The Phoenicians, Carthaginians, Romans, Byzantines, Fatimids, Normans, Sicilians, Spanish, French, a European lay religious order and the British all tried to conquer or rule Malta, and many succeeded. Maltese, the official language with English, looks and sounds Arabic, but its speakers are primarily Roman Catholics who pray to Allah, or God.", "sentence_answer": "Applications are pouring in, and the program aims to raise \u20ac2 billion, more than a quarter of Malta\u2019s gross domestic product .", "paragraph_id": "5d701495c8e4820a9b66c0b0"} +{"question": "What school rarely accepts dancers?", "paragraph": "\u201cMaybe she wanted me to follow in her footsteps,\u201d Ms. Bradley said. And now Ms. Bradley has a chance to get into City Ballet, which rarely accepts dancers who have not trained at its school. Still, she said that she has had friends tell her that the school \u201cprobably needs a black girl to make it look more diverse.\u201d She disagrees. \u201cThe teachers don\u2019t care about that,\u201d she said. \u201cThey just want you to do your tendu. I\u2019m glad S.A.B. is like that. Lately, with this whole Misty Copeland thing \u2014 she\u2019s black. It just shouldn\u2019t have anything to do with that. It should just be like, she\u2019s so good at ballet, she should be a principal. Now she is a principal, but it shouldn\u2019t have taken all of that.\u201d Last spring, of the five apprentices Mr. Martins named for City Ballet only one was white. In the main company, Mr. Farley, Olivia Boisson, Preston Chamblee, Taylor Stanley and Lara Tong have become familiar dancers. Is the company ready for a black female principal, too? \u201cWe\u2019ve always been ready!\u201d Mr. Martins exclaimed. \u201cBut where is she? Show me her. I\u2019ll take her in a minute.\u201d", "answer": "City Ballet", "sentence": "And now Ms. Bradley has a chance to get into City Ballet , which rarely accepts dancers who have not trained at its school.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cMaybe she wanted me to follow in her footsteps,\u201d Ms. Bradley said. And now Ms. Bradley has a chance to get into City Ballet , which rarely accepts dancers who have not trained at its school. Still, she said that she has had friends tell her that the school \u201cprobably needs a black girl to make it look more diverse.\u201d She disagrees. \u201cThe teachers don\u2019t care about that,\u201d she said. \u201cThey just want you to do your tendu. I\u2019m glad S.A.B. is like that. Lately, with this whole Misty Copeland thing \u2014 she\u2019s black. It just shouldn\u2019t have anything to do with that. It should just be like, she\u2019s so good at ballet, she should be a principal. Now she is a principal, but it shouldn\u2019t have taken all of that.\u201d Last spring, of the five apprentices Mr. Martins named for City Ballet only one was white. In the main company, Mr. Farley, Olivia Boisson, Preston Chamblee, Taylor Stanley and Lara Tong have become familiar dancers. Is the company ready for a black female principal, too? \u201cWe\u2019ve always been ready!\u201d Mr. Martins exclaimed. \u201cBut where is she? Show me her. I\u2019ll take her in a minute.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cMaybe she wanted me to follow in her footsteps,\u201d Ms. Bradley said. And now Ms. Bradley has a chance to get into City Ballet , which rarely accepts dancers who have not trained at its school. Still, she said that she has had friends tell her that the school \u201cprobably needs a black girl to make it look more diverse.\u201d She disagrees. \u201cThe teachers don\u2019t care about that,\u201d she said. \u201cThey just want you to do your tendu. I\u2019m glad S.A.B. is like that. Lately, with this whole Misty Copeland thing \u2014 she\u2019s black. It just shouldn\u2019t have anything to do with that. It should just be like, she\u2019s so good at ballet, she should be a principal. Now she is a principal, but it shouldn\u2019t have taken all of that.\u201d Last spring, of the five apprentices Mr. Martins named for City Ballet only one was white. In the main company, Mr. Farley, Olivia Boisson, Preston Chamblee, Taylor Stanley and Lara Tong have become familiar dancers. Is the company ready for a black female principal, too? \u201cWe\u2019ve always been ready!\u201d Mr. Martins exclaimed. \u201cBut where is she? Show me her. I\u2019ll take her in a minute.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "And now Ms. Bradley has a chance to get into City Ballet , which rarely accepts dancers who have not trained at its school.", "paragraph_id": "5d70a715c8e4820a9b66f6ae"} +{"question": "How many seats did the governing party 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": "42", "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": "5d700771c8e4820a9b66ad99"} +{"question": "When was Kevin Keller wrote in?", "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": "2010,", "sentence": "\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.", "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": "\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.", "paragraph_id": "5d703079c8e4820a9b66dcbb"} +{"question": "What did Gus Wenner say was paramount?", "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": "Bringing on great people", "sentence": "Bringing on great people , he said, is paramount.", "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": " Bringing on great people , he said, is paramount.", "paragraph_id": "5d700b80c8e4820a9b66b636"} +{"question": "Why do police commanders and prosecutors support camera use?", "paragraph": "Police commanders and prosecutors generally support camera use, arguing that they provide useful evidence, and will usually show the officers conducting themselves professionally. Views among officers and the unions representing them are more mixed, varying from place to place. \u201cA negative is that police might say, \u2018We just won\u2019t put ourselves in bad situations,\u2019 that they say, \u2018We are not going to jeopardize our lives because if we make a good-faith mistake, it is going to look like a crime, and we\u2019re going to get prosecuted for murder,\u2019 \u201d said Francis T. Cullen, a professor in the School of Criminal Justice at the University of Cincinnati.", "answer": "provide useful evidence", "sentence": "Police commanders and prosecutors generally support camera use, arguing that they provide useful evidence , and will usually show the officers conducting themselves professionally.", "paragraph_sentence": " Police commanders and prosecutors generally support camera use, arguing that they provide useful evidence , and will usually show the officers conducting themselves professionally. Views among officers and the unions representing them are more mixed, varying from place to place. \u201cA negative is that police might say, \u2018We just won\u2019t put ourselves in bad situations,\u2019 that they say, \u2018We are not going to jeopardize our lives because if we make a good-faith mistake, it is going to look like a crime, and we\u2019re going to get prosecuted for murder,\u2019 \u201d said Francis T. Cullen, a professor in the School of Criminal Justice at the University of Cincinnati.", "paragraph_answer": "Police commanders and prosecutors generally support camera use, arguing that they provide useful evidence , and will usually show the officers conducting themselves professionally. Views among officers and the unions representing them are more mixed, varying from place to place. \u201cA negative is that police might say, \u2018We just won\u2019t put ourselves in bad situations,\u2019 that they say, \u2018We are not going to jeopardize our lives because if we make a good-faith mistake, it is going to look like a crime, and we\u2019re going to get prosecuted for murder,\u2019 \u201d said Francis T. Cullen, a professor in the School of Criminal Justice at the University of Cincinnati.", "sentence_answer": "Police commanders and prosecutors generally support camera use, arguing that they provide useful evidence , and will usually show the officers conducting themselves professionally.", "paragraph_id": "5d700a0fc8e4820a9b66b373"} +{"question": "What other ads were in the other car?", "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": "free \u201cKyng\u201d size condoms", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d701b37c8e4820a9b66c6ba"} +{"question": "armstrong on tours abroad as good will______?", "paragraph": "There were two subplots surrounding Armstrong\u2019s East Berlin concert, which I want to dwell on here. The first was the role jazz played during the Cold War. Starting in the mid-1950s, the State Department began sending jazz musicians like Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, Duke Ellington, and Armstrong on tours abroad as good-will ambassadors. Part of the rationale was that jazz was a uniquely American art form that could show off the best of American culture, just as the Russians used ballet troupes to show off their culture. The government also thought that these artists, most of them black, might, by their presence, help diffuse \u201cthe widely shared sense that race was America\u2019s Achilles\u2019 heel internationally,\u201d as Penny M. Von Eschen writes in \u201cSatchmo Blows Up the World,\u201d her book about the jazz tours.", "answer": "ambassadors", "sentence": "Starting in the mid-1950s, the State Department began sending jazz musicians like Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, Duke Ellington, and Armstrong on tours abroad as good-will ambassadors .", "paragraph_sentence": "There were two subplots surrounding Armstrong\u2019s East Berlin concert, which I want to dwell on here. The first was the role jazz played during the Cold War. Starting in the mid-1950s, the State Department began sending jazz musicians like Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, Duke Ellington, and Armstrong on tours abroad as good-will ambassadors . Part of the rationale was that jazz was a uniquely American art form that could show off the best of American culture, just as the Russians used ballet troupes to show off their culture. The government also thought that these artists, most of them black, might, by their presence, help diffuse \u201cthe widely shared sense that race was America\u2019s Achilles\u2019 heel internationally,\u201d as Penny M. Von Eschen writes in \u201cSatchmo Blows Up the World,\u201d her book about the jazz tours.", "paragraph_answer": "There were two subplots surrounding Armstrong\u2019s East Berlin concert, which I want to dwell on here. The first was the role jazz played during the Cold War. Starting in the mid-1950s, the State Department began sending jazz musicians like Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, Duke Ellington, and Armstrong on tours abroad as good-will ambassadors . Part of the rationale was that jazz was a uniquely American art form that could show off the best of American culture, just as the Russians used ballet troupes to show off their culture. The government also thought that these artists, most of them black, might, by their presence, help diffuse \u201cthe widely shared sense that race was America\u2019s Achilles\u2019 heel internationally,\u201d as Penny M. Von Eschen writes in \u201cSatchmo Blows Up the World,\u201d her book about the jazz tours.", "sentence_answer": "Starting in the mid-1950s, the State Department began sending jazz musicians like Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, Duke Ellington, and Armstrong on tours abroad as good-will ambassadors .", "paragraph_id": "5d7018dbc8e4820a9b66c4ed"} +{"question": "What beer style have big brewers altered?", "paragraph": "And we can\u2019t neglect good old American lager, the beer that made Milwaukee, St. Louis and so many other brewing centers famous. My ballpark concession would absolutely require a couple of good lagers, even if this style has been denatured by big brewers, who have used adjuncts to malted barley, like rice and corn, to create so banal a product it can only be enjoyed icy cold, bottle to forehead in the brutal heat. To the endlessly creative American craft brewer, plain old lager may not seem particularly exciting. Decades ago, with so many great styles of beer left moribund by industrial brewers, craft brewers had compelling reasons to concentrate elsewhere. But little by little, American craft brewers have now taken up the challenge.", "answer": "lagers", "sentence": "My ballpark concession would absolutely require a couple of good lagers , even if this style has been denatured by big brewers, who have used adjuncts to malted barley, like rice and corn, to create so banal a product it can only be enjoyed icy cold, bottle to forehead in the brutal heat.", "paragraph_sentence": "And we can\u2019t neglect good old American lager, the beer that made Milwaukee, St. Louis and so many other brewing centers famous. My ballpark concession would absolutely require a couple of good lagers , even if this style has been denatured by big brewers, who have used adjuncts to malted barley, like rice and corn, to create so banal a product it can only be enjoyed icy cold, bottle to forehead in the brutal heat. To the endlessly creative American craft brewer, plain old lager may not seem particularly exciting. Decades ago, with so many great styles of beer left moribund by industrial brewers, craft brewers had compelling reasons to concentrate elsewhere. But little by little, American craft brewers have now taken up the challenge.", "paragraph_answer": "And we can\u2019t neglect good old American lager, the beer that made Milwaukee, St. Louis and so many other brewing centers famous. My ballpark concession would absolutely require a couple of good lagers , even if this style has been denatured by big brewers, who have used adjuncts to malted barley, like rice and corn, to create so banal a product it can only be enjoyed icy cold, bottle to forehead in the brutal heat. To the endlessly creative American craft brewer, plain old lager may not seem particularly exciting. Decades ago, with so many great styles of beer left moribund by industrial brewers, craft brewers had compelling reasons to concentrate elsewhere. But little by little, American craft brewers have now taken up the challenge.", "sentence_answer": "My ballpark concession would absolutely require a couple of good lagers , even if this style has been denatured by big brewers, who have used adjuncts to malted barley, like rice and corn, to create so banal a product it can only be enjoyed icy cold, bottle to forehead in the brutal heat.", "paragraph_id": "5d70145cc8e4820a9b66c08a"} +{"question": "Who is the book Splendid Cities by?", "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": "Rosie Goodwin and Alice Chadwick", "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": "5d7024b0c8e4820a9b66d108"} +{"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": "5d7026f6c8e4820a9b66d462"} +{"question": "What is the address of the \"Mourning Lincoln\" event?", "paragraph": "CATSKILL The Thomas Cole National Historic Site An artist talk by Stephen Hannock. April 12 at 2 p.m. $7 and $9. The Thomas Cole National Historic Site, 218 Spring Street. 518-943-7465; thomascole.org. GARRISON Desmond Fish Library Coffee and conversation with the author Allison Pataki and the filmmaker Beatrice Copeland. April 10 at 11 a.m. Free. Desmond Fish Library, 472 Route 403. 845-424-3020; desmondfishlibrary.org. HYDE PARK The Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum The Hudson Valley History Reading Festival, author talks and book signings. April 18, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Free. The Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum, 4079 Albany Post Road. 845-486-7745; fdrlibrary.marist.edu. MARLBORO The Falcon \u201cAmplify Sound Concert Series,\u201d poetry readings and performances. April 6 at 7 p.m. Donations accepted. The Falcon, 1348 Route 9W. liveatthefalcon.com; 845-236-7970. MOUNT VERNON St. Paul\u2019s Church \u201cMourning Lincoln: Reactions to the Assassination of President Lincoln,\u201d lecture. April 11 at 2 p.m. Free. St. Paul\u2019s Church, 897 South Columbus Avenue. 914-667-4116; nps.gov/sapa.", "answer": "897 South Columbus Avenue", "sentence": "St. Paul\u2019s Church, 897 South Columbus Avenue .", "paragraph_sentence": "CATSKILL The Thomas Cole National Historic Site An artist talk by Stephen Hannock. April 12 at 2 p.m. $7 and $9. The Thomas Cole National Historic Site, 218 Spring Street. 518-943-7465; thomascole.org. GARRISON Desmond Fish Library Coffee and conversation with the author Allison Pataki and the filmmaker Beatrice Copeland. April 10 at 11 a.m. Free. Desmond Fish Library, 472 Route 403. 845-424-3020; desmondfishlibrary.org. HYDE PARK The Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum The Hudson Valley History Reading Festival, author talks and book signings. April 18, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Free. The Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum, 4079 Albany Post Road. 845-486-7745; fdrlibrary.marist.edu. MARLBORO The Falcon \u201cAmplify Sound Concert Series,\u201d poetry readings and performances. April 6 at 7 p.m. Donations accepted. The Falcon, 1348 Route 9W. liveatthefalcon.com; 845-236-7970. MOUNT VERNON St. Paul\u2019s Church \u201cMourning Lincoln: Reactions to the Assassination of President Lincoln,\u201d lecture. April 11 at 2 p.m. Free. St. Paul\u2019s Church, 897 South Columbus Avenue . 914-667-4116; nps.gov/sapa.", "paragraph_answer": "CATSKILL The Thomas Cole National Historic Site An artist talk by Stephen Hannock. April 12 at 2 p.m. $7 and $9. The Thomas Cole National Historic Site, 218 Spring Street. 518-943-7465; thomascole.org. GARRISON Desmond Fish Library Coffee and conversation with the author Allison Pataki and the filmmaker Beatrice Copeland. April 10 at 11 a.m. Free. Desmond Fish Library, 472 Route 403. 845-424-3020; desmondfishlibrary.org. HYDE PARK The Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum The Hudson Valley History Reading Festival, author talks and book signings. April 18, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Free. The Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum, 4079 Albany Post Road. 845-486-7745; fdrlibrary.marist.edu. MARLBORO The Falcon \u201cAmplify Sound Concert Series,\u201d poetry readings and performances. April 6 at 7 p.m. Donations accepted. The Falcon, 1348 Route 9W. liveatthefalcon.com; 845-236-7970. MOUNT VERNON St. Paul\u2019s Church \u201cMourning Lincoln: Reactions to the Assassination of President Lincoln,\u201d lecture. April 11 at 2 p.m. Free. St. Paul\u2019s Church, 897 South Columbus Avenue . 914-667-4116; nps.gov/sapa.", "sentence_answer": "St. Paul\u2019s Church, 897 South Columbus Avenue .", "paragraph_id": "5d7034b0c8e4820a9b66df22"} +{"question": "What type of meals did the young woman share with Ms. Harper?", "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": "Filipino", "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": "5d70449bc8e4820a9b66e78e"} +{"question": "What is being run?", "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": "a business", "sentence": "\u201cTo be quite honest, we have a business to run, and that is something different than the political situation,\u201d Mr. van Horssen said.", "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": "\u201cTo be quite honest, we have a business to run, and that is something different than the political situation,\u201d Mr. van Horssen said.", "paragraph_id": "5d700f5cc8e4820a9b66bb62"} +{"question": "where DR. Fah spent her junior year ?", "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": "I spent my junior year in Paris", "sentence": "I spent my junior year in Paris , and came back to a campus that was up in arms about the invasion of Cambodia.", "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": " I spent my junior year in Paris , and came back to a campus that was up in arms about the invasion of Cambodia.", "paragraph_id": "5d701becc8e4820a9b66c774"} +{"question": "Does the IRS ever initiate contact via email?", "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": "the I.R.S. doesn\u2019t initiate contact by email", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d704110c8e4820a9b66e55a"} +{"question": "What was Page Potter Reynolds wearing when Ms. Simpson photographed her?", "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": "clown wig", "sentence": "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_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": "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_id": "5d702d1fc8e4820a9b66daba"} +{"question": "How many games had the Celtics won prior to matching up with the Lakers?", "paragraph": "LAKERS 112, CELTICS 104 Kobe Bryant had 15 points and 11 rebounds for his first double-double of the season while playing what was most likely his final game in Boston. Isaiah Thomas had 24 points, and Evan Turner scored 20 for the Celtics, who had won four straight. Boston trailed by 11 with just over six minutes left but used a 9-0 run to close to 100-98 on Avery Bradley\u2019s dunk with 3:35 to go. It remained a 2-point game until Bryant hit his second 3-pointer of the quarter, making it 107-102 with 1:40 left. Bryant received a huge ovation when he was announced for the starting lineups, but he was jeered the first time he got the ball, a nod to his role in what is perhaps the league\u2019s best rivalry.", "answer": "won four straight", "sentence": "Isaiah Thomas had 24 points, and Evan Turner scored 20 for the Celtics, who had won four straight .", "paragraph_sentence": "LAKERS 112, CELTICS 104 Kobe Bryant had 15 points and 11 rebounds for his first double-double of the season while playing what was most likely his final game in Boston. Isaiah Thomas had 24 points, and Evan Turner scored 20 for the Celtics, who had won four straight . Boston trailed by 11 with just over six minutes left but used a 9-0 run to close to 100-98 on Avery Bradley\u2019s dunk with 3:35 to go. It remained a 2-point game until Bryant hit his second 3-pointer of the quarter, making it 107-102 with 1:40 left. Bryant received a huge ovation when he was announced for the starting lineups, but he was jeered the first time he got the ball, a nod to his role in what is perhaps the league\u2019s best rivalry.", "paragraph_answer": "LAKERS 112, CELTICS 104 Kobe Bryant had 15 points and 11 rebounds for his first double-double of the season while playing what was most likely his final game in Boston. Isaiah Thomas had 24 points, and Evan Turner scored 20 for the Celtics, who had won four straight . Boston trailed by 11 with just over six minutes left but used a 9-0 run to close to 100-98 on Avery Bradley\u2019s dunk with 3:35 to go. It remained a 2-point game until Bryant hit his second 3-pointer of the quarter, making it 107-102 with 1:40 left. Bryant received a huge ovation when he was announced for the starting lineups, but he was jeered the first time he got the ball, a nod to his role in what is perhaps the league\u2019s best rivalry.", "sentence_answer": "Isaiah Thomas had 24 points, and Evan Turner scored 20 for the Celtics, who had won four straight .", "paragraph_id": "5d700891c8e4820a9b66b03b"} +{"question": "How many Americans have been killed by spice?", "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": "1,000", "sentence": "Intermittent reports from several states suggest that at least 1,000 Americans have died since 2009 after smoking spice.", "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": "Intermittent reports from several states suggest that at least 1,000 Americans have died since 2009 after smoking spice.", "paragraph_id": "5d700b61c8e4820a9b66b61a"} +{"question": "What game were the rangers preparing for?", "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": "Game 7 of their second-round playoff series", "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": "5d707d9dc8e4820a9b66f37b"} +{"question": "what does the entire legal battle center around?", "paragraph": "A federal judge on Wednesday denied Rowan County Clerk Kim Davis a stay of his order requiring her office to issue marriage licenses to all eligible couples. It was the latest setback for the clerk, who objects to same-sex marriage on religious grounds and was previously jailed rather than issue licenses to gay couples. Ms. Davis has repeatedly asked Judge David L. Bunning of Federal District Court to put a hold on his orders requiring the issuance of marriage licenses while she appeals. Her latest request stems from Judge Bunning\u2019s order making it clear that his decision applied to all eligible couples and was not limited to the couples who had sued her. Judge Bunning said Wednesday that without the clarification, he would have \"left other eligible couples at the mercy of Davis\u2019s \u2018no marriages policy.\u2019 \" He wrote, \u201cSuch an approach would not only create piecemeal litigation, it would be inconsistent with basic principles of justice and fairness.\" Ms. Davis spent five days in jail earlier in September. Her release was conditioned in part on her not interfering with the issuance of marriage licenses by her office.", "answer": "issuance of marriage licenses", "sentence": "Ms. Davis has repeatedly asked Judge David L. Bunning of Federal District Court to put a hold on his orders requiring the issuance of marriage licenses while she appeals.", "paragraph_sentence": "A federal judge on Wednesday denied Rowan County Clerk Kim Davis a stay of his order requiring her office to issue marriage licenses to all eligible couples. It was the latest setback for the clerk, who objects to same-sex marriage on religious grounds and was previously jailed rather than issue licenses to gay couples. Ms. Davis has repeatedly asked Judge David L. Bunning of Federal District Court to put a hold on his orders requiring the issuance of marriage licenses while she appeals. Her latest request stems from Judge Bunning\u2019s order making it clear that his decision applied to all eligible couples and was not limited to the couples who had sued her. Judge Bunning said Wednesday that without the clarification, he would have \"left other eligible couples at the mercy of Davis\u2019s \u2018no marriages policy.\u2019 \" He wrote, \u201cSuch an approach would not only create piecemeal litigation, it would be inconsistent with basic principles of justice and fairness.\" Ms. Davis spent five days in jail earlier in September. Her release was conditioned in part on her not interfering with the issuance of marriage licenses by her office.", "paragraph_answer": "A federal judge on Wednesday denied Rowan County Clerk Kim Davis a stay of his order requiring her office to issue marriage licenses to all eligible couples. It was the latest setback for the clerk, who objects to same-sex marriage on religious grounds and was previously jailed rather than issue licenses to gay couples. Ms. Davis has repeatedly asked Judge David L. Bunning of Federal District Court to put a hold on his orders requiring the issuance of marriage licenses while she appeals. Her latest request stems from Judge Bunning\u2019s order making it clear that his decision applied to all eligible couples and was not limited to the couples who had sued her. Judge Bunning said Wednesday that without the clarification, he would have \"left other eligible couples at the mercy of Davis\u2019s \u2018no marriages policy.\u2019 \" He wrote, \u201cSuch an approach would not only create piecemeal litigation, it would be inconsistent with basic principles of justice and fairness.\" Ms. Davis spent five days in jail earlier in September. Her release was conditioned in part on her not interfering with the issuance of marriage licenses by her office.", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Davis has repeatedly asked Judge David L. Bunning of Federal District Court to put a hold on his orders requiring the issuance of marriage licenses while she appeals.", "paragraph_id": "5d701c60c8e4820a9b66c7ab"} +{"question": "What college had an issue with donations from LGBT community?", "paragraph": "Such tiptoeing around donors opposed to funding any L.G.B.T. programs is becoming less common, Mr. Henry says. Andrew Watt, president of the Association of Fundraising Professionals, also says he believes that any hesitation to court the L.G.B.T. community as a source of donations, for fear of negative reactions or unwelcome perceptions, is vanishing. \u201cI think we\u2019ve gotten to the point that it\u2019s ceasing to be an issue,\u201d he says. But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College, a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass. Like the Girl Scouts, the college said it was acting in accordance with its core beliefs when, in July 2014, the college\u2019s president, D. Michael Lindsay, along with 13 other evangelical and Roman Catholic leaders, signed a letter to the White House, asking for a religious exemption from a planned order barring federal contractors from discriminating in hiring on the basis of sexual orientation. The on-campus reaction was anger: A petition signed by 3,000 students, faculty and alumni was reportedly sent to Mr. Lindsay, protesting his request for the exemption and accusing him of discrimination. There was other fallout. The mayor of nearby Salem canceled the school\u2019s contract to manage its Old Town Hall, an early 19th-century building now used as an event space and theater.", "answer": "Gordon College", "sentence": "But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College , a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass.", "paragraph_sentence": "Such tiptoeing around donors opposed to funding any L.G.B.T. programs is becoming less common, Mr. Henry says. Andrew Watt, president of the Association of Fundraising Professionals, also says he believes that any hesitation to court the L.G.B.T. community as a source of donations, for fear of negative reactions or unwelcome perceptions, is vanishing. \u201cI think we\u2019ve gotten to the point that it\u2019s ceasing to be an issue,\u201d he says. But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College , a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass. Like the Girl Scouts, the college said it was acting in accordance with its core beliefs when, in July 2014, the college\u2019s president, D. Michael Lindsay, along with 13 other evangelical and Roman Catholic leaders, signed a letter to the White House, asking for a religious exemption from a planned order barring federal contractors from discriminating in hiring on the basis of sexual orientation. The on-campus reaction was anger: A petition signed by 3,000 students, faculty and alumni was reportedly sent to Mr. Lindsay, protesting his request for the exemption and accusing him of discrimination. There was other fallout. The mayor of nearby Salem canceled the school\u2019s contract to manage its Old Town Hall, an early 19th-century building now used as an event space and theater.", "paragraph_answer": "Such tiptoeing around donors opposed to funding any L.G.B.T. programs is becoming less common, Mr. Henry says. Andrew Watt, president of the Association of Fundraising Professionals, also says he believes that any hesitation to court the L.G.B.T. community as a source of donations, for fear of negative reactions or unwelcome perceptions, is vanishing. \u201cI think we\u2019ve gotten to the point that it\u2019s ceasing to be an issue,\u201d he says. But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College , a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass. Like the Girl Scouts, the college said it was acting in accordance with its core beliefs when, in July 2014, the college\u2019s president, D. Michael Lindsay, along with 13 other evangelical and Roman Catholic leaders, signed a letter to the White House, asking for a religious exemption from a planned order barring federal contractors from discriminating in hiring on the basis of sexual orientation. The on-campus reaction was anger: A petition signed by 3,000 students, faculty and alumni was reportedly sent to Mr. Lindsay, protesting his request for the exemption and accusing him of discrimination. There was other fallout. The mayor of nearby Salem canceled the school\u2019s contract to manage its Old Town Hall, an early 19th-century building now used as an event space and theater.", "sentence_answer": "But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College , a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass.", "paragraph_id": "5d7010b5c8e4820a9b66bd43"} +{"question": "How can a person contact Dr. Lear with suggestions regarding his research?", "paragraph": "His next step is to attach a GPS tracking device to the lizards to see what kind of path they follow on their way home. But he is so eager to hear theories about the homing lizard that he is sharing his email address. Anyone with a suggestion about how the lizards navigate or how their ability might be tested can email him at lealmizzou@gmail.com. He will be in the field, with anoles, until mid-July. After that, he says, he\u2019ll answer any emails with promising ideas. Think of it as a tip line for science.", "answer": "email him at lealmizzou@gmail.com", "sentence": "Anyone with a suggestion about how the lizards navigate or how their ability might be tested can email him at lealmizzou@gmail.com .", "paragraph_sentence": "His next step is to attach a GPS tracking device to the lizards to see what kind of path they follow on their way home. But he is so eager to hear theories about the homing lizard that he is sharing his email address. Anyone with a suggestion about how the lizards navigate or how their ability might be tested can email him at lealmizzou@gmail.com . He will be in the field, with anoles, until mid-July. After that, he says, he\u2019ll answer any emails with promising ideas. Think of it as a tip line for science.", "paragraph_answer": "His next step is to attach a GPS tracking device to the lizards to see what kind of path they follow on their way home. But he is so eager to hear theories about the homing lizard that he is sharing his email address. Anyone with a suggestion about how the lizards navigate or how their ability might be tested can email him at lealmizzou@gmail.com . He will be in the field, with anoles, until mid-July. After that, he says, he\u2019ll answer any emails with promising ideas. Think of it as a tip line for science.", "sentence_answer": "Anyone with a suggestion about how the lizards navigate or how their ability might be tested can email him at lealmizzou@gmail.com .", "paragraph_id": "5d700a8dc8e4820a9b66b45b"} +{"question": "What was the name of the movie was shot with a dashboard-mounted video camera?", "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) \u2605 \u2018Taxi\u2019 (No rating, 1:22) Shot almost entirely with a dashboard-mounted video camera, Jafar Panahi\u2019s latest film \u2014 his third since the Iranian government banned him from practicing his craft in 2010 \u2014 is a wry meditation on the slippery boundary between movies and reality and a pointed work of social criticism. What seems like a random series of encounters turns out to be an elegantly shaped and poignant parable of modern urban life. (Scott) \u2605 \u2018Theeb\u2019 (No rating, 1:40, in Arabic) The title character in the \u201cArabic western,\u201d set in 1916 and heavily influenced by Sergio Leone, is a Bedouin boy stranded in the desert with the mercenary who killed his older brother. The survival drama is as tough as it is picturesque. (Holden)", "answer": "Taxi", "sentence": "(Scott) \u2605 \u2018 Taxi \u2019 (No rating, 1:22) Shot almost entirely with a dashboard-mounted video camera, Jafar Panahi\u2019s latest film \u2014 his third since the Iranian government banned him from practicing his craft in 2010 \u2014 is a wry meditation on the slippery boundary between movies and reality and a pointed work of social criticism.", "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) \u2605 \u2018 Taxi \u2019 (No rating, 1:22) Shot almost entirely with a dashboard-mounted video camera, Jafar Panahi\u2019s latest film \u2014 his third since the Iranian government banned him from practicing his craft in 2010 \u2014 is a wry meditation on the slippery boundary between movies and reality and a pointed work of social criticism. What seems like a random series of encounters turns out to be an elegantly shaped and poignant parable of modern urban life. (Scott) \u2605 \u2018Theeb\u2019 (No rating, 1:40, in Arabic) The title character in the \u201cArabic western,\u201d set in 1916 and heavily influenced by Sergio Leone, is a Bedouin boy stranded in the desert with the mercenary who killed his older brother. The survival drama is as tough as it is picturesque. (Holden)", "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) \u2605 \u2018 Taxi \u2019 (No rating, 1:22) Shot almost entirely with a dashboard-mounted video camera, Jafar Panahi\u2019s latest film \u2014 his third since the Iranian government banned him from practicing his craft in 2010 \u2014 is a wry meditation on the slippery boundary between movies and reality and a pointed work of social criticism. What seems like a random series of encounters turns out to be an elegantly shaped and poignant parable of modern urban life. (Scott) \u2605 \u2018Theeb\u2019 (No rating, 1:40, in Arabic) The title character in the \u201cArabic western,\u201d set in 1916 and heavily influenced by Sergio Leone, is a Bedouin boy stranded in the desert with the mercenary who killed his older brother. The survival drama is as tough as it is picturesque. (Holden)", "sentence_answer": "(Scott) \u2605 \u2018 Taxi \u2019 (No rating, 1:22) Shot almost entirely with a dashboard-mounted video camera, Jafar Panahi\u2019s latest film \u2014 his third since the Iranian government banned him from practicing his craft in 2010 \u2014 is a wry meditation on the slippery boundary between movies and reality and a pointed work of social criticism.", "paragraph_id": "5d702201c8e4820a9b66ce0f"} +{"question": "How was the police's behaviour described as?", "paragraph": "To Zachary Hammond\u2019s supporters, the shooting death of the 19-year-old man was yet another example of questionable police behavior that has shaken communities around the country. In their view, the police in Seneca, S.C., falsely claimed Mr. Hammond was shot last month as he tried to drive his car over the officer who fired on him, when his wounds show he was actually shot from the side and back. They also say the deadly confrontation, in which officers approached with their guns drawn and screaming profanities, evolved from an absurd sting effort to trap his date into selling a tiny amount of marijuana, a drug now decriminalized in much of the country.", "answer": "questionable", "sentence": "To Zachary Hammond\u2019s supporters, the shooting death of the 19-year-old man was yet another example of questionable police behavior that has shaken communities around the country.", "paragraph_sentence": " To Zachary Hammond\u2019s supporters, the shooting death of the 19-year-old man was yet another example of questionable police behavior that has shaken communities around the country. In their view, the police in Seneca, S.C., falsely claimed Mr. Hammond was shot last month as he tried to drive his car over the officer who fired on him, when his wounds show he was actually shot from the side and back. They also say the deadly confrontation, in which officers approached with their guns drawn and screaming profanities, evolved from an absurd sting effort to trap his date into selling a tiny amount of marijuana, a drug now decriminalized in much of the country.", "paragraph_answer": "To Zachary Hammond\u2019s supporters, the shooting death of the 19-year-old man was yet another example of questionable police behavior that has shaken communities around the country. In their view, the police in Seneca, S.C., falsely claimed Mr. Hammond was shot last month as he tried to drive his car over the officer who fired on him, when his wounds show he was actually shot from the side and back. They also say the deadly confrontation, in which officers approached with their guns drawn and screaming profanities, evolved from an absurd sting effort to trap his date into selling a tiny amount of marijuana, a drug now decriminalized in much of the country.", "sentence_answer": "To Zachary Hammond\u2019s supporters, the shooting death of the 19-year-old man was yet another example of questionable police behavior that has shaken communities around the country.", "paragraph_id": "5d701c76c8e4820a9b66c7d0"} +{"question": "What is Indian Railways?", "paragraph": "Indian Railways is primarily a form of employment that also runs trains. It employs more than 1.3 million people, and in the last fiscal year earned about 1.6 trillion rupees, or $25.2 billion, or less than 14 percent of the revenue of Apple. The railway spends almost as much as it earns. Often it turns in a small profit, but that is a result of legally sanctioned accounting wizardry. For instance, the way it calculates depreciation on its assets is not how companies conduct the same exercise. Also, it does not spend as much as it should on upgrading its trains, research or on safety.", "answer": "primarily a form of employment that also runs trains", "sentence": "Indian Railways is primarily a form of employment that also runs trains .", "paragraph_sentence": " Indian Railways is primarily a form of employment that also runs trains . It employs more than 1.3 million people, and in the last fiscal year earned about 1.6 trillion rupees, or $25.2 billion, or less than 14 percent of the revenue of Apple. The railway spends almost as much as it earns. Often it turns in a small profit, but that is a result of legally sanctioned accounting wizardry. For instance, the way it calculates depreciation on its assets is not how companies conduct the same exercise. Also, it does not spend as much as it should on upgrading its trains, research or on safety.", "paragraph_answer": "Indian Railways is primarily a form of employment that also runs trains . It employs more than 1.3 million people, and in the last fiscal year earned about 1.6 trillion rupees, or $25.2 billion, or less than 14 percent of the revenue of Apple. The railway spends almost as much as it earns. Often it turns in a small profit, but that is a result of legally sanctioned accounting wizardry. For instance, the way it calculates depreciation on its assets is not how companies conduct the same exercise. Also, it does not spend as much as it should on upgrading its trains, research or on safety.", "sentence_answer": "Indian Railways is primarily a form of employment that also runs trains .", "paragraph_id": "5d7005ecc8e4820a9b66aa1b"} +{"question": "who ended up getting their way?", "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": "the Iranians", "sentence": "The American negotiators had preferred a step-by-step approach, but the Iranians seem to have gotten their way, for the most part.", "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": "The American negotiators had preferred a step-by-step approach, but the Iranians seem to have gotten their way, for the most part.", "paragraph_id": "5d7004f8c8e4820a9b66a843"} +{"question": "What is the Great West Conference a mishmash of?", "paragraph": "N.J.I.T. will not quibble about its future home. After making the move to Division I from Division II in 2006, it found a temporary spot in the Great West Conference \u2014 a mishmash of colleges mostly from the Midwest and the West. But the conference was never granted an automatic bid to the men\u2019s N.C.A.A. tournament, and in 2013 it disbanded after five of its six remaining members left for other conferences. From that point, the clock has been ticking for N.J.I.T. to upgrade its facilities to make itself more marketable. \u201cThis has been in the works for a while now,\u201d Engles said. \u201cWhen I would meet with recruits, I would tell them, \u2018We plan on building a new $100 million facility,\u2019 but it was just pictures. It was never guaranteed until now.\u201d", "answer": "colleges", "sentence": "After making the move to Division I from Division II in 2006, it found a temporary spot in the Great West Conference \u2014 a mishmash of colleges mostly from the Midwest and the West.", "paragraph_sentence": "N.J.I.T. will not quibble about its future home. After making the move to Division I from Division II in 2006, it found a temporary spot in the Great West Conference \u2014 a mishmash of colleges mostly from the Midwest and the West. But the conference was never granted an automatic bid to the men\u2019s N.C.A.A. tournament, and in 2013 it disbanded after five of its six remaining members left for other conferences. From that point, the clock has been ticking for N.J.I.T. to upgrade its facilities to make itself more marketable. \u201cThis has been in the works for a while now,\u201d Engles said. \u201cWhen I would meet with recruits, I would tell them, \u2018We plan on building a new $100 million facility,\u2019 but it was just pictures. It was never guaranteed until now.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "N.J.I.T. will not quibble about its future home. After making the move to Division I from Division II in 2006, it found a temporary spot in the Great West Conference \u2014 a mishmash of colleges mostly from the Midwest and the West. But the conference was never granted an automatic bid to the men\u2019s N.C.A.A. tournament, and in 2013 it disbanded after five of its six remaining members left for other conferences. From that point, the clock has been ticking for N.J.I.T. to upgrade its facilities to make itself more marketable. \u201cThis has been in the works for a while now,\u201d Engles said. \u201cWhen I would meet with recruits, I would tell them, \u2018We plan on building a new $100 million facility,\u2019 but it was just pictures. It was never guaranteed until now.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "After making the move to Division I from Division II in 2006, it found a temporary spot in the Great West Conference \u2014 a mishmash of colleges mostly from the Midwest and the West.", "paragraph_id": "5d70205cc8e4820a9b66cc22"} +{"question": "What did the 2015 bill bar the Justice Department from doing to interfere with state marijuana laws?", "paragraph": "The ruling is one of several indications that some resolution between federal and state marijuana laws may be approaching. In 2013, the Justice Department recommended that federal officials not target dispensaries, growers and patients who complied with state marijuana laws and had no links to cartels or interstate smuggling. Moreover, the 2015 appropriations bill passed by Congress in December barred the Justice Department from spending money to interfere with any state\u2019s efforts to carry out its medical marijuana laws. The Justice Department has countered that it can still prosecute violations of the federal marijuana ban and continue cases already in the courts.", "answer": "spending money", "sentence": "Moreover, the 2015 appropriations bill passed by Congress in December barred the Justice Department from spending money to interfere with any state\u2019s efforts to carry out its medical marijuana laws.", "paragraph_sentence": "The ruling is one of several indications that some resolution between federal and state marijuana laws may be approaching. In 2013, the Justice Department recommended that federal officials not target dispensaries, growers and patients who complied with state marijuana laws and had no links to cartels or interstate smuggling. Moreover, the 2015 appropriations bill passed by Congress in December barred the Justice Department from spending money to interfere with any state\u2019s efforts to carry out its medical marijuana laws. The Justice Department has countered that it can still prosecute violations of the federal marijuana ban and continue cases already in the courts.", "paragraph_answer": "The ruling is one of several indications that some resolution between federal and state marijuana laws may be approaching. In 2013, the Justice Department recommended that federal officials not target dispensaries, growers and patients who complied with state marijuana laws and had no links to cartels or interstate smuggling. Moreover, the 2015 appropriations bill passed by Congress in December barred the Justice Department from spending money to interfere with any state\u2019s efforts to carry out its medical marijuana laws. The Justice Department has countered that it can still prosecute violations of the federal marijuana ban and continue cases already in the courts.", "sentence_answer": "Moreover, the 2015 appropriations bill passed by Congress in December barred the Justice Department from spending money to interfere with any state\u2019s efforts to carry out its medical marijuana laws.", "paragraph_id": "5d700ed0c8e4820a9b66bac8"} +{"question": "What kind of statements did Justice Kagan say that may be damaging enough?", "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": "false statements", "sentence": "Justice Kagan said that false statements may be damage enough.", "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": "Justice Kagan said that false statements may be damage enough.", "paragraph_id": "5d700eb3c8e4820a9b66baad"} +{"question": "Where did the marriage ceremony of Dr. Louise Wong and Paul Whitfield the third take place?", "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": "at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington", "sentence": "Dr. Louise Wong and Paul Whitfield Hughes III were married Saturday at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington .", "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": "Dr. Louise Wong and Paul Whitfield Hughes III were married Saturday at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington .", "paragraph_id": "5d701635c8e4820a9b66c23d"} +{"question": "What could be the reason Google is the monopoly power in search?", "paragraph": "But even if one believes that regulatory oversight weakened Microsoft, Mr. Manne, of the International Center for Law and Economics, points out that the prosecution could be the reason we\u2019re here today \u2014 with Google as the monopoly power in search. \u201cIt\u2019s the paradigmatic cautionary tale,\u201d he said. \u201cYou had the rise of Google coming on the heels of the antitrust enforcement against Microsoft, and because of all this scrutiny, Microsoft was not as effective a competitor against Google as it could have been.\u201d Noting the potential for another giant, possibly Amazon, to gain a monopoly as a result of the charges against Google, Mr. Manne adds: \u201cI think we would see that potential again here, and that\u2019s exactly what we don\u2019t want.\u201d", "answer": "the prosecution", "sentence": "But even if one believes that regulatory oversight weakened Microsoft, Mr. Manne, of the International Center for Law and Economics, points out that the prosecution could be the reason we\u2019re here today \u2014 with Google as the monopoly power in search.", "paragraph_sentence": " But even if one believes that regulatory oversight weakened Microsoft, Mr. Manne, of the International Center for Law and Economics, points out that the prosecution could be the reason we\u2019re here today \u2014 with Google as the monopoly power in search. \u201cIt\u2019s the paradigmatic cautionary tale,\u201d he said. \u201cYou had the rise of Google coming on the heels of the antitrust enforcement against Microsoft, and because of all this scrutiny, Microsoft was not as effective a competitor against Google as it could have been.\u201d Noting the potential for another giant, possibly Amazon, to gain a monopoly as a result of the charges against Google, Mr. Manne adds: \u201cI think we would see that potential again here, and that\u2019s exactly what we don\u2019t want.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "But even if one believes that regulatory oversight weakened Microsoft, Mr. Manne, of the International Center for Law and Economics, points out that the prosecution could be the reason we\u2019re here today \u2014 with Google as the monopoly power in search. \u201cIt\u2019s the paradigmatic cautionary tale,\u201d he said. \u201cYou had the rise of Google coming on the heels of the antitrust enforcement against Microsoft, and because of all this scrutiny, Microsoft was not as effective a competitor against Google as it could have been.\u201d Noting the potential for another giant, possibly Amazon, to gain a monopoly as a result of the charges against Google, Mr. Manne adds: \u201cI think we would see that potential again here, and that\u2019s exactly what we don\u2019t want.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "But even if one believes that regulatory oversight weakened Microsoft, Mr. Manne, of the International Center for Law and Economics, points out that the prosecution could be the reason we\u2019re here today \u2014 with Google as the monopoly power in search.", "paragraph_id": "5d704212c8e4820a9b66e5fc"} +{"question": "Who specifically might really like dinners at Noreetuh?", "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": "wine lovers", "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.", "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d703591c8e4820a9b66dfa2"} +{"question": "What term did Mr. Bush use?", "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": "anchor babies", "sentence": "And, astoundingly, he handed Mr. Trump the opportunity to send out tweets like this: \u201cIn a clumsy move to get out of his \u2018 anchor 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 \u2018 anchor 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 \u2018 anchor 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 \u2018 anchor babies \u2019 dilemma, where he signed that he would not use the term and now uses it, he blamed ASIANS.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d7037c3c8e4820a9b66e0ec"} +{"question": "When does it open?", "paragraph": "\u201cShe has this extraordinary talent for distilling form, landscape, abstraction and color,\u201d Mr. Kelly said. \u201cHer palette is very unusual. It has a lot to do with that great tradition of Belgian Northern European artists dealing with a quality of light.\u201d So he decided to give the artist her first solo show in the United States, traveling to Belgium recently to choose the paintings and watercolors for the exhibition, which opens Jan. 8 at his 10th Avenue gallery. \u201cIt\u2019s impossible to separate Ilse D\u2019Hollander\u2019s work from her personality,\u201d Eric Rinckhout wrote in an essay. \u201cShe withdrew into her work as into a house, to seek the rest, order and control she could not find in her head at times.\u201d", "answer": "Jan. 8", "sentence": "So he decided to give the artist her first solo show in the United States, traveling to Belgium recently to choose the paintings and watercolors for the exhibition, which opens Jan. 8 at his 10th Avenue gallery.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cShe has this extraordinary talent for distilling form, landscape, abstraction and color,\u201d Mr. Kelly said. \u201cHer palette is very unusual. It has a lot to do with that great tradition of Belgian Northern European artists dealing with a quality of light.\u201d So he decided to give the artist her first solo show in the United States, traveling to Belgium recently to choose the paintings and watercolors for the exhibition, which opens Jan. 8 at his 10th Avenue gallery. \u201cIt\u2019s impossible to separate Ilse D\u2019Hollander\u2019s work from her personality,\u201d Eric Rinckhout wrote in an essay. \u201cShe withdrew into her work as into a house, to seek the rest, order and control she could not find in her head at times.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cShe has this extraordinary talent for distilling form, landscape, abstraction and color,\u201d Mr. Kelly said. \u201cHer palette is very unusual. It has a lot to do with that great tradition of Belgian Northern European artists dealing with a quality of light.\u201d So he decided to give the artist her first solo show in the United States, traveling to Belgium recently to choose the paintings and watercolors for the exhibition, which opens Jan. 8 at his 10th Avenue gallery. \u201cIt\u2019s impossible to separate Ilse D\u2019Hollander\u2019s work from her personality,\u201d Eric Rinckhout wrote in an essay. \u201cShe withdrew into her work as into a house, to seek the rest, order and control she could not find in her head at times.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "So he decided to give the artist her first solo show in the United States, traveling to Belgium recently to choose the paintings and watercolors for the exhibition, which opens Jan. 8 at his 10th Avenue gallery.", "paragraph_id": "5d704b80c8e4820a9b66e9a2"} +{"question": "At the university of Rochester, who is the director of Russian studies?", "paragraph": "Kathleen Parth\u00e9, the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email, \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past, too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917.\u201d She added, \u201cAs a writer he may have been a spent force, but as a cultural icon who helped legitimize the latest version of Russian authoritarianism,\u201d he was receiving \u201ca very grand send-off.\u201d", "answer": "Kathleen Parth\u00e9", "sentence": "Kathleen Parth\u00e9 , the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email, \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past, too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Kathleen Parth\u00e9 , the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email, \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past, too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917.\u201d She added, \u201cAs a writer he may have been a spent force, but as a cultural icon who helped legitimize the latest version of Russian authoritarianism,\u201d he was receiving \u201ca very grand send-off.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": " Kathleen Parth\u00e9 , the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email, \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past, too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917.\u201d She added, \u201cAs a writer he may have been a spent force, but as a cultural icon who helped legitimize the latest version of Russian authoritarianism,\u201d he was receiving \u201ca very grand send-off.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Kathleen Parth\u00e9 , the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email, \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past, too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d701bb1c8e4820a9b66c723"} +{"question": "What did Mr. Kolesnik say?", "paragraph": "Ukrainians greeted the news with much the same skepticism as the experts, though mingled with relief. \u201cWe had a cease-fire before, but it was not observed, almost from the beginning, so how can we have much faith?\u201d said Dmitri Kolesnik, 18, a student in Kharkiv, a city in southeastern Ukraine that has been touched sporadically by violence. He paused on the steps leading down to a subway station, and said he put the odds of peace at no better than 50-50. \u201cPutin is a very aggressive person,\u201d Mr. Kolesnik said, as bustling throngs made their way home in the late afternoon. \u201cYou cannot always trust that just because he says something that it will happen.\u201d", "answer": "You cannot always trust that just because he says something that it will happen.\u201d", "sentence": "\u201c You cannot always trust that just because he says something that it will happen.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Ukrainians greeted the news with much the same skepticism as the experts, though mingled with relief. \u201cWe had a cease-fire before, but it was not observed, almost from the beginning, so how can we have much faith?\u201d said Dmitri Kolesnik, 18, a student in Kharkiv, a city in southeastern Ukraine that has been touched sporadically by violence. He paused on the steps leading down to a subway station, and said he put the odds of peace at no better than 50-50. \u201cPutin is a very aggressive person,\u201d Mr. Kolesnik said, as bustling throngs made their way home in the late afternoon. \u201c You cannot always trust that just because he says something that it will happen.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Ukrainians greeted the news with much the same skepticism as the experts, though mingled with relief. \u201cWe had a cease-fire before, but it was not observed, almost from the beginning, so how can we have much faith?\u201d said Dmitri Kolesnik, 18, a student in Kharkiv, a city in southeastern Ukraine that has been touched sporadically by violence. He paused on the steps leading down to a subway station, and said he put the odds of peace at no better than 50-50. \u201cPutin is a very aggressive person,\u201d Mr. Kolesnik said, as bustling throngs made their way home in the late afternoon. \u201c You cannot always trust that just because he says something that it will happen.\u201d ", "sentence_answer": "\u201c You cannot always trust that just because he says something that it will happen.\u201d ", "paragraph_id": "5d70278fc8e4820a9b66d55f"} +{"question": "What seed are the Dayton Flyers?", "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": "11 seed", "sentence": "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": " 11 seed , used a second-half to surge to defeat sixth-seeded Providence, 66-53, at Nationwide Arena.", "paragraph_id": "5d7004f2c8e4820a9b66a82d"} +{"question": "What famous Christmas son did Loesser write?", "paragraph": "Broadway Playhouse: Frank Loesser (Sunday) It\u2019s time for small guys and dolls to learn about the adult ones who shared a spotlight on Broadway \u2014 and the man who helped bring them to life. At this program, the season\u2019s conclusion to the Broadway Playhouse series at Merkin Concert Hall, which introduces classic musicals and their creators to the next generation of audiences, they can discover the world of Frank Loesser. The composer and lyricist behind \u201cGuys and Dolls\u201d and \u201cHow to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying,\u201d Loesser also wrote a famous tune that could be an anthem for this winter: \u201cBaby, It\u2019s Cold Outside.\u201d Singalongs and interactive games are part of the fun. At 11 a.m., 129 West 67th Street, Manhattan, 212-501-3330, kaufmanmusiccenter.org/mch.", "answer": "\u201cBaby, It\u2019s Cold Outside.\u201d", "sentence": "The composer and lyricist behind \u201cGuys and Dolls\u201d and \u201cHow to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying,\u201d Loesser also wrote a famous tune that could be an anthem for this winter: \u201cBaby, It\u2019s Cold Outside.\u201d Singalongs and interactive games are part of the fun.", "paragraph_sentence": "Broadway Playhouse: Frank Loesser (Sunday) It\u2019s time for small guys and dolls to learn about the adult ones who shared a spotlight on Broadway \u2014 and the man who helped bring them to life. At this program, the season\u2019s conclusion to the Broadway Playhouse series at Merkin Concert Hall, which introduces classic musicals and their creators to the next generation of audiences, they can discover the world of Frank Loesser. The composer and lyricist behind \u201cGuys and Dolls\u201d and \u201cHow to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying,\u201d Loesser also wrote a famous tune that could be an anthem for this winter: \u201cBaby, It\u2019s Cold Outside.\u201d Singalongs and interactive games are part of the fun. At 11 a.m., 129 West 67th Street, Manhattan, 212-501-3330, kaufmanmusiccenter.org/mch.", "paragraph_answer": "Broadway Playhouse: Frank Loesser (Sunday) It\u2019s time for small guys and dolls to learn about the adult ones who shared a spotlight on Broadway \u2014 and the man who helped bring them to life. At this program, the season\u2019s conclusion to the Broadway Playhouse series at Merkin Concert Hall, which introduces classic musicals and their creators to the next generation of audiences, they can discover the world of Frank Loesser. The composer and lyricist behind \u201cGuys and Dolls\u201d and \u201cHow to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying,\u201d Loesser also wrote a famous tune that could be an anthem for this winter: \u201cBaby, It\u2019s Cold Outside.\u201d Singalongs and interactive games are part of the fun. At 11 a.m., 129 West 67th Street, Manhattan, 212-501-3330, kaufmanmusiccenter.org/mch.", "sentence_answer": "The composer and lyricist behind \u201cGuys and Dolls\u201d and \u201cHow to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying,\u201d Loesser also wrote a famous tune that could be an anthem for this winter: \u201cBaby, It\u2019s Cold Outside.\u201d Singalongs and interactive games are part of the fun.", "paragraph_id": "5d70a08bc8e4820a9b66f661"} +{"question": "What did Mrs. Clinton reportedly only use while secretary of state?", "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": "a private email account", "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d705262c8e4820a9b66ebd0"} +{"question": "Which two channels did the police raid?", "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": "KanalTurk and Bugun TV", "sentence": "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_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": "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_id": "5d700b6cc8e4820a9b66b627"} +{"question": "Who are in charge for the renewal project?", "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": "the architect Josep Llu\u00eds Sert and the urban planner Paul Lester Wiener.", "sentence": "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_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": "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_id": "5d700bc2c8e4820a9b66b69e"} +{"question": "What city did the media mention that made Porzingis grimace?", "paragraph": "Except for publicity events. One day after the T-shirt signing in White Plains, Porzingis appeared at a similar function in the shadow of the Christmas tree at Rockefeller Center. He arrived in a party bus with 15 children from the Garden of Dreams Foundation, a charity in the Bronx. Dressed in track pants and a blue-and-white trimmed Santa hat, he led his charges into an area penned off by barricades and there, in front of reporters, went through the motions of \u201csurprising\u201d them with gifts. The 20-minute photo-op did not leave much room for spontaneity. Looming over everything around him, Porzingis grinned into a firestorm of 100 flashing phones. He was painfully genial, smiling and shaking hands. He approximated laughter at every corny joke about his height. The one authentic moment came when he offered to hold a selfie stick for a picture with the children and his arm shot out to a gasp-inducing length. But then the youths were hustled off and the news media were unleashed. A television news crew put a camera in his face and asked how it felt to be playing in New York. Though he was smiling, his eyes went cold, and the muscles of his lips began to tighten. \u201cI love it here,\u201d Porzingis said. \u201cNew York\u2019s the place to be.\u201d", "answer": "New York.", "sentence": "A television news crew put a camera in his face and asked how it felt to be playing in New York. Though he was smiling, his eyes went cold, and the muscles of his lips began to tighten.", "paragraph_sentence": "Except for publicity events. One day after the T-shirt signing in White Plains, Porzingis appeared at a similar function in the shadow of the Christmas tree at Rockefeller Center. He arrived in a party bus with 15 children from the Garden of Dreams Foundation, a charity in the Bronx. Dressed in track pants and a blue-and-white trimmed Santa hat, he led his charges into an area penned off by barricades and there, in front of reporters, went through the motions of \u201csurprising\u201d them with gifts. The 20-minute photo-op did not leave much room for spontaneity. Looming over everything around him, Porzingis grinned into a firestorm of 100 flashing phones. He was painfully genial, smiling and shaking hands. He approximated laughter at every corny joke about his height. The one authentic moment came when he offered to hold a selfie stick for a picture with the children and his arm shot out to a gasp-inducing length. But then the youths were hustled off and the news media were unleashed. A television news crew put a camera in his face and asked how it felt to be playing in New York. Though he was smiling, his eyes went cold, and the muscles of his lips began to tighten. \u201cI love it here,\u201d Porzingis said. \u201cNew York\u2019s the place to be.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Except for publicity events. One day after the T-shirt signing in White Plains, Porzingis appeared at a similar function in the shadow of the Christmas tree at Rockefeller Center. He arrived in a party bus with 15 children from the Garden of Dreams Foundation, a charity in the Bronx. Dressed in track pants and a blue-and-white trimmed Santa hat, he led his charges into an area penned off by barricades and there, in front of reporters, went through the motions of \u201csurprising\u201d them with gifts. The 20-minute photo-op did not leave much room for spontaneity. Looming over everything around him, Porzingis grinned into a firestorm of 100 flashing phones. He was painfully genial, smiling and shaking hands. He approximated laughter at every corny joke about his height. The one authentic moment came when he offered to hold a selfie stick for a picture with the children and his arm shot out to a gasp-inducing length. But then the youths were hustled off and the news media were unleashed. A television news crew put a camera in his face and asked how it felt to be playing in New York. Though he was smiling, his eyes went cold, and the muscles of his lips began to tighten. \u201cI love it here,\u201d Porzingis said. \u201cNew York\u2019s the place to be.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "A television news crew put a camera in his face and asked how it felt to be playing in New York. Though he was smiling, his eyes went cold, and the muscles of his lips began to tighten.", "paragraph_id": "5d7025ecc8e4820a9b66d227"} +{"question": "Which race of women were being sterilized without their permission?", "paragraph": "PG: Rap names aside, your careers unfolded side by side at the forefront of the women\u2019s movement. When did you meet? GS: When Ruth was at the A.C.L.U. What comes to mind are these cases in which young African-American women were being sterilized without their permission. RBG: There was an irony. We couldn\u2019t get abortions. But there was this notorious obstetrician, and if it was a woman\u2019s third child, he would automatically sterilize her.", "answer": "African-American", "sentence": "GS: When Ruth was at the A.C.L.U. What comes to mind are these cases in which young African-American women were being sterilized without their permission.", "paragraph_sentence": "PG: Rap names aside, your careers unfolded side by side at the forefront of the women\u2019s movement. When did you meet? GS: When Ruth was at the A.C.L.U. What comes to mind are these cases in which young African-American women were being sterilized without their permission. RBG: There was an irony. We couldn\u2019t get abortions. But there was this notorious obstetrician, and if it was a woman\u2019s third child, he would automatically sterilize her.", "paragraph_answer": "PG: Rap names aside, your careers unfolded side by side at the forefront of the women\u2019s movement. When did you meet? GS: When Ruth was at the A.C.L.U. What comes to mind are these cases in which young African-American women were being sterilized without their permission. RBG: There was an irony. We couldn\u2019t get abortions. But there was this notorious obstetrician, and if it was a woman\u2019s third child, he would automatically sterilize her.", "sentence_answer": "GS: When Ruth was at the A.C.L.U. What comes to mind are these cases in which young African-American women were being sterilized without their permission.", "paragraph_id": "5d705b05c8e4820a9b66ee8d"} +{"question": "What country were reports blocked in on Wednesday night?", "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": "United States", "sentence": "By Wednesday night, reports from both Bugun and KanalTurk were blocked from viewers in the United States on YouTube.", "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": "By Wednesday night, reports from both Bugun and KanalTurk were blocked from viewers in the United States on YouTube.", "paragraph_id": "5d700cc7c8e4820a9b66b819"} +{"question": "Which areas use more than their fair share of water?", "paragraph": "In Tehran, officials barely managed to keep the water running this summer as reservoirs shrank to dangerously low levels. Subsidies for water and electricity encourage overconsumption in urban areas. Isa Kalantari, a former minister of agriculture, warns that more than half of Iran\u2019s provinces could become uninhabitable within 15 years, displacing millions of people. As in drought-stricken California, agriculture accounts for about 90 percent of water consumption in Iran. And here, matters are not helped by the prevalence of crude, centuries-old irrigation methods and other wasteful practices.", "answer": "urban areas", "sentence": "Subsidies for water and electricity encourage overconsumption in urban areas .", "paragraph_sentence": "In Tehran, officials barely managed to keep the water running this summer as reservoirs shrank to dangerously low levels. Subsidies for water and electricity encourage overconsumption in urban areas . Isa Kalantari, a former minister of agriculture, warns that more than half of Iran\u2019s provinces could become uninhabitable within 15 years, displacing millions of people. As in drought-stricken California, agriculture accounts for about 90 percent of water consumption in Iran. And here, matters are not helped by the prevalence of crude, centuries-old irrigation methods and other wasteful practices.", "paragraph_answer": "In Tehran, officials barely managed to keep the water running this summer as reservoirs shrank to dangerously low levels. Subsidies for water and electricity encourage overconsumption in urban areas . Isa Kalantari, a former minister of agriculture, warns that more than half of Iran\u2019s provinces could become uninhabitable within 15 years, displacing millions of people. As in drought-stricken California, agriculture accounts for about 90 percent of water consumption in Iran. And here, matters are not helped by the prevalence of crude, centuries-old irrigation methods and other wasteful practices.", "sentence_answer": "Subsidies for water and electricity encourage overconsumption in urban areas .", "paragraph_id": "5d701f11c8e4820a9b66cad3"} +{"question": "What sort of German companies often have big operations in the United States according to Mr. Jain?", "paragraph": "But Mr. Jain argued that Deutsche Bank needed to be a force on Wall Street to serve blue-chip German companies that almost always have large operations in the United States. \u201cIt is critical for us to have a strong and credible presence in the U.S. in order to claim that we are a true global competitor,\u201d Mr. Jain said. True, he could point to a rebound in Deutsche Bank\u2019s investment banking unit during the last quarter. The bank said that revenue generated from trading stocks, bonds and currencies was the highest in years. Revenue from investment banking rose 15 percent, to \u20ac4.7 billion. Operating profit for the unit fell by more than half, to \u20ac643 million, after subtracting a portion of the penalty paid in the rate-fixing scandal. Mr. Jain said the bank will \u201cavoid trying to be all things to all people.\u201d But critics would say the bank, trapped in its image of itself as Germany\u2019s beachhead in the financial world, is still trying to do too much.", "answer": "blue-chip German companies", "sentence": "But Mr. Jain argued that Deutsche Bank needed to be a force on Wall Street to serve blue-chip German companies that almost always have large operations in the United States.", "paragraph_sentence": " But Mr. Jain argued that Deutsche Bank needed to be a force on Wall Street to serve blue-chip German companies that almost always have large operations in the United States. \u201cIt is critical for us to have a strong and credible presence in the U.S. in order to claim that we are a true global competitor,\u201d Mr. Jain said. True, he could point to a rebound in Deutsche Bank\u2019s investment banking unit during the last quarter. The bank said that revenue generated from trading stocks, bonds and currencies was the highest in years. Revenue from investment banking rose 15 percent, to \u20ac4.7 billion. Operating profit for the unit fell by more than half, to \u20ac643 million, after subtracting a portion of the penalty paid in the rate-fixing scandal. Mr. Jain said the bank will \u201cavoid trying to be all things to all people.\u201d But critics would say the bank, trapped in its image of itself as Germany\u2019s beachhead in the financial world, is still trying to do too much.", "paragraph_answer": "But Mr. Jain argued that Deutsche Bank needed to be a force on Wall Street to serve blue-chip German companies that almost always have large operations in the United States. \u201cIt is critical for us to have a strong and credible presence in the U.S. in order to claim that we are a true global competitor,\u201d Mr. Jain said. True, he could point to a rebound in Deutsche Bank\u2019s investment banking unit during the last quarter. The bank said that revenue generated from trading stocks, bonds and currencies was the highest in years. Revenue from investment banking rose 15 percent, to \u20ac4.7 billion. Operating profit for the unit fell by more than half, to \u20ac643 million, after subtracting a portion of the penalty paid in the rate-fixing scandal. Mr. Jain said the bank will \u201cavoid trying to be all things to all people.\u201d But critics would say the bank, trapped in its image of itself as Germany\u2019s beachhead in the financial world, is still trying to do too much.", "sentence_answer": "But Mr. Jain argued that Deutsche Bank needed to be a force on Wall Street to serve blue-chip German companies that almost always have large operations in the United States.", "paragraph_id": "5d701545c8e4820a9b66c150"} +{"question": "Who kept the papers that arrived from Croatia?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt\u2019s scattered, we\u2019re still sorting through\u201d about eight boxes of new material, said Philip Hallman, curator of the university\u2019s Screen Arts Mavericks and Makers collection. The papers arrived last week from Croatia, where they had been kept by Ms. Kodar, Mr. Hallman said. University officials declined to disclose the purchase price of the papers. The discovery comes amid renewed interest in Welles coinciding with the 100th anniversary of his birth earlier this month. Most prominently, a group of producers are working to complete \u201cThe Other Side of the Wind,\u201d a film shot by Welles in the 1970s. The producers unveiled an Indiegogo crowdfunding campaign on May 7 to raise funds for editing, music and other postproduction costs.", "answer": "Ms. Kodar", "sentence": "The papers arrived last week from Croatia, where they had been kept by Ms. Kodar , Mr. Hallman said.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s scattered, we\u2019re still sorting through\u201d about eight boxes of new material, said Philip Hallman, curator of the university\u2019s Screen Arts Mavericks and Makers collection. The papers arrived last week from Croatia, where they had been kept by Ms. Kodar , Mr. Hallman said. University officials declined to disclose the purchase price of the papers. The discovery comes amid renewed interest in Welles coinciding with the 100th anniversary of his birth earlier this month. Most prominently, a group of producers are working to complete \u201cThe Other Side of the Wind,\u201d a film shot by Welles in the 1970s. The producers unveiled an Indiegogo crowdfunding campaign on May 7 to raise funds for editing, music and other postproduction costs.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s scattered, we\u2019re still sorting through\u201d about eight boxes of new material, said Philip Hallman, curator of the university\u2019s Screen Arts Mavericks and Makers collection. The papers arrived last week from Croatia, where they had been kept by Ms. Kodar , Mr. Hallman said. University officials declined to disclose the purchase price of the papers. The discovery comes amid renewed interest in Welles coinciding with the 100th anniversary of his birth earlier this month. Most prominently, a group of producers are working to complete \u201cThe Other Side of the Wind,\u201d a film shot by Welles in the 1970s. The producers unveiled an Indiegogo crowdfunding campaign on May 7 to raise funds for editing, music and other postproduction costs.", "sentence_answer": "The papers arrived last week from Croatia, where they had been kept by Ms. Kodar , Mr. Hallman said.", "paragraph_id": "5d708439c8e4820a9b66f42c"} +{"question": "What other extreme weather condition are the tourists familiar with?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe got to eat at the Boathouse for Sunday brunch, and we really enjoyed that, so we were talking about doing the more touristy things,\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s nice to come back and have more of an excuse to do the touristy things.\u201d Mr. Garcia said he was neither relieved nor disappointed by the blizzard\u2019s last-minute zag to the east. \u201cI\u2019m indifferent,\u201d he said. \u201cIt was nice weather. I enjoyed it. I was out till midnight walking Monday night \u2014 had a late dinner at Quality Meats and walked around. So it was great. We\u2019re used to the hype in Miami, with the hurricanes. I guess it\u2019s terrible if you have to run a business, but for us it didn\u2019t affect us.\u201d", "answer": "hurricanes", "sentence": "We\u2019re used to the hype in Miami, with the hurricanes .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe got to eat at the Boathouse for Sunday brunch, and we really enjoyed that, so we were talking about doing the more touristy things,\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s nice to come back and have more of an excuse to do the touristy things.\u201d Mr. Garcia said he was neither relieved nor disappointed by the blizzard\u2019s last-minute zag to the east. \u201cI\u2019m indifferent,\u201d he said. \u201cIt was nice weather. I enjoyed it. I was out till midnight walking Monday night \u2014 had a late dinner at Quality Meats and walked around. So it was great. We\u2019re used to the hype in Miami, with the hurricanes . I guess it\u2019s terrible if you have to run a business, but for us it didn\u2019t affect us.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe got to eat at the Boathouse for Sunday brunch, and we really enjoyed that, so we were talking about doing the more touristy things,\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s nice to come back and have more of an excuse to do the touristy things.\u201d Mr. Garcia said he was neither relieved nor disappointed by the blizzard\u2019s last-minute zag to the east. \u201cI\u2019m indifferent,\u201d he said. \u201cIt was nice weather. I enjoyed it. I was out till midnight walking Monday night \u2014 had a late dinner at Quality Meats and walked around. So it was great. We\u2019re used to the hype in Miami, with the hurricanes . I guess it\u2019s terrible if you have to run a business, but for us it didn\u2019t affect us.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "We\u2019re used to the hype in Miami, with the hurricanes .", "paragraph_id": "5d700e77c8e4820a9b66ba63"} +{"question": "What percentage of NCAA women's hockey players self-reported concussions?", "paragraph": "Despite increased public discussion, there is a dearth of information focused on concussions in women\u2019s hockey. The few published studies available are unsettling. An eight-year study released this year by the International Ice Hockey Federation analyzed women\u2019s hockey injuries at the world championships and the Olympics. It found that concussions were the third-most-common injury (15.5 percent), behind contusions (28 percent) and sprains (20.8 percent). A 2014 summary of self-reported concussions among N.C.A.A. student-athletes said that women\u2019s hockey had the largest percentage of players who had experienced at least one concussion, at 20.9 percent.", "answer": "20.9", "sentence": "A 2014 summary of self-reported concussions among N.C.A.A. student-athletes said that women\u2019s hockey had the largest percentage of players who had experienced at least one concussion, at 20.9 percent.", "paragraph_sentence": "Despite increased public discussion, there is a dearth of information focused on concussions in women\u2019s hockey. The few published studies available are unsettling. An eight-year study released this year by the International Ice Hockey Federation analyzed women\u2019s hockey injuries at the world championships and the Olympics. It found that concussions were the third-most-common injury (15.5 percent), behind contusions (28 percent) and sprains (20.8 percent). A 2014 summary of self-reported concussions among N.C.A.A. student-athletes said that women\u2019s hockey had the largest percentage of players who had experienced at least one concussion, at 20.9 percent. ", "paragraph_answer": "Despite increased public discussion, there is a dearth of information focused on concussions in women\u2019s hockey. The few published studies available are unsettling. An eight-year study released this year by the International Ice Hockey Federation analyzed women\u2019s hockey injuries at the world championships and the Olympics. It found that concussions were the third-most-common injury (15.5 percent), behind contusions (28 percent) and sprains (20.8 percent). A 2014 summary of self-reported concussions among N.C.A.A. student-athletes said that women\u2019s hockey had the largest percentage of players who had experienced at least one concussion, at 20.9 percent.", "sentence_answer": "A 2014 summary of self-reported concussions among N.C.A.A. student-athletes said that women\u2019s hockey had the largest percentage of players who had experienced at least one concussion, at 20.9 percent.", "paragraph_id": "5d702157c8e4820a9b66cd37"} +{"question": "What period is the image of Buddha from?", "paragraph": "Technically, they\u2019re demons, but they\u2019re also fantastical fun, as are many of Buddhism\u2019s supporting players, with their folk-art additives. These include guardian ogres with faces like pugs with tusks and nymphs with half-bird, half human bodies who, with a pretty dance and a flutter of stained-glass wings, bid you goodbye at the end of the show. But before you leave, there are a couple of things worth an extra look. One, in a case between the two nymphs, is a 17th-century gilded bronze image of the seated Buddha. With his short neck, cool shape-up haircut, plain off-the-shoulder robe, and round face bent forward and down, he\u2019s as close as any Myanmar work here comes to embodying a Buddhist physical ideal.", "answer": "17th-century", "sentence": "One, in a case between the two nymphs, is a 17th-century gilded bronze image of the seated Buddha.", "paragraph_sentence": "Technically, they\u2019re demons, but they\u2019re also fantastical fun, as are many of Buddhism\u2019s supporting players, with their folk-art additives. These include guardian ogres with faces like pugs with tusks and nymphs with half-bird, half human bodies who, with a pretty dance and a flutter of stained-glass wings, bid you goodbye at the end of the show. But before you leave, there are a couple of things worth an extra look. One, in a case between the two nymphs, is a 17th-century gilded bronze image of the seated Buddha. With his short neck, cool shape-up haircut, plain off-the-shoulder robe, and round face bent forward and down, he\u2019s as close as any Myanmar work here comes to embodying a Buddhist physical ideal.", "paragraph_answer": "Technically, they\u2019re demons, but they\u2019re also fantastical fun, as are many of Buddhism\u2019s supporting players, with their folk-art additives. These include guardian ogres with faces like pugs with tusks and nymphs with half-bird, half human bodies who, with a pretty dance and a flutter of stained-glass wings, bid you goodbye at the end of the show. But before you leave, there are a couple of things worth an extra look. One, in a case between the two nymphs, is a 17th-century gilded bronze image of the seated Buddha. With his short neck, cool shape-up haircut, plain off-the-shoulder robe, and round face bent forward and down, he\u2019s as close as any Myanmar work here comes to embodying a Buddhist physical ideal.", "sentence_answer": "One, in a case between the two nymphs, is a 17th-century gilded bronze image of the seated Buddha.", "paragraph_id": "5d702a09c8e4820a9b66d782"} +{"question": "What percent increase did Credit Agricole observe in net income from this year to last?", "paragraph": "PARIS \u2014 Cr\u00e9dit Agricole and Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 G\u00e9n\u00e9rale, two of France\u2019s largest banks, reported higher third-quarter profits on Thursday as their retail divisions posted improved results. Cr\u00e9dit Agricole, which ranks second only to BNP Paribas among French lenders in terms of assets, posted net income of 930 million euros, about $1 billion, for the three months from July through September, an increase of 15 percent from a year earlier. Its revenue slipped 2 percent to \u20ac3.9 billion, it said, though it noted that the figure was broadly stable after accounting for a revaluation of its own debt, loan hedges and other items. It said most business lines had improved, particularly domestic and international retail banking.", "answer": "15 percent", "sentence": "Cr\u00e9dit Agricole, which ranks second only to BNP Paribas among French lenders in terms of assets, posted net income of 930 million euros, about $1 billion, for the three months from July through September, an increase of 15 percent from a year earlier.", "paragraph_sentence": "PARIS \u2014 Cr\u00e9dit Agricole and Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 G\u00e9n\u00e9rale, two of France\u2019s largest banks, reported higher third-quarter profits on Thursday as their retail divisions posted improved results. Cr\u00e9dit Agricole, which ranks second only to BNP Paribas among French lenders in terms of assets, posted net income of 930 million euros, about $1 billion, for the three months from July through September, an increase of 15 percent from a year earlier. Its revenue slipped 2 percent to \u20ac3.9 billion, it said, though it noted that the figure was broadly stable after accounting for a revaluation of its own debt, loan hedges and other items. It said most business lines had improved, particularly domestic and international retail banking.", "paragraph_answer": "PARIS \u2014 Cr\u00e9dit Agricole and Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 G\u00e9n\u00e9rale, two of France\u2019s largest banks, reported higher third-quarter profits on Thursday as their retail divisions posted improved results. Cr\u00e9dit Agricole, which ranks second only to BNP Paribas among French lenders in terms of assets, posted net income of 930 million euros, about $1 billion, for the three months from July through September, an increase of 15 percent from a year earlier. Its revenue slipped 2 percent to \u20ac3.9 billion, it said, though it noted that the figure was broadly stable after accounting for a revaluation of its own debt, loan hedges and other items. It said most business lines had improved, particularly domestic and international retail banking.", "sentence_answer": "Cr\u00e9dit Agricole, which ranks second only to BNP Paribas among French lenders in terms of assets, posted net income of 930 million euros, about $1 billion, for the three months from July through September, an increase of 15 percent from a year earlier.", "paragraph_id": "5d700826c8e4820a9b66af64"} +{"question": "Why were these emotions purposely conveyed in the subject of 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": "These are the most common feelings tasted by black people in America.", "sentence": "These are the most common feelings tasted by black people in America. \u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "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 ", "paragraph_answer": "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", "sentence_answer": " These are the most common feelings tasted by black people in America. \u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d701cfdc8e4820a9b66c872"} +{"question": "Who has the government been locked in intense battles with?", "paragraph": "The government and defense have been locked in increasingly intense battles, some voiced through objections in court, others occurring out of earshot of the jury and the news media; the contents of some of those have been made available later through transcripts. The only testimony Thursday concerned the conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face in the supermax penitentiary in Colorado, sometimes called the ADX, where he is likely to go if the jury sentenced him to life in prison. William Weinreb, the lead prosecutor, told the judge in a sidebar that the prison conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face might be the most crucial factor weighed by the jury. \u201cThe jury cares a lot about this,\u201d Mr. Weinreb said, according to a transcript. \u201cWe\u2019re talking about maybe the most important thing for them.\u201d", "answer": "defense", "sentence": "The government and defense have been locked in increasingly intense battles, some voiced through objections in court, others occurring out of earshot of the jury and the news media; the contents of some of those have been made available later through transcripts.", "paragraph_sentence": " The government and defense have been locked in increasingly intense battles, some voiced through objections in court, others occurring out of earshot of the jury and the news media; the contents of some of those have been made available later through transcripts. The only testimony Thursday concerned the conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face in the supermax penitentiary in Colorado, sometimes called the ADX, where he is likely to go if the jury sentenced him to life in prison. William Weinreb, the lead prosecutor, told the judge in a sidebar that the prison conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face might be the most crucial factor weighed by the jury. \u201cThe jury cares a lot about this,\u201d Mr. Weinreb said, according to a transcript. \u201cWe\u2019re talking about maybe the most important thing for them.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The government and defense have been locked in increasingly intense battles, some voiced through objections in court, others occurring out of earshot of the jury and the news media; the contents of some of those have been made available later through transcripts. The only testimony Thursday concerned the conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face in the supermax penitentiary in Colorado, sometimes called the ADX, where he is likely to go if the jury sentenced him to life in prison. William Weinreb, the lead prosecutor, told the judge in a sidebar that the prison conditions that Mr. Tsarnaev would face might be the most crucial factor weighed by the jury. \u201cThe jury cares a lot about this,\u201d Mr. Weinreb said, according to a transcript. \u201cWe\u2019re talking about maybe the most important thing for them.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The government and defense have been locked in increasingly intense battles, some voiced through objections in court, others occurring out of earshot of the jury and the news media; the contents of some of those have been made available later through transcripts.", "paragraph_id": "5d7008fcc8e4820a9b66b135"} +{"question": "How did Ukrainians greet the news?", "paragraph": "Ukrainians greeted the news with much the same skepticism as the experts, though mingled with relief. \u201cWe had a cease-fire before, but it was not observed, almost from the beginning, so how can we have much faith?\u201d said Dmitri Kolesnik, 18, a student in Kharkiv, a city in southeastern Ukraine that has been touched sporadically by violence. He paused on the steps leading down to a subway station, and said he put the odds of peace at no better than 50-50. \u201cPutin is a very aggressive person,\u201d Mr. Kolesnik said, as bustling throngs made their way home in the late afternoon. \u201cYou cannot always trust that just because he says something that it will happen.\u201d", "answer": "Ukrainians greeted the news with much the same skepticism as the experts,", "sentence": "Ukrainians greeted the news with much the same skepticism as the experts, though mingled with relief.", "paragraph_sentence": " Ukrainians greeted the news with much the same skepticism as the experts, though mingled with relief. \u201cWe had a cease-fire before, but it was not observed, almost from the beginning, so how can we have much faith?\u201d said Dmitri Kolesnik, 18, a student in Kharkiv, a city in southeastern Ukraine that has been touched sporadically by violence. He paused on the steps leading down to a subway station, and said he put the odds of peace at no better than 50-50. \u201cPutin is a very aggressive person,\u201d Mr. Kolesnik said, as bustling throngs made their way home in the late afternoon. \u201cYou cannot always trust that just because he says something that it will happen.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": " Ukrainians greeted the news with much the same skepticism as the experts, though mingled with relief. \u201cWe had a cease-fire before, but it was not observed, almost from the beginning, so how can we have much faith?\u201d said Dmitri Kolesnik, 18, a student in Kharkiv, a city in southeastern Ukraine that has been touched sporadically by violence. He paused on the steps leading down to a subway station, and said he put the odds of peace at no better than 50-50. \u201cPutin is a very aggressive person,\u201d Mr. Kolesnik said, as bustling throngs made their way home in the late afternoon. \u201cYou cannot always trust that just because he says something that it will happen.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Ukrainians greeted the news with much the same skepticism as the experts, though mingled with relief.", "paragraph_id": "5d70278fc8e4820a9b66d55b"} +{"question": "Approximately how much will the budget cuts be?", "paragraph": "As laid out in the Conservative manifesto, the cuts would be deep outside certain protected areas like the National Health Service, and might be about 30 billion pounds, or about $49 billion. Mr. Osborne is driven by a Thatcherite belief in the value of a smaller state to free up individual and corporate enterprise and encourage those able to work to do so, and such cuts could create political tensions, and even unrest, in the country. Mr. Osborne is respected, but his economic theology is not shared by every Tory, which could also lead to defections and close votes. Mr. Cameron has never been very popular with some of his backbenchers. They are sure to be shocked and overjoyed at the victory he brought them, as they feared Labour would manage, with the Scots, to create a majority to throw the Tories out of power. Even the most optimistic Conservatives were talking about winning 300 seats, which pollsters thought was hallucinatory.", "answer": "30 billion pounds", "sentence": "As laid out in the Conservative manifesto, the cuts would be deep outside certain protected areas like the National Health Service, and might be about 30 billion pounds , or about $49 billion.", "paragraph_sentence": " As laid out in the Conservative manifesto, the cuts would be deep outside certain protected areas like the National Health Service, and might be about 30 billion pounds , or about $49 billion. Mr. Osborne is driven by a Thatcherite belief in the value of a smaller state to free up individual and corporate enterprise and encourage those able to work to do so, and such cuts could create political tensions, and even unrest, in the country. Mr. Osborne is respected, but his economic theology is not shared by every Tory, which could also lead to defections and close votes. Mr. Cameron has never been very popular with some of his backbenchers. They are sure to be shocked and overjoyed at the victory he brought them, as they feared Labour would manage, with the Scots, to create a majority to throw the Tories out of power. Even the most optimistic Conservatives were talking about winning 300 seats, which pollsters thought was hallucinatory.", "paragraph_answer": "As laid out in the Conservative manifesto, the cuts would be deep outside certain protected areas like the National Health Service, and might be about 30 billion pounds , or about $49 billion. Mr. Osborne is driven by a Thatcherite belief in the value of a smaller state to free up individual and corporate enterprise and encourage those able to work to do so, and such cuts could create political tensions, and even unrest, in the country. Mr. Osborne is respected, but his economic theology is not shared by every Tory, which could also lead to defections and close votes. Mr. Cameron has never been very popular with some of his backbenchers. They are sure to be shocked and overjoyed at the victory he brought them, as they feared Labour would manage, with the Scots, to create a majority to throw the Tories out of power. Even the most optimistic Conservatives were talking about winning 300 seats, which pollsters thought was hallucinatory.", "sentence_answer": "As laid out in the Conservative manifesto, the cuts would be deep outside certain protected areas like the National Health Service, and might be about 30 billion pounds , or about $49 billion.", "paragraph_id": "5d7043dbc8e4820a9b66e71f"} +{"question": "What time does the Oliver Wolcott Library close on Saturdays?", "paragraph": "LAKEVILLE The White Gallery \u201cFor the Love of Making Art: The Work of Robert Baras.\u201d Through July 12. Saturdays and Sundays, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., and by appointment. The White Gallery, 344 Main Street. thewhitegalleryart.com; 860-435-1029. LITCHFIELD Oliver Wolcott Library Oil paintings by Victor Leger. Through June 26. Mondays, noon to 5 p.m.; Tuesdays through Thursdays, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Fridays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; Sundays, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Oliver Wolcott Library, 160 South Street. 860-567-8030; owlibrary.org.", "answer": "2 p.m", "sentence": "Mondays, noon to 5 p.m.; Tuesdays through Thursdays, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Fridays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m .; Sundays, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Oliver Wolcott Library, 160 South Street.", "paragraph_sentence": "LAKEVILLE The White Gallery \u201cFor the Love of Making Art: The Work of Robert Baras.\u201d Through July 12. Saturdays and Sundays, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., and by appointment. The White Gallery, 344 Main Street. thewhitegalleryart.com; 860-435-1029. LITCHFIELD Oliver Wolcott Library Oil paintings by Victor Leger. Through June 26. Mondays, noon to 5 p.m.; Tuesdays through Thursdays, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Fridays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m .; Sundays, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Oliver Wolcott Library, 160 South Street. 860-567-8030; owlibrary.org.", "paragraph_answer": "LAKEVILLE The White Gallery \u201cFor the Love of Making Art: The Work of Robert Baras.\u201d Through July 12. Saturdays and Sundays, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., and by appointment. The White Gallery, 344 Main Street. thewhitegalleryart.com; 860-435-1029. LITCHFIELD Oliver Wolcott Library Oil paintings by Victor Leger. Through June 26. Mondays, noon to 5 p.m.; Tuesdays through Thursdays, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Fridays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m .; Sundays, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Oliver Wolcott Library, 160 South Street. 860-567-8030; owlibrary.org.", "sentence_answer": "Mondays, noon to 5 p.m.; Tuesdays through Thursdays, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Fridays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m .; Sundays, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Oliver Wolcott Library, 160 South Street.", "paragraph_id": "5d704197c8e4820a9b66e5ad"} +{"question": "What company delivered my order?", "paragraph": "Amen. Now, another guy with another problem. Q. I ordered a lamp from Wayfair, an online furniture store, which the company insisted on delivering to my office. When the package arrived, FedEx also dropped off two huge boxes that I insisted were not part of my order. The deliveryman insisted otherwise and left them. Inside were two huge pieces of patio furniture. I don\u2019t have a patio. And after getting home with the box containing my lamp, I discovered that it was a shambles of oversize toothpicks. I called Wayfair. The company promised a refund on the lamp but refused to pick up the patio furniture because I didn\u2019t keep the boxes for them. The boxes didn\u2019t fit in my office because it was crowded with patio furniture. Their solution is for me to keep the furniture, sell it on Craigslist or donate it to charity. I don\u2019t like any of these options. I can\u2019t even toss out the furniture without having to pay a bulk disposal fee from a trash company. But the company won\u2019t budge. Maybe you can change their mind.", "answer": "FedEx", "sentence": "When the package arrived, FedEx also dropped off two huge boxes that I insisted were not part of my order.", "paragraph_sentence": "Amen. Now, another guy with another problem. Q. I ordered a lamp from Wayfair, an online furniture store, which the company insisted on delivering to my office. When the package arrived, FedEx also dropped off two huge boxes that I insisted were not part of my order. The deliveryman insisted otherwise and left them. Inside were two huge pieces of patio furniture. I don\u2019t have a patio. And after getting home with the box containing my lamp, I discovered that it was a shambles of oversize toothpicks. I called Wayfair. The company promised a refund on the lamp but refused to pick up the patio furniture because I didn\u2019t keep the boxes for them. The boxes didn\u2019t fit in my office because it was crowded with patio furniture. Their solution is for me to keep the furniture, sell it on Craigslist or donate it to charity. I don\u2019t like any of these options. I can\u2019t even toss out the furniture without having to pay a bulk disposal fee from a trash company. But the company won\u2019t budge. Maybe you can change their mind.", "paragraph_answer": "Amen. Now, another guy with another problem. Q. I ordered a lamp from Wayfair, an online furniture store, which the company insisted on delivering to my office. When the package arrived, FedEx also dropped off two huge boxes that I insisted were not part of my order. The deliveryman insisted otherwise and left them. Inside were two huge pieces of patio furniture. I don\u2019t have a patio. And after getting home with the box containing my lamp, I discovered that it was a shambles of oversize toothpicks. I called Wayfair. The company promised a refund on the lamp but refused to pick up the patio furniture because I didn\u2019t keep the boxes for them. The boxes didn\u2019t fit in my office because it was crowded with patio furniture. Their solution is for me to keep the furniture, sell it on Craigslist or donate it to charity. I don\u2019t like any of these options. I can\u2019t even toss out the furniture without having to pay a bulk disposal fee from a trash company. But the company won\u2019t budge. Maybe you can change their mind.", "sentence_answer": "When the package arrived, FedEx also dropped off two huge boxes that I insisted were not part of my order.", "paragraph_id": "5d7028ccc8e4820a9b66d67f"} +{"question": "Who deserves their own evening?", "paragraph": "And isn\u2019t it time to give Caleb Teicher his own evening? In three excerpts from his \u201cVariations,\u201d interspersed throughout the night, he paired his facile, flowing style to Glenn Gould\u2019s recordings of Bach\u2019s \u201cGoldberg Variations.\u201d Sharing the stage with Brittany DeStefano and Gabe Winns, Mr. Teicher juxtaposed barely there brushes with frenetic taps as his body \u2014 twisting and dipping \u2014 pulled toward and away from the Gould. These days, a choreographer with a new angle on Bach is startling: Mr. Teicher has a will and a way.", "answer": "Caleb Teicher", "sentence": "And isn\u2019t it time to give Caleb Teicher his own evening?", "paragraph_sentence": " And isn\u2019t it time to give Caleb Teicher his own evening? In three excerpts from his \u201cVariations,\u201d interspersed throughout the night, he paired his facile, flowing style to Glenn Gould\u2019s recordings of Bach\u2019s \u201cGoldberg Variations.\u201d Sharing the stage with Brittany DeStefano and Gabe Winns, Mr. Teicher juxtaposed barely there brushes with frenetic taps as his body \u2014 twisting and dipping \u2014 pulled toward and away from the Gould. These days, a choreographer with a new angle on Bach is startling: Mr. Teicher has a will and a way.", "paragraph_answer": "And isn\u2019t it time to give Caleb Teicher his own evening? In three excerpts from his \u201cVariations,\u201d interspersed throughout the night, he paired his facile, flowing style to Glenn Gould\u2019s recordings of Bach\u2019s \u201cGoldberg Variations.\u201d Sharing the stage with Brittany DeStefano and Gabe Winns, Mr. Teicher juxtaposed barely there brushes with frenetic taps as his body \u2014 twisting and dipping \u2014 pulled toward and away from the Gould. These days, a choreographer with a new angle on Bach is startling: Mr. Teicher has a will and a way.", "sentence_answer": "And isn\u2019t it time to give Caleb Teicher his own evening?", "paragraph_id": "5d70467fc8e4820a9b66e85b"} +{"question": "Who did Russian's invaded last year in unmarked unmarked unifrom?", "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": "Crimean Peninsula", "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": "5d7026fec8e4820a9b66d479"} +{"question": "How many migrants does Germany expect this year?", "paragraph": "\u2022 Jobs for migrants. In Germany, which expects 800,000 migrants this year alone, Chancellor Angela Merkel and big business are mounting a vocal campaign to get the new arrivals into jobs quickly. In Spain, a Syrian who was tripped last week by a Hungarian journalist was offered a job by a soccer school in Madrid. But the migrant crisis, complicated by the clash between national interests and Europewide policies, continues unabated.", "answer": "800,000", "sentence": "In Germany, which expects 800,000 migrants this year alone, Chancellor Angela Merkel and big business are mounting a vocal campaign to get the new arrivals into jobs quickly.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2022 Jobs for migrants. In Germany, which expects 800,000 migrants this year alone, Chancellor Angela Merkel and big business are mounting a vocal campaign to get the new arrivals into jobs quickly. In Spain, a Syrian who was tripped last week by a Hungarian journalist was offered a job by a soccer school in Madrid. But the migrant crisis, complicated by the clash between national interests and Europewide policies, continues unabated.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2022 Jobs for migrants. In Germany, which expects 800,000 migrants this year alone, Chancellor Angela Merkel and big business are mounting a vocal campaign to get the new arrivals into jobs quickly. In Spain, a Syrian who was tripped last week by a Hungarian journalist was offered a job by a soccer school in Madrid. But the migrant crisis, complicated by the clash between national interests and Europewide policies, continues unabated.", "sentence_answer": "In Germany, which expects 800,000 migrants this year alone, Chancellor Angela Merkel and big business are mounting a vocal campaign to get the new arrivals into jobs quickly.", "paragraph_id": "5d701e43c8e4820a9b66c9b9"} +{"question": "What does Ms. Ross work just as hard on as her show?", "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": "her marriage of pragmatism and new-age nuttiness", "sentence": "But Ms. Ross works just as hard in her marriage of pragmatism and new-age nuttiness .", "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": "But Ms. Ross works just as hard in her marriage of pragmatism and new-age nuttiness .", "paragraph_id": "5d705bd9c8e4820a9b66ef02"} +{"question": "What kind of show is the mini series, \"Spiral?\"", "paragraph": "And it\u2019s not yet noon in \u201cParis,\u201d a six-part French mini-series that traverses 24 hours as a dozen seemingly random residents dodge, dart and finally collide. Created by the writer Virginie Brac and the director Gilles Bannier of the labyrinthine crime drama \u201cSpiral,\u201d and starting Tuesday, Nov. 3, at 11 p.m. Eastern on TV5Monde, it\u2019s a moody mashup of cool and grit featuring the C\u00e9sar-winning actor \u00c9ric Caravaca, the Swiss model Julie Ordon and the French rapper Kool Shen; a score by the keyboardist Herv\u00e9 Salters; and a graphic intro that soars through the innards of the Eiffel Tower. Oh \u2014 and subtitles.", "answer": "crime drama", "sentence": "Created by the writer Virginie Brac and the director Gilles Bannier of the labyrinthine crime drama \u201cSpiral,\u201d and starting Tuesday, Nov. 3, at 11 p.m. Eastern on TV5Monde, it\u2019s a moody mashup of cool and grit featuring the C\u00e9sar-winning actor \u00c9ric Caravaca, the Swiss model Julie Ordon and the French rapper Kool Shen; a score by the keyboardist Herv\u00e9 Salters; and a graphic intro that soars through the innards of the Eiffel Tower.", "paragraph_sentence": "And it\u2019s not yet noon in \u201cParis,\u201d a six-part French mini-series that traverses 24 hours as a dozen seemingly random residents dodge, dart and finally collide. Created by the writer Virginie Brac and the director Gilles Bannier of the labyrinthine crime drama \u201cSpiral,\u201d and starting Tuesday, Nov. 3, at 11 p.m. Eastern on TV5Monde, it\u2019s a moody mashup of cool and grit featuring the C\u00e9sar-winning actor \u00c9ric Caravaca, the Swiss model Julie Ordon and the French rapper Kool Shen; a score by the keyboardist Herv\u00e9 Salters; and a graphic intro that soars through the innards of the Eiffel Tower. Oh \u2014 and subtitles.", "paragraph_answer": "And it\u2019s not yet noon in \u201cParis,\u201d a six-part French mini-series that traverses 24 hours as a dozen seemingly random residents dodge, dart and finally collide. Created by the writer Virginie Brac and the director Gilles Bannier of the labyrinthine crime drama \u201cSpiral,\u201d and starting Tuesday, Nov. 3, at 11 p.m. Eastern on TV5Monde, it\u2019s a moody mashup of cool and grit featuring the C\u00e9sar-winning actor \u00c9ric Caravaca, the Swiss model Julie Ordon and the French rapper Kool Shen; a score by the keyboardist Herv\u00e9 Salters; and a graphic intro that soars through the innards of the Eiffel Tower. Oh \u2014 and subtitles.", "sentence_answer": "Created by the writer Virginie Brac and the director Gilles Bannier of the labyrinthine crime drama \u201cSpiral,\u201d and starting Tuesday, Nov. 3, at 11 p.m. Eastern on TV5Monde, it\u2019s a moody mashup of cool and grit featuring the C\u00e9sar-winning actor \u00c9ric Caravaca, the Swiss model Julie Ordon and the French rapper Kool Shen; a score by the keyboardist Herv\u00e9 Salters; and a graphic intro that soars through the innards of the Eiffel Tower.", "paragraph_id": "5d700b2ac8e4820a9b66b59d"} +{"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": "5d7026f6c8e4820a9b66d461"} +{"question": "Which gallery has a organic and natural modern approach to furniture?", "paragraph": "Moderne An organic and natural modern approach to furniture is on view at Moderne Gallery of Philadelphia, which is showing a sofa designed in 1968 by Wharton Esherick, a leading midcentury craftsman. Made of cherry and walnut, the biomorphic shape recalls sculptures by Alberto Giacometti, Barbara Hepworth and Henry Moore, and functions as both sculpture and sofa. When the wood along the back of the sofa expands because of temperature and humidity, it reveals red paint, creating a kind of striped effect. Friedman Benda Nature is corralled in a more humorous way by the Brazilian designers and brothers Humberto and Fernando Campana in their \u201cBolotas\u201d (2015) chairs at Friedman Benda, near the entrance to the fair. \u201cBolotas\u201d means \u201cacorns\u201d in Portuguese, and the chairs, covered with chestnut-colored sheep\u2019s wool, do simulate the look of acorns, as well as of unshaven sheep, shag carpeting or bean bags. They are, nonetheless, shockingly comfortable. David Gill Arguably the goofiest object at Salon is the \u201cJungle V.I.P.\u201d chandelier from 2014, designed by Barnaby Barford. Made with crystal, brass, sculpted foam and wire, the fixture hangs at a tilt, thanks to a black crystal monkey dangling from its rim. In another context, it might read like a sculpture by Maurizio Cattelan or any number of young artists given to sight gags. Like many of the objects in this show, however, the chandelier is a strong statement against taking art or design too seriously, and for mixing materials, histories, traditions and sensibilities as irreverently as possible.", "answer": "Moderne Gallery of Philadelphia", "sentence": "Moderne An organic and natural modern approach to furniture is on view at Moderne Gallery of Philadelphia , which is showing a sofa designed in 1968 by Wharton Esherick, a leading midcentury craftsman.", "paragraph_sentence": " Moderne An organic and natural modern approach to furniture is on view at Moderne Gallery of Philadelphia , which is showing a sofa designed in 1968 by Wharton Esherick, a leading midcentury craftsman. Made of cherry and walnut, the biomorphic shape recalls sculptures by Alberto Giacometti, Barbara Hepworth and Henry Moore, and functions as both sculpture and sofa. When the wood along the back of the sofa expands because of temperature and humidity, it reveals red paint, creating a kind of striped effect. Friedman Benda Nature is corralled in a more humorous way by the Brazilian designers and brothers Humberto and Fernando Campana in their \u201cBolotas\u201d (2015) chairs at Friedman Benda, near the entrance to the fair. \u201cBolotas\u201d means \u201cacorns\u201d in Portuguese, and the chairs, covered with chestnut-colored sheep\u2019s wool, do simulate the look of acorns, as well as of unshaven sheep, shag carpeting or bean bags. They are, nonetheless, shockingly comfortable. David Gill Arguably the goofiest object at Salon is the \u201cJungle V.I.P.\u201d chandelier from 2014, designed by Barnaby Barford. Made with crystal, brass, sculpted foam and wire, the fixture hangs at a tilt, thanks to a black crystal monkey dangling from its rim. In another context, it might read like a sculpture by Maurizio Cattelan or any number of young artists given to sight gags. Like many of the objects in this show, however, the chandelier is a strong statement against taking art or design too seriously, and for mixing materials, histories, traditions and sensibilities as irreverently as possible.", "paragraph_answer": "Moderne An organic and natural modern approach to furniture is on view at Moderne Gallery of Philadelphia , which is showing a sofa designed in 1968 by Wharton Esherick, a leading midcentury craftsman. Made of cherry and walnut, the biomorphic shape recalls sculptures by Alberto Giacometti, Barbara Hepworth and Henry Moore, and functions as both sculpture and sofa. When the wood along the back of the sofa expands because of temperature and humidity, it reveals red paint, creating a kind of striped effect. Friedman Benda Nature is corralled in a more humorous way by the Brazilian designers and brothers Humberto and Fernando Campana in their \u201cBolotas\u201d (2015) chairs at Friedman Benda, near the entrance to the fair. \u201cBolotas\u201d means \u201cacorns\u201d in Portuguese, and the chairs, covered with chestnut-colored sheep\u2019s wool, do simulate the look of acorns, as well as of unshaven sheep, shag carpeting or bean bags. They are, nonetheless, shockingly comfortable. David Gill Arguably the goofiest object at Salon is the \u201cJungle V.I.P.\u201d chandelier from 2014, designed by Barnaby Barford. Made with crystal, brass, sculpted foam and wire, the fixture hangs at a tilt, thanks to a black crystal monkey dangling from its rim. In another context, it might read like a sculpture by Maurizio Cattelan or any number of young artists given to sight gags. Like many of the objects in this show, however, the chandelier is a strong statement against taking art or design too seriously, and for mixing materials, histories, traditions and sensibilities as irreverently as possible.", "sentence_answer": "Moderne An organic and natural modern approach to furniture is on view at Moderne Gallery of Philadelphia , which is showing a sofa designed in 1968 by Wharton Esherick, a leading midcentury craftsman.", "paragraph_id": "5d70580ec8e4820a9b66ed97"} +{"question": "Who opens fire on the Countess and Donovan?", "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": "\u201cMy friend, the best is yet to come.\u201d", "sentence": "Let us hope she was also right when she said, \u201cMy friend, the best is yet to come.\u201d", "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": "Let us hope she was also right when she said, \u201cMy friend, the best is yet to come.\u201d ", "paragraph_id": "5d703e83c8e4820a9b66e3fc"} +{"question": "How did Mr. Obama commute sentences?", "paragraph": "Working closely with two lawyers at the clinic, Ms. Francik prepared 182 pages of legal and personal material to support Mr. Norris\u2019s clemency application. Her enthusiasm and confidence during their one face-to-face meeting at Morgantown, in November, along with phone calls and numerous letters, so encouraged Mr. Norris that he began sewing the leather bag he hoped to carry out of prison. His application was submitted in mid-February, joining thousands of others from inmates nationwide. They were evaluated by Department of Justice lawyers, who recommended top candidates for White House officials to cull. Mr. Obama reviewed data on each finalist, a White House spokesman said, before using his constitutional authority to commute their sentences. In the early afternoon of March 31, a White House lawyer called the clinic to say that Mr. Norris had become one of 22 people who would be getting letters of congratulations from Mr. Obama. Ms. Francik received a text and bolted from her class \u2014 Professional Responsibility \u2014 to join the phone call alerting Mr. Norris, who naturally was in Morgantown\u2019s law library. He burst into tears.", "answer": "constitutional authority", "sentence": "Mr. Obama reviewed data on each finalist, a White House spokesman said, before using his constitutional authority to commute their sentences.", "paragraph_sentence": "Working closely with two lawyers at the clinic, Ms. Francik prepared 182 pages of legal and personal material to support Mr. Norris\u2019s clemency application. Her enthusiasm and confidence during their one face-to-face meeting at Morgantown, in November, along with phone calls and numerous letters, so encouraged Mr. Norris that he began sewing the leather bag he hoped to carry out of prison. His application was submitted in mid-February, joining thousands of others from inmates nationwide. They were evaluated by Department of Justice lawyers, who recommended top candidates for White House officials to cull. Mr. Obama reviewed data on each finalist, a White House spokesman said, before using his constitutional authority to commute their sentences. In the early afternoon of March 31, a White House lawyer called the clinic to say that Mr. Norris had become one of 22 people who would be getting letters of congratulations from Mr. Obama. Ms. Francik received a text and bolted from her class \u2014 Professional Responsibility \u2014 to join the phone call alerting Mr. Norris, who naturally was in Morgantown\u2019s law library. He burst into tears.", "paragraph_answer": "Working closely with two lawyers at the clinic, Ms. Francik prepared 182 pages of legal and personal material to support Mr. Norris\u2019s clemency application. Her enthusiasm and confidence during their one face-to-face meeting at Morgantown, in November, along with phone calls and numerous letters, so encouraged Mr. Norris that he began sewing the leather bag he hoped to carry out of prison. His application was submitted in mid-February, joining thousands of others from inmates nationwide. They were evaluated by Department of Justice lawyers, who recommended top candidates for White House officials to cull. Mr. Obama reviewed data on each finalist, a White House spokesman said, before using his constitutional authority to commute their sentences. In the early afternoon of March 31, a White House lawyer called the clinic to say that Mr. Norris had become one of 22 people who would be getting letters of congratulations from Mr. Obama. Ms. Francik received a text and bolted from her class \u2014 Professional Responsibility \u2014 to join the phone call alerting Mr. Norris, who naturally was in Morgantown\u2019s law library. He burst into tears.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Obama reviewed data on each finalist, a White House spokesman said, before using his constitutional authority to commute their sentences.", "paragraph_id": "5d7007ccc8e4820a9b66aea1"} +{"question": "What year was The Legend of Pale Male opened?", "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": "2010", "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": "5d70213fc8e4820a9b66cd23"} +{"question": "Where did Cam Talbot get his second straight start?", "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": "Rangers", "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026c8c8e4820a9b66d333"} +{"question": "Which places passed this year sick leave policies?", "paragraph": "Oregon, Philadelphia and Emeryville, Calif., have all passed paid sick-leave policies this year, and Montgomery County, Md., is expected to soon. Last year, 11 states and cities did so, up from only two in 2011. (Eleven other states, including Wisconsin, Arizona and Georgia, have gone the other direction, banning cities from enacting paid sick leave.)", "answer": "Oregon, Philadelphia and Emeryville, Calif.", "sentence": "Oregon, Philadelphia and Emeryville, Calif. , have all passed paid sick-leave policies this year, and Montgomery County, Md., is expected to soon.", "paragraph_sentence": " Oregon, Philadelphia and Emeryville, Calif. , have all passed paid sick-leave policies this year, and Montgomery County, Md., is expected to soon. Last year, 11 states and cities did so, up from only two in 2011. (Eleven other states, including Wisconsin, Arizona and Georgia, have gone the other direction, banning cities from enacting paid sick leave.)", "paragraph_answer": " Oregon, Philadelphia and Emeryville, Calif. , have all passed paid sick-leave policies this year, and Montgomery County, Md., is expected to soon. Last year, 11 states and cities did so, up from only two in 2011. (Eleven other states, including Wisconsin, Arizona and Georgia, have gone the other direction, banning cities from enacting paid sick leave.)", "sentence_answer": " Oregon, Philadelphia and Emeryville, Calif. , have all passed paid sick-leave policies this year, and Montgomery County, Md., is expected to soon.", "paragraph_id": "5d70896fc8e4820a9b66f4a9"} +{"question": "Which company's stock is worth more, Barnes & Noble or Netflix?", "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": "Netflix", "sentence": "Netflix was the biggest gainer in the S.&P. 500 index.", "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": " Netflix was the biggest gainer in the S.&P. 500 index.", "paragraph_id": "5d701966c8e4820a9b66c555"} +{"question": "How old was the baby?", "paragraph": "A baby girl, only a few minutes old, swaddled in a blanket or clothes, was breathing on the hood of a car in the Wakefield section of the Bronx. Inside a two-family home nearby, her 22-year-old mother lay on the floor in a pool of blood, fatally stabbed several times in her torso and neck, the authorities said. She had been close to nine months pregnant.", "answer": "a few minutes old", "sentence": "A baby girl, only a few minutes old , swaddled in a blanket or clothes, was breathing on the hood of a car in the Wakefield section of the Bronx.", "paragraph_sentence": " A baby girl, only a few minutes old , swaddled in a blanket or clothes, was breathing on the hood of a car in the Wakefield section of the Bronx. Inside a two-family home nearby, her 22-year-old mother lay on the floor in a pool of blood, fatally stabbed several times in her torso and neck, the authorities said. She had been close to nine months pregnant.", "paragraph_answer": "A baby girl, only a few minutes old , swaddled in a blanket or clothes, was breathing on the hood of a car in the Wakefield section of the Bronx. Inside a two-family home nearby, her 22-year-old mother lay on the floor in a pool of blood, fatally stabbed several times in her torso and neck, the authorities said. She had been close to nine months pregnant.", "sentence_answer": "A baby girl, only a few minutes old , swaddled in a blanket or clothes, was breathing on the hood of a car in the Wakefield section of the Bronx.", "paragraph_id": "5d700b8bc8e4820a9b66b63d"} +{"question": "What did the middle class once believe?", "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": "believed deeply that the motherland would become strong", "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.", "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": "\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.", "paragraph_id": "5d7014e4c8e4820a9b66c0eb"} +{"question": "What is Orama's best prepared food?", "paragraph": "This appetizer aside, seafood is Orama\u2019s strength. The high-quality shrimp and lobster cocktail gained zip with a chunky sauce of diced tomatoes, olive oil and Fresno chiles. The grilled octopus, another appetizer, was meaty and tender and presented on a bed of fennel, red onions, capers and roasted tomatoes, all caramelized with a balsamic vinegar. The winning crab cake, gently held together with Dijon mustard and mayonnaise and coated in crunchy Panko breadcrumbs, was laden with jumbo lump meat pieces. The shrimp Santorini \u2014 jumbo shrimp in a smooth and garlicky tomato sauce, with pieces of feta \u2014 was hearty and comforting. But we fawned over the crispy sea bass the most. The entire fish is first grilled, then given a quick fry before being glazed with a spicy sweet-and-sour sauce and topped with a stir-fry of Napa cabbage, sliced bell peppers and button and enoki mushrooms. The tasty and crisp exterior revealed a moist fish inside.", "answer": "seafood", "sentence": "This appetizer aside, seafood is Orama\u2019s strength.", "paragraph_sentence": " This appetizer aside, seafood is Orama\u2019s strength. The high-quality shrimp and lobster cocktail gained zip with a chunky sauce of diced tomatoes, olive oil and Fresno chiles. The grilled octopus, another appetizer, was meaty and tender and presented on a bed of fennel, red onions, capers and roasted tomatoes, all caramelized with a balsamic vinegar. The winning crab cake, gently held together with Dijon mustard and mayonnaise and coated in crunchy Panko breadcrumbs, was laden with jumbo lump meat pieces. The shrimp Santorini \u2014 jumbo shrimp in a smooth and garlicky tomato sauce, with pieces of feta \u2014 was hearty and comforting. But we fawned over the crispy sea bass the most. The entire fish is first grilled, then given a quick fry before being glazed with a spicy sweet-and-sour sauce and topped with a stir-fry of Napa cabbage, sliced bell peppers and button and enoki mushrooms. The tasty and crisp exterior revealed a moist fish inside.", "paragraph_answer": "This appetizer aside, seafood is Orama\u2019s strength. The high-quality shrimp and lobster cocktail gained zip with a chunky sauce of diced tomatoes, olive oil and Fresno chiles. The grilled octopus, another appetizer, was meaty and tender and presented on a bed of fennel, red onions, capers and roasted tomatoes, all caramelized with a balsamic vinegar. The winning crab cake, gently held together with Dijon mustard and mayonnaise and coated in crunchy Panko breadcrumbs, was laden with jumbo lump meat pieces. The shrimp Santorini \u2014 jumbo shrimp in a smooth and garlicky tomato sauce, with pieces of feta \u2014 was hearty and comforting. But we fawned over the crispy sea bass the most. The entire fish is first grilled, then given a quick fry before being glazed with a spicy sweet-and-sour sauce and topped with a stir-fry of Napa cabbage, sliced bell peppers and button and enoki mushrooms. The tasty and crisp exterior revealed a moist fish inside.", "sentence_answer": "This appetizer aside, seafood is Orama\u2019s strength.", "paragraph_id": "5d706b28c8e4820a9b66f155"} +{"question": "Who did not attend the auto show?", "paragraph": "\u201cBluetec technology allows us to demonstrate Audi\u2019s commitment to always being at the very forefront of diesel technology,\u201d he said in remarks at the Detroit auto show at the beginning of 2007. But internal friction within the company was already building. Mr. Bernhard unexpectedly did not attend that auto show, and soon resigned. Behind the scenes, Mr. Hatz was part of a faction at the company that supported using a less expensive system that did not require urea, according to two Volkswagen managers who were in a position to witness the clashes. The managers requested anonymity because they did not want to jeopardize their relationships with Volkswagen. Mr. Hatz\u2019s viewpoint won out and the technology-sharing arrangement was soon scrapped.", "answer": "Mr. Bernhard", "sentence": "Mr. Bernhard unexpectedly did not attend that auto show, and soon resigned.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cBluetec technology allows us to demonstrate Audi\u2019s commitment to always being at the very forefront of diesel technology,\u201d he said in remarks at the Detroit auto show at the beginning of 2007. But internal friction within the company was already building. Mr. Bernhard unexpectedly did not attend that auto show, and soon resigned. Behind the scenes, Mr. Hatz was part of a faction at the company that supported using a less expensive system that did not require urea, according to two Volkswagen managers who were in a position to witness the clashes. The managers requested anonymity because they did not want to jeopardize their relationships with Volkswagen. Mr. Hatz\u2019s viewpoint won out and the technology-sharing arrangement was soon scrapped.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cBluetec technology allows us to demonstrate Audi\u2019s commitment to always being at the very forefront of diesel technology,\u201d he said in remarks at the Detroit auto show at the beginning of 2007. But internal friction within the company was already building. Mr. Bernhard unexpectedly did not attend that auto show, and soon resigned. Behind the scenes, Mr. Hatz was part of a faction at the company that supported using a less expensive system that did not require urea, according to two Volkswagen managers who were in a position to witness the clashes. The managers requested anonymity because they did not want to jeopardize their relationships with Volkswagen. Mr. Hatz\u2019s viewpoint won out and the technology-sharing arrangement was soon scrapped.", "sentence_answer": " Mr. Bernhard unexpectedly did not attend that auto show, and soon resigned.", "paragraph_id": "5d704412c8e4820a9b66e73a"} +{"question": "What did they name the cubs?", "paragraph": "Two cubs from the ice age were recently uncovered in the Siberian Arctic, perfectly frozen in the permafrost. Named Uyan and Dina after the Uyandina river where they were recovered, the cubs still had their fur and whiskers. \u201cIt\u2019s the first time in history that a cave lion, although it is a cub and not a grown-up animal, was found with all the fur, internal organs and soft parts of the body so well-preserved,\u201d Valery Plotnikov, a researcher at the regional Academy of Sciences, said to The Associated Press. Cave lions, the prehistoric relative of modern-day lions, are believed to have become extinct about 10,000 years ago.", "answer": "Uyan and Dina", "sentence": "Named Uyan and Dina after the Uyandina river where they were recovered, the cubs still had their fur and whiskers.", "paragraph_sentence": "Two cubs from the ice age were recently uncovered in the Siberian Arctic, perfectly frozen in the permafrost. Named Uyan and Dina after the Uyandina river where they were recovered, the cubs still had their fur and whiskers. \u201cIt\u2019s the first time in history that a cave lion, although it is a cub and not a grown-up animal, was found with all the fur, internal organs and soft parts of the body so well-preserved,\u201d Valery Plotnikov, a researcher at the regional Academy of Sciences, said to The Associated Press. Cave lions, the prehistoric relative of modern-day lions, are believed to have become extinct about 10,000 years ago.", "paragraph_answer": "Two cubs from the ice age were recently uncovered in the Siberian Arctic, perfectly frozen in the permafrost. Named Uyan and Dina after the Uyandina river where they were recovered, the cubs still had their fur and whiskers. \u201cIt\u2019s the first time in history that a cave lion, although it is a cub and not a grown-up animal, was found with all the fur, internal organs and soft parts of the body so well-preserved,\u201d Valery Plotnikov, a researcher at the regional Academy of Sciences, said to The Associated Press. Cave lions, the prehistoric relative of modern-day lions, are believed to have become extinct about 10,000 years ago.", "sentence_answer": "Named Uyan and Dina after the Uyandina river where they were recovered, the cubs still had their fur and whiskers.", "paragraph_id": "5d70374fc8e4820a9b66e092"} +{"question": "What do attorney generals do?", "paragraph": "Adding more teeth to the watchdogs\u2019 bite, therefore, makes sense. And after all, it\u2019s their duty to be skeptical. Granted, confrontation is less welcome. Much of that, though, stems from regulators, like attorneys general, who are also in the business of cultivating voters. But as the carnage becomes more distant in Washington\u2019s rearview mirror, there\u2019s a danger that legislation will dilute the work of watchdogs. On Thursday, a bipartisan group of senators dropped a new bill into the hopper to regulate the regulators, forcing quicker verdicts on exams and reviews when financial institutions complain. Even some of the biggest bank critics, like Daniel K. Tarullo, the Federal Reserve governor, have shown a willingness to consider rolling back rules for smaller lenders.", "answer": "cultivating voters", "sentence": "Much of that, though, stems from regulators, like attorneys general, who are also in the business of cultivating voters .", "paragraph_sentence": "Adding more teeth to the watchdogs\u2019 bite, therefore, makes sense. And after all, it\u2019s their duty to be skeptical. Granted, confrontation is less welcome. Much of that, though, stems from regulators, like attorneys general, who are also in the business of cultivating voters . But as the carnage becomes more distant in Washington\u2019s rearview mirror, there\u2019s a danger that legislation will dilute the work of watchdogs. On Thursday, a bipartisan group of senators dropped a new bill into the hopper to regulate the regulators, forcing quicker verdicts on exams and reviews when financial institutions complain. Even some of the biggest bank critics, like Daniel K. Tarullo, the Federal Reserve governor, have shown a willingness to consider rolling back rules for smaller lenders.", "paragraph_answer": "Adding more teeth to the watchdogs\u2019 bite, therefore, makes sense. And after all, it\u2019s their duty to be skeptical. Granted, confrontation is less welcome. Much of that, though, stems from regulators, like attorneys general, who are also in the business of cultivating voters . But as the carnage becomes more distant in Washington\u2019s rearview mirror, there\u2019s a danger that legislation will dilute the work of watchdogs. On Thursday, a bipartisan group of senators dropped a new bill into the hopper to regulate the regulators, forcing quicker verdicts on exams and reviews when financial institutions complain. Even some of the biggest bank critics, like Daniel K. Tarullo, the Federal Reserve governor, have shown a willingness to consider rolling back rules for smaller lenders.", "sentence_answer": "Much of that, though, stems from regulators, like attorneys general, who are also in the business of cultivating voters .", "paragraph_id": "5d701978c8e4820a9b66c57c"} +{"question": "What sport had the highest percentage of players who self-reported concussions among NCAA student athletes?", "paragraph": "Despite increased public discussion, there is a dearth of information focused on concussions in women\u2019s hockey. The few published studies available are unsettling. An eight-year study released this year by the International Ice Hockey Federation analyzed women\u2019s hockey injuries at the world championships and the Olympics. It found that concussions were the third-most-common injury (15.5 percent), behind contusions (28 percent) and sprains (20.8 percent). A 2014 summary of self-reported concussions among N.C.A.A. student-athletes said that women\u2019s hockey had the largest percentage of players who had experienced at least one concussion, at 20.9 percent.", "answer": "women\u2019s hockey", "sentence": "Despite increased public discussion, there is a dearth of information focused on concussions in women\u2019s hockey .", "paragraph_sentence": " Despite increased public discussion, there is a dearth of information focused on concussions in women\u2019s hockey . The few published studies available are unsettling. An eight-year study released this year by the International Ice Hockey Federation analyzed women\u2019s hockey injuries at the world championships and the Olympics. It found that concussions were the third-most-common injury (15.5 percent), behind contusions (28 percent) and sprains (20.8 percent). A 2014 summary of self-reported concussions among N.C.A.A. student-athletes said that women\u2019s hockey had the largest percentage of players who had experienced at least one concussion, at 20.9 percent.", "paragraph_answer": "Despite increased public discussion, there is a dearth of information focused on concussions in women\u2019s hockey . The few published studies available are unsettling. An eight-year study released this year by the International Ice Hockey Federation analyzed women\u2019s hockey injuries at the world championships and the Olympics. It found that concussions were the third-most-common injury (15.5 percent), behind contusions (28 percent) and sprains (20.8 percent). A 2014 summary of self-reported concussions among N.C.A.A. student-athletes said that women\u2019s hockey had the largest percentage of players who had experienced at least one concussion, at 20.9 percent.", "sentence_answer": "Despite increased public discussion, there is a dearth of information focused on concussions in women\u2019s hockey .", "paragraph_id": "5d702157c8e4820a9b66cd36"} +{"question": "What is largely responsible for decreasing the pace of inflation?", "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": "lower energy prices", "sentence": "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 .", "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": "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 .", "paragraph_id": "5d702ce9c8e4820a9b66da63"} +{"question": "What is the name of the terrorist group?", "paragraph": "What I can pledge, with absolute certainty, is that from the first day of my administration, Boko Haram will know the strength of our collective will and commitment to rid this nation of terror, and bring back peace and normalcy to all the affected areas. Until now, Nigeria has been wanting in its response to their threat: With our neighbors fighting hard to push the terrorists south and out of their countries, our military was not sufficiently supported or equipped to push north. As a consequence, the outgoing government\u2019s lack of determination was an accidental enabler of the group, allowing them to operate with impunity in Nigerian territory.", "answer": "Boko Haram", "sentence": "What I can pledge, with absolute certainty, is that from the first day of my administration, Boko Haram will know the strength of our collective will and commitment to rid this nation of terror, and bring back peace and normalcy to all the affected areas.", "paragraph_sentence": " What I can pledge, with absolute certainty, is that from the first day of my administration, Boko Haram will know the strength of our collective will and commitment to rid this nation of terror, and bring back peace and normalcy to all the affected areas. Until now, Nigeria has been wanting in its response to their threat: With our neighbors fighting hard to push the terrorists south and out of their countries, our military was not sufficiently supported or equipped to push north. As a consequence, the outgoing government\u2019s lack of determination was an accidental enabler of the group, allowing them to operate with impunity in Nigerian territory.", "paragraph_answer": "What I can pledge, with absolute certainty, is that from the first day of my administration, Boko Haram will know the strength of our collective will and commitment to rid this nation of terror, and bring back peace and normalcy to all the affected areas. Until now, Nigeria has been wanting in its response to their threat: With our neighbors fighting hard to push the terrorists south and out of their countries, our military was not sufficiently supported or equipped to push north. As a consequence, the outgoing government\u2019s lack of determination was an accidental enabler of the group, allowing them to operate with impunity in Nigerian territory.", "sentence_answer": "What I can pledge, with absolute certainty, is that from the first day of my administration, Boko Haram will know the strength of our collective will and commitment to rid this nation of terror, and bring back peace and normalcy to all the affected areas.", "paragraph_id": "5d705dadc8e4820a9b66ef99"} +{"question": "What state did Eric Burlison claim that the legislation would draw business to?", "paragraph": "State Representative Eric Burlison, who sponsored the legislation and says it would draw new businesses to Missouri, said he was \u201coptimistic\u201d about getting the veto overturned but stopped far short of forecasting a victory. Union leaders said they were hopeful that the veto would hold up. \u201cI would say this is completely up in the air,\u201d said Mr. Burlison, a Republican from Springfield. \u201cBut I feel no matter what happens that we\u2019re making progress.\u201d The right-to-work policy has become law in Wisconsin, Indiana and Michigan \u2014 states with Republican governors and Republican-controlled legislatures \u2014 in recent years despite vocal objections from organized labor. The bill has been introduced a number of times in Missouri, but only this year made it to the desk of Mr. Nixon, whose veto had been widely expected. Supporters of the legislation say it would attract businesses to the state and prevent nonunion workers from paying for union services they do not want. But union leaders say the existing law allowing them to charge fees to nonunion workers is fair because all workers benefit from collective bargaining. They say revoking that right would weaken unions, some of which are already struggling to maintain membership and political clout.", "answer": "Missouri", "sentence": "State Representative Eric Burlison, who sponsored the legislation and says it would draw new businesses to Missouri , said he was \u201coptimistic\u201d about getting the veto overturned but stopped far short of forecasting a victory.", "paragraph_sentence": " State Representative Eric Burlison, who sponsored the legislation and says it would draw new businesses to Missouri , said he was \u201coptimistic\u201d about getting the veto overturned but stopped far short of forecasting a victory. Union leaders said they were hopeful that the veto would hold up. \u201cI would say this is completely up in the air,\u201d said Mr. Burlison, a Republican from Springfield. \u201cBut I feel no matter what happens that we\u2019re making progress.\u201d The right-to-work policy has become law in Wisconsin, Indiana and Michigan \u2014 states with Republican governors and Republican-controlled legislatures \u2014 in recent years despite vocal objections from organized labor. The bill has been introduced a number of times in Missouri, but only this year made it to the desk of Mr. Nixon, whose veto had been widely expected. Supporters of the legislation say it would attract businesses to the state and prevent nonunion workers from paying for union services they do not want. But union leaders say the existing law allowing them to charge fees to nonunion workers is fair because all workers benefit from collective bargaining. They say revoking that right would weaken unions, some of which are already struggling to maintain membership and political clout.", "paragraph_answer": "State Representative Eric Burlison, who sponsored the legislation and says it would draw new businesses to Missouri , said he was \u201coptimistic\u201d about getting the veto overturned but stopped far short of forecasting a victory. Union leaders said they were hopeful that the veto would hold up. \u201cI would say this is completely up in the air,\u201d said Mr. Burlison, a Republican from Springfield. \u201cBut I feel no matter what happens that we\u2019re making progress.\u201d The right-to-work policy has become law in Wisconsin, Indiana and Michigan \u2014 states with Republican governors and Republican-controlled legislatures \u2014 in recent years despite vocal objections from organized labor. The bill has been introduced a number of times in Missouri, but only this year made it to the desk of Mr. Nixon, whose veto had been widely expected. Supporters of the legislation say it would attract businesses to the state and prevent nonunion workers from paying for union services they do not want. But union leaders say the existing law allowing them to charge fees to nonunion workers is fair because all workers benefit from collective bargaining. They say revoking that right would weaken unions, some of which are already struggling to maintain membership and political clout.", "sentence_answer": "State Representative Eric Burlison, who sponsored the legislation and says it would draw new businesses to Missouri , said he was \u201coptimistic\u201d about getting the veto overturned but stopped far short of forecasting a victory.", "paragraph_id": "5d701844c8e4820a9b66c452"} +{"question": "Which test can be a cost-saver for those whose heart attack was stopped thanks to a screening of cholesterol?", "paragraph": "Here\u2019s why: For the individual patient whose heart attack is prevented by a cholesterol screening, to give one example, that blood test is a cost-saver. But to prevent one heart attack, the health care system has to test hundreds of healthy people \u2014 and give about a hundred of them cholesterol-lowering drugs for at least five years. Added together, those prevention measures cost more than is saved on the one heart attack treatment. (My colleagues Aaron E. Carroll and Austin Frakt have written a helpful article on this concept, known in medicine as the \u201cnumber needed to treat.\u201d)", "answer": "blood test", "sentence": "Here\u2019s why: For the individual patient whose heart attack is prevented by a cholesterol screening, to give one example, that blood test is a cost-saver.", "paragraph_sentence": " Here\u2019s why: For the individual patient whose heart attack is prevented by a cholesterol screening, to give one example, that blood test is a cost-saver. But to prevent one heart attack, the health care system has to test hundreds of healthy people \u2014 and give about a hundred of them cholesterol-lowering drugs for at least five years. Added together, those prevention measures cost more than is saved on the one heart attack treatment. (My colleagues Aaron E. Carroll and Austin Frakt have written a helpful article on this concept, known in medicine as the \u201cnumber needed to treat.\u201d)", "paragraph_answer": "Here\u2019s why: For the individual patient whose heart attack is prevented by a cholesterol screening, to give one example, that blood test is a cost-saver. But to prevent one heart attack, the health care system has to test hundreds of healthy people \u2014 and give about a hundred of them cholesterol-lowering drugs for at least five years. Added together, those prevention measures cost more than is saved on the one heart attack treatment. (My colleagues Aaron E. Carroll and Austin Frakt have written a helpful article on this concept, known in medicine as the \u201cnumber needed to treat.\u201d)", "sentence_answer": "Here\u2019s why: For the individual patient whose heart attack is prevented by a cholesterol screening, to give one example, that blood test is a cost-saver.", "paragraph_id": "5d705854c8e4820a9b66edab"} +{"question": "Where was the voting age changed in recent years?", "paragraph": "\u201cI have my own environment that I grew up in, my own experiences that lead me to make the choices that I do,\u201d she said, explaining that her parents were not very politically active. The last time the voting age was a major issue was in 1971, when lawmakers passed the 26th Amendment, which lowered the voting age to 18 from 21, aligning it with the minimum age for military service during the Vietnam War. In Maryland, Takoma Park lowered the voting age to 16 for municipal contests in 2013, and Hyattsville did so in 2015, after local advocates pushed for changing it.", "answer": "Maryland, Takoma Park lowered the voting age to 16 for municipal contests in 2013, and Hyattsville did so in 2015", "sentence": "In Maryland, Takoma Park lowered the voting age to 16 for municipal contests in 2013, and Hyattsville did so in 2015 , after local advocates pushed for changing it.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI have my own environment that I grew up in, my own experiences that lead me to make the choices that I do,\u201d she said, explaining that her parents were not very politically active. The last time the voting age was a major issue was in 1971, when lawmakers passed the 26th Amendment, which lowered the voting age to 18 from 21, aligning it with the minimum age for military service during the Vietnam War. In Maryland, Takoma Park lowered the voting age to 16 for municipal contests in 2013, and Hyattsville did so in 2015 , after local advocates pushed for changing it. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI have my own environment that I grew up in, my own experiences that lead me to make the choices that I do,\u201d she said, explaining that her parents were not very politically active. The last time the voting age was a major issue was in 1971, when lawmakers passed the 26th Amendment, which lowered the voting age to 18 from 21, aligning it with the minimum age for military service during the Vietnam War. In Maryland, Takoma Park lowered the voting age to 16 for municipal contests in 2013, and Hyattsville did so in 2015 , after local advocates pushed for changing it.", "sentence_answer": "In Maryland, Takoma Park lowered the voting age to 16 for municipal contests in 2013, and Hyattsville did so in 2015 , after local advocates pushed for changing it.", "paragraph_id": "5d703bbfc8e4820a9b66e2b4"} +{"question": "What two Asian countries did Mr. Hatz speak of?", "paragraph": "While Mr. Hatz was referring to carbon dioxide regulations, and Volkswagen\u2019s cheating scandal is centered on smog-forming pollutants, managing both kinds of emissions presents an interlocking puzzle for automakers. At times, Mr. Hatz could sound defeatist. \u201cPerhaps we have just small Korean and Japanese cars in this country,\u201d he said. \u201cWe have to be realistic.\u201d And he was dismissive of the prospects for the big Detroit automakers. \u201cI cannot see a way with their program that they can fulfill these regulations,\u201d he said. \u201cThere\u2019s no way.\u201d At the time, California regulators, along with regulators in Washington, already had rules in place for emissions of nitrogen oxides and other smog-forming pollutants that were the toughest in the world, and California was also proposing to regulate greenhouse gas emissions from cars. While diesels have better fuel economy and, by extension, lower emissions of global warming gases, they have higher emissions of nitrogen oxides and other smog-forming pollutants that require special treatment systems. The company was plunged into an internal struggle about how to proceed. Wolfgang Bernhard, a former Daimler executive who ran the Volkswagen brand, had championed a technology-sharing agreement with Mercedes-Benz and BMW to jointly develop a system using urea, which neutralizes nitrogen oxides. Publicly, Mr. Hatz supported the technology, which Mercedes markets as Bluetec.", "answer": "Korean and Japanese", "sentence": "\u201cPerhaps we have just small Korean and Japanese cars in this country,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_sentence": "While Mr. Hatz was referring to carbon dioxide regulations, and Volkswagen\u2019s cheating scandal is centered on smog-forming pollutants, managing both kinds of emissions presents an interlocking puzzle for automakers. At times, Mr. Hatz could sound defeatist. \u201cPerhaps we have just small Korean and Japanese cars in this country,\u201d he said. \u201cWe have to be realistic.\u201d And he was dismissive of the prospects for the big Detroit automakers. \u201cI cannot see a way with their program that they can fulfill these regulations,\u201d he said. \u201cThere\u2019s no way.\u201d At the time, California regulators, along with regulators in Washington, already had rules in place for emissions of nitrogen oxides and other smog-forming pollutants that were the toughest in the world, and California was also proposing to regulate greenhouse gas emissions from cars. While diesels have better fuel economy and, by extension, lower emissions of global warming gases, they have higher emissions of nitrogen oxides and other smog-forming pollutants that require special treatment systems. The company was plunged into an internal struggle about how to proceed. Wolfgang Bernhard, a former Daimler executive who ran the Volkswagen brand, had championed a technology-sharing agreement with Mercedes-Benz and BMW to jointly develop a system using urea, which neutralizes nitrogen oxides. Publicly, Mr. Hatz supported the technology, which Mercedes markets as Bluetec.", "paragraph_answer": "While Mr. Hatz was referring to carbon dioxide regulations, and Volkswagen\u2019s cheating scandal is centered on smog-forming pollutants, managing both kinds of emissions presents an interlocking puzzle for automakers. At times, Mr. Hatz could sound defeatist. \u201cPerhaps we have just small Korean and Japanese cars in this country,\u201d he said. \u201cWe have to be realistic.\u201d And he was dismissive of the prospects for the big Detroit automakers. \u201cI cannot see a way with their program that they can fulfill these regulations,\u201d he said. \u201cThere\u2019s no way.\u201d At the time, California regulators, along with regulators in Washington, already had rules in place for emissions of nitrogen oxides and other smog-forming pollutants that were the toughest in the world, and California was also proposing to regulate greenhouse gas emissions from cars. While diesels have better fuel economy and, by extension, lower emissions of global warming gases, they have higher emissions of nitrogen oxides and other smog-forming pollutants that require special treatment systems. The company was plunged into an internal struggle about how to proceed. Wolfgang Bernhard, a former Daimler executive who ran the Volkswagen brand, had championed a technology-sharing agreement with Mercedes-Benz and BMW to jointly develop a system using urea, which neutralizes nitrogen oxides. Publicly, Mr. Hatz supported the technology, which Mercedes markets as Bluetec.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cPerhaps we have just small Korean and Japanese cars in this country,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_id": "5d704355c8e4820a9b66e6a7"} +{"question": "According to the article, how many people hold the same wealth as the worlds 3.6 billion most impoverish people combined?", "paragraph": "To the east, Gov. John Kasich of Ohio told a group of Montana Republicans this week that they would be crazy not to embrace the president\u2019s program of health coverage for the poor. \u201cI gotta tell you, turning down your money back to Montana on an ideological basis, when people can lose their lives because they get no help, doesn\u2019t make a lot of sense to me,\u201d he said, in remarks reported by the Great Falls Tribune. Nearly every proposal in the State of the Union address polls with majority approval, nationwide. The great issue of the early 21st century is how to elevate a stagnant middle class. When 80 people hold the same amount of wealth as 3.6 billion of the world\u2019s poorest, that equation of inequality can catch the attention of even the most heartless.", "answer": "80", "sentence": "When 80 people hold the same amount of wealth as 3.6 billion of the world\u2019s poorest, that equation of inequality can catch the attention of even the most heartless.", "paragraph_sentence": "To the east, Gov. John Kasich of Ohio told a group of Montana Republicans this week that they would be crazy not to embrace the president\u2019s program of health coverage for the poor. \u201cI gotta tell you, turning down your money back to Montana on an ideological basis, when people can lose their lives because they get no help, doesn\u2019t make a lot of sense to me,\u201d he said, in remarks reported by the Great Falls Tribune. Nearly every proposal in the State of the Union address polls with majority approval, nationwide. The great issue of the early 21st century is how to elevate a stagnant middle class. When 80 people hold the same amount of wealth as 3.6 billion of the world\u2019s poorest, that equation of inequality can catch the attention of even the most heartless. ", "paragraph_answer": "To the east, Gov. John Kasich of Ohio told a group of Montana Republicans this week that they would be crazy not to embrace the president\u2019s program of health coverage for the poor. \u201cI gotta tell you, turning down your money back to Montana on an ideological basis, when people can lose their lives because they get no help, doesn\u2019t make a lot of sense to me,\u201d he said, in remarks reported by the Great Falls Tribune. Nearly every proposal in the State of the Union address polls with majority approval, nationwide. The great issue of the early 21st century is how to elevate a stagnant middle class. When 80 people hold the same amount of wealth as 3.6 billion of the world\u2019s poorest, that equation of inequality can catch the attention of even the most heartless.", "sentence_answer": "When 80 people hold the same amount of wealth as 3.6 billion of the world\u2019s poorest, that equation of inequality can catch the attention of even the most heartless.", "paragraph_id": "5d7038acc8e4820a9b66e14f"} +{"question": "What body of water do Jessie and Virginia play in?", "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": "Maury River", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700b22c8e4820a9b66b577"} +{"question": "What does preventive health care cost rather than it saves?", "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": "more", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d705705c8e4820a9b66ed4d"} +{"question": "Where is Joan Shelley from?", "paragraph": "Ms. Shelley is from Louisville, Ky., where she has recorded in duos and groups; \u201cElectric Ursa\u201d is her second solo album. Her songs hold echoes of the area\u2019s Appalachian heritage in their unhurried picking and Celtic-tinged melodies, and she sings with the centered clarity of a mountain balladeer. But her songs aren\u2019t necessarily traditionalist. She also invokes another school of American and British acoustic music: the guitar meditations of musicians like John Fahey, Davy Graham and Vashti Bunyan, who found more hypnotic uses for elements of folk styles. Although Ms. Shelley leads a full band on her albums, at Union Pool, her backup was ample with just two acoustic guitars \u2014 her own and Nathan Salsburg\u2019s \u2014 and the occasional vocal harmonies of Glen Dentinger. A few cyclical, undulating, fingerpicked chords were enough for each song, with Ms. Shelley pinpointing the rhythm and Mr. Salsburg entwining it with touches of filigree. Mr. Salsburg, also from Louisville, had started the evening with guitar instrumentals (including a folkified version of the Smiths\u2019 \u201cReel Around the Fountain\u201d); Nathan Bowles, a banjoist and singer who also shared the bill, joined Ms. Shelley\u2019s group for one song.", "answer": "Louisville, Ky", "sentence": "Ms. Shelley is from Louisville, Ky ., where she has recorded in duos and groups; \u201cElectric Ursa\u201d is her second solo album.", "paragraph_sentence": " Ms. Shelley is from Louisville, Ky ., where she has recorded in duos and groups; \u201cElectric Ursa\u201d is her second solo album. Her songs hold echoes of the area\u2019s Appalachian heritage in their unhurried picking and Celtic-tinged melodies, and she sings with the centered clarity of a mountain balladeer. But her songs aren\u2019t necessarily traditionalist. She also invokes another school of American and British acoustic music: the guitar meditations of musicians like John Fahey, Davy Graham and Vashti Bunyan, who found more hypnotic uses for elements of folk styles. Although Ms. Shelley leads a full band on her albums, at Union Pool, her backup was ample with just two acoustic guitars \u2014 her own and Nathan Salsburg\u2019s \u2014 and the occasional vocal harmonies of Glen Dentinger. A few cyclical, undulating, fingerpicked chords were enough for each song, with Ms. Shelley pinpointing the rhythm and Mr. Salsburg entwining it with touches of filigree. Mr. Salsburg, also from Louisville, had started the evening with guitar instrumentals (including a folkified version of the Smiths\u2019 \u201cReel Around the Fountain\u201d); Nathan Bowles, a banjoist and singer who also shared the bill, joined Ms. Shelley\u2019s group for one song.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Shelley is from Louisville, Ky ., where she has recorded in duos and groups; \u201cElectric Ursa\u201d is her second solo album. Her songs hold echoes of the area\u2019s Appalachian heritage in their unhurried picking and Celtic-tinged melodies, and she sings with the centered clarity of a mountain balladeer. But her songs aren\u2019t necessarily traditionalist. She also invokes another school of American and British acoustic music: the guitar meditations of musicians like John Fahey, Davy Graham and Vashti Bunyan, who found more hypnotic uses for elements of folk styles. Although Ms. Shelley leads a full band on her albums, at Union Pool, her backup was ample with just two acoustic guitars \u2014 her own and Nathan Salsburg\u2019s \u2014 and the occasional vocal harmonies of Glen Dentinger. A few cyclical, undulating, fingerpicked chords were enough for each song, with Ms. Shelley pinpointing the rhythm and Mr. Salsburg entwining it with touches of filigree. Mr. Salsburg, also from Louisville, had started the evening with guitar instrumentals (including a folkified version of the Smiths\u2019 \u201cReel Around the Fountain\u201d); Nathan Bowles, a banjoist and singer who also shared the bill, joined Ms. Shelley\u2019s group for one song.", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Shelley is from Louisville, Ky ., where she has recorded in duos and groups; \u201cElectric Ursa\u201d is her second solo album.", "paragraph_id": "5d7044d1c8e4820a9b66e7a1"} +{"question": "where did Mr. Constantine work after the radiator factory?", "paragraph": "Mr. Constantine once told a State University interviewer that after working in a radiator factory in Buffalo, he joined the Erie County sheriff\u2019s office because \u201claw enforcement was a chance for people of my generation, usually people of ethnic groups \u2014 Irish, Italian, Polish \u2014 who grew up in city neighborhoods and who had not gone to college, to get into an occupation with a challenging environment that had a great deal of flexibility and autonomy.\u201d \u201cWe were looking for excitement and adventure,\u201d he said.", "answer": "Erie County sheriff\u2019s office", "sentence": "Mr. Constantine once told a State University interviewer that after working in a radiator factory in Buffalo, he joined the Erie County sheriff\u2019s office because \u201claw enforcement was a chance for people of my generation, usually people of ethnic groups \u2014 Irish, Italian, Polish \u2014 who grew up in city neighborhoods and who had not gone to college, to get into an occupation with a challenging environment that had a great deal of flexibility and autonomy.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Constantine once told a State University interviewer that after working in a radiator factory in Buffalo, he joined the Erie County sheriff\u2019s office because \u201claw enforcement was a chance for people of my generation, usually people of ethnic groups \u2014 Irish, Italian, Polish \u2014 who grew up in city neighborhoods and who had not gone to college, to get into an occupation with a challenging environment that had a great deal of flexibility and autonomy.\u201d \u201cWe were looking for excitement and adventure,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Constantine once told a State University interviewer that after working in a radiator factory in Buffalo, he joined the Erie County sheriff\u2019s office because \u201claw enforcement was a chance for people of my generation, usually people of ethnic groups \u2014 Irish, Italian, Polish \u2014 who grew up in city neighborhoods and who had not gone to college, to get into an occupation with a challenging environment that had a great deal of flexibility and autonomy.\u201d \u201cWe were looking for excitement and adventure,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Constantine once told a State University interviewer that after working in a radiator factory in Buffalo, he joined the Erie County sheriff\u2019s office because \u201claw enforcement was a chance for people of my generation, usually people of ethnic groups \u2014 Irish, Italian, Polish \u2014 who grew up in city neighborhoods and who had not gone to college, to get into an occupation with a challenging environment that had a great deal of flexibility and autonomy.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d700abec8e4820a9b66b4db"} +{"question": "Who was in charge of investment in London for Deutsche Bank?", "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": "Mr. Jain", "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": "5d7010a8c8e4820a9b66bd1f"} +{"question": "Who had a one man show on Broadway in 2013?", "paragraph": "PHOENIX \u2014 The eye was inexorably drawn to LeBron James during his return to the Cleveland Cavaliers\u2019 lineup on Tuesday night. In a 107-100 loss to the Phoenix Suns \u2014 Cleveland\u2019s sixth straight defeat and ninth in 10 games \u2014 James played so many roles it was as if he were channeling the actor Alan Cumming in his 2013 one-man Broadway show, \u201cMacbeth.\u201d Except no Cavaliers fans were applauding at the end. Their team is now below .500, with a 19-20 record no one could have foreseen before the season began. James\u2019s homecoming has clearly run aground.", "answer": "Alan Cumming", "sentence": "In a 107-100 loss to the Phoenix Suns \u2014 Cleveland\u2019s sixth straight defeat and ninth in 10 games \u2014 James played so many roles it was as if he were channeling the actor Alan Cumming in his 2013 one-man Broadway show, \u201cMacbeth.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "PHOENIX \u2014 The eye was inexorably drawn to LeBron James during his return to the Cleveland Cavaliers\u2019 lineup on Tuesday night. In a 107-100 loss to the Phoenix Suns \u2014 Cleveland\u2019s sixth straight defeat and ninth in 10 games \u2014 James played so many roles it was as if he were channeling the actor Alan Cumming in his 2013 one-man Broadway show, \u201cMacbeth.\u201d Except no Cavaliers fans were applauding at the end. Their team is now below .500, with a 19-20 record no one could have foreseen before the season began. James\u2019s homecoming has clearly run aground.", "paragraph_answer": "PHOENIX \u2014 The eye was inexorably drawn to LeBron James during his return to the Cleveland Cavaliers\u2019 lineup on Tuesday night. In a 107-100 loss to the Phoenix Suns \u2014 Cleveland\u2019s sixth straight defeat and ninth in 10 games \u2014 James played so many roles it was as if he were channeling the actor Alan Cumming in his 2013 one-man Broadway show, \u201cMacbeth.\u201d Except no Cavaliers fans were applauding at the end. Their team is now below .500, with a 19-20 record no one could have foreseen before the season began. James\u2019s homecoming has clearly run aground.", "sentence_answer": "In a 107-100 loss to the Phoenix Suns \u2014 Cleveland\u2019s sixth straight defeat and ninth in 10 games \u2014 James played so many roles it was as if he were channeling the actor Alan Cumming in his 2013 one-man Broadway show, \u201cMacbeth.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d70378ac8e4820a9b66e0c4"} +{"question": "what did Mr Abou Zeid say?", "paragraph": "Mr. Abou Zeid said the current trash crisis also did not bode well for the government\u2019s ability to deal with the country\u2019s other problems. \u201cIf on such local matters they can\u2019t even function and agree, how can they agree on the bigger issues?\u201d Mr. Zeid said. The civil war in neighboring Syria and the more than 1.2 million refugees who have fled to Lebanon are taxing the economy and the government\u2019s ability to provide services. Political divisions have left the country without a president for 14 months, and the current Parliament extended its own mandate last year, essentially re-electing itself after failing to agree on a law to govern new elections. Dysfunctional politics are nothing new in Lebanon, a country with 4.2 million people before the Syrian civil war. Since Lebanon\u2019s own civil war that ended in 1990, a constellation of mostly sectarian political parties have tried to govern the country through consensus \u2014 a commodity often in short supply.", "answer": "the current trash crisis also did not bode well for the government\u2019s ability to deal with the country\u2019s other problems.", "sentence": "Mr. Abou Zeid said the current trash crisis also did not bode well for the government\u2019s ability to deal with the country\u2019s other problems. \u201cIf on such local matters they can\u2019t even function and agree, how can they agree on the bigger issues?\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Abou Zeid said the current trash crisis also did not bode well for the government\u2019s ability to deal with the country\u2019s other problems. \u201cIf on such local matters they can\u2019t even function and agree, how can they agree on the bigger issues?\u201d Mr. Zeid said. The civil war in neighboring Syria and the more than 1.2 million refugees who have fled to Lebanon are taxing the economy and the government\u2019s ability to provide services. Political divisions have left the country without a president for 14 months, and the current Parliament extended its own mandate last year, essentially re-electing itself after failing to agree on a law to govern new elections. Dysfunctional politics are nothing new in Lebanon, a country with 4.2 million people before the Syrian civil war. Since Lebanon\u2019s own civil war that ended in 1990, a constellation of mostly sectarian political parties have tried to govern the country through consensus \u2014 a commodity often in short supply.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Abou Zeid said the current trash crisis also did not bode well for the government\u2019s ability to deal with the country\u2019s other problems. \u201cIf on such local matters they can\u2019t even function and agree, how can they agree on the bigger issues?\u201d Mr. Zeid said. The civil war in neighboring Syria and the more than 1.2 million refugees who have fled to Lebanon are taxing the economy and the government\u2019s ability to provide services. Political divisions have left the country without a president for 14 months, and the current Parliament extended its own mandate last year, essentially re-electing itself after failing to agree on a law to govern new elections. Dysfunctional politics are nothing new in Lebanon, a country with 4.2 million people before the Syrian civil war. Since Lebanon\u2019s own civil war that ended in 1990, a constellation of mostly sectarian political parties have tried to govern the country through consensus \u2014 a commodity often in short supply.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Abou Zeid said the current trash crisis also did not bode well for the government\u2019s ability to deal with the country\u2019s other problems. \u201cIf on such local matters they can\u2019t even function and agree, how can they agree on the bigger issues?\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d705ccbc8e4820a9b66ef41"} +{"question": "Which newspaper tried to assess how well the candidates were doing?", "paragraph": "This article was initially published as a letter to subscribers of The Upshot\u2019s newsletter. You can sign up for the email here to get this and all of the best of The Upshot. We found a lot of good stuff on the web this week. There was a lot of talk at the Republican debate about experience in running a government. The Washington Post tried to assess how well the candidates who are governors did in their states. You know, Jim Gilmore had a pretty good record.", "answer": "The Washington Post", "sentence": "The Washington Post tried to assess how well the candidates who are governors did in their states.", "paragraph_sentence": "This article was initially published as a letter to subscribers of The Upshot\u2019s newsletter. You can sign up for the email here to get this and all of the best of The Upshot. We found a lot of good stuff on the web this week. There was a lot of talk at the Republican debate about experience in running a government. The Washington Post tried to assess how well the candidates who are governors did in their states. You know, Jim Gilmore had a pretty good record.", "paragraph_answer": "This article was initially published as a letter to subscribers of The Upshot\u2019s newsletter. You can sign up for the email here to get this and all of the best of The Upshot. We found a lot of good stuff on the web this week. There was a lot of talk at the Republican debate about experience in running a government. The Washington Post tried to assess how well the candidates who are governors did in their states. You know, Jim Gilmore had a pretty good record.", "sentence_answer": " The Washington Post tried to assess how well the candidates who are governors did in their states.", "paragraph_id": "5d702e8fc8e4820a9b66dbd3"} +{"question": "What instrument can Corey Robinson play?", "paragraph": "Viewers have watched linebacker Jaylon Smith bowling, receiver Corey Robinson playing the ukulele and singing and Day and cornerback Cole Luke coaching a women\u2019s flag-football team. During their off week, crews accompanied some players home. Espinoza said the network was pleased with the weekly 30-minute show. \u201cThere\u2019s been a lot of drama within the program,\u201d he said. \u201cSome unexpected injuries, some come-from-behind wins. We couldn\u2019t have scripted it any better.\u201d The first three episodes averaged 663,000 viewers across all platforms. That compares favorably with Showtime\u2019s most popular sports series, \u201cInside the NFL,\u201d and the show is the third-most-watched program through its streaming service, Espinoza said.", "answer": "ukulele", "sentence": "Viewers have watched linebacker Jaylon Smith bowling, receiver Corey Robinson playing the ukulele and singing and Day and cornerback Cole Luke coaching a women\u2019s flag-football team.", "paragraph_sentence": " Viewers have watched linebacker Jaylon Smith bowling, receiver Corey Robinson playing the ukulele and singing and Day and cornerback Cole Luke coaching a women\u2019s flag-football team. During their off week, crews accompanied some players home. Espinoza said the network was pleased with the weekly 30-minute show. \u201cThere\u2019s been a lot of drama within the program,\u201d he said. \u201cSome unexpected injuries, some come-from-behind wins. We couldn\u2019t have scripted it any better.\u201d The first three episodes averaged 663,000 viewers across all platforms. That compares favorably with Showtime\u2019s most popular sports series, \u201cInside the NFL,\u201d and the show is the third-most-watched program through its streaming service, Espinoza said.", "paragraph_answer": "Viewers have watched linebacker Jaylon Smith bowling, receiver Corey Robinson playing the ukulele and singing and Day and cornerback Cole Luke coaching a women\u2019s flag-football team. During their off week, crews accompanied some players home. Espinoza said the network was pleased with the weekly 30-minute show. \u201cThere\u2019s been a lot of drama within the program,\u201d he said. \u201cSome unexpected injuries, some come-from-behind wins. We couldn\u2019t have scripted it any better.\u201d The first three episodes averaged 663,000 viewers across all platforms. That compares favorably with Showtime\u2019s most popular sports series, \u201cInside the NFL,\u201d and the show is the third-most-watched program through its streaming service, Espinoza said.", "sentence_answer": "Viewers have watched linebacker Jaylon Smith bowling, receiver Corey Robinson playing the ukulele and singing and Day and cornerback Cole Luke coaching a women\u2019s flag-football team.", "paragraph_id": "5d704cf0c8e4820a9b66ea19"} +{"question": "Why won't the FDA recommend using ethylene oxide sterilization regularly?", "paragraph": "The F.D.A. is investigating numerous additional measures, such as sterilizing the devices with toxic gas or sampling them for microbiological cultures periodically. Ronald Reagan U.C.L.A. Medical Center and Advocate Lutheran General Hospital have begun sterilizing their instruments with a gas called ethylene oxide. Neither has had additional cases of CRE since instituting the procedure. At the moment, however, the F.D.A. is not willing to recommend ethylene oxide sterilization on a routine basis. \u201cThis agent itself could potentially be quite toxic, not only if not thoroughly aired afterward but in the longer term to people doing the cleaning,\u201d Dr. Ostroff said.", "answer": "This agent itself could potentially be quite toxic", "sentence": "At the moment, however, the F.D.A. is not willing to recommend ethylene oxide sterilization on a routine basis. \u201c This agent itself could potentially be quite toxic , not only if not thoroughly aired afterward but in the longer term to people doing the cleaning,\u201d Dr. Ostroff said.", "paragraph_sentence": "The F.D.A. is investigating numerous additional measures, such as sterilizing the devices with toxic gas or sampling them for microbiological cultures periodically. Ronald Reagan U.C.L.A. Medical Center and Advocate Lutheran General Hospital have begun sterilizing their instruments with a gas called ethylene oxide. Neither has had additional cases of CRE since instituting the procedure. At the moment, however, the F.D.A. is not willing to recommend ethylene oxide sterilization on a routine basis. \u201c This agent itself could potentially be quite toxic , not only if not thoroughly aired afterward but in the longer term to people doing the cleaning,\u201d Dr. Ostroff said. ", "paragraph_answer": "The F.D.A. is investigating numerous additional measures, such as sterilizing the devices with toxic gas or sampling them for microbiological cultures periodically. Ronald Reagan U.C.L.A. Medical Center and Advocate Lutheran General Hospital have begun sterilizing their instruments with a gas called ethylene oxide. Neither has had additional cases of CRE since instituting the procedure. At the moment, however, the F.D.A. is not willing to recommend ethylene oxide sterilization on a routine basis. \u201c This agent itself could potentially be quite toxic , not only if not thoroughly aired afterward but in the longer term to people doing the cleaning,\u201d Dr. Ostroff said.", "sentence_answer": "At the moment, however, the F.D.A. is not willing to recommend ethylene oxide sterilization on a routine basis. \u201c This agent itself could potentially be quite toxic , not only if not thoroughly aired afterward but in the longer term to people doing the cleaning,\u201d Dr. Ostroff said.", "paragraph_id": "5d704563c8e4820a9b66e7d5"} +{"question": "What amount of Republicans supported Carly Fiorina?", "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": "4 percent", "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": "5d70811cc8e4820a9b66f3e1"} +{"question": "What did Daru refuse to do that Balducci required of him?", "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": "take Mohamed to another town for some French justice and certain death.", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d7042fec8e4820a9b66e67a"} +{"question": "What is the name of the resort owned by Wilkins?", "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": "Cove Haven", "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": "5d7008bdc8e4820a9b66b0a6"} +{"question": "who parred the last 5 holes?", "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": "Thomas Pieters", "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": "5d7008b2c8e4820a9b66b093"} +{"question": "What kind of students has the University of California been accepting fewer of?", "paragraph": "California, rather than making another push to bring college to the masses, is taking small steps in reverse. With state funding declining, the University of California has been enrolling fewer in-state students (even as the population keeps growing) and a greater number of affluent students from other countries and states. Outside California, the educational gap between rich and poor is much wider \u2013 and not narrowing very rapidly. All the while, a college education remains the most reliable ticket to the middle class and beyond. The unemployment rate for college graduates is only 2.7 percent, and the pay gap between college graduates and everyone else is near a record high. College obviously can\u2019t solve all of the economy\u2019s problems, but there is a reason that nearly all families that can comfortably send their children to college do so. For families that aren\u2019t as comfortable, some colleges are doing much more to help than others.", "answer": "in-state students", "sentence": "With state funding declining, the University of California has been enrolling fewer in-state students (even as the population keeps growing) and a greater number of affluent students from other countries and states.", "paragraph_sentence": "California, rather than making another push to bring college to the masses, is taking small steps in reverse. With state funding declining, the University of California has been enrolling fewer in-state students (even as the population keeps growing) and a greater number of affluent students from other countries and states. Outside California, the educational gap between rich and poor is much wider \u2013 and not narrowing very rapidly. All the while, a college education remains the most reliable ticket to the middle class and beyond. The unemployment rate for college graduates is only 2.7 percent, and the pay gap between college graduates and everyone else is near a record high. College obviously can\u2019t solve all of the economy\u2019s problems, but there is a reason that nearly all families that can comfortably send their children to college do so. For families that aren\u2019t as comfortable, some colleges are doing much more to help than others.", "paragraph_answer": "California, rather than making another push to bring college to the masses, is taking small steps in reverse. With state funding declining, the University of California has been enrolling fewer in-state students (even as the population keeps growing) and a greater number of affluent students from other countries and states. Outside California, the educational gap between rich and poor is much wider \u2013 and not narrowing very rapidly. All the while, a college education remains the most reliable ticket to the middle class and beyond. The unemployment rate for college graduates is only 2.7 percent, and the pay gap between college graduates and everyone else is near a record high. College obviously can\u2019t solve all of the economy\u2019s problems, but there is a reason that nearly all families that can comfortably send their children to college do so. For families that aren\u2019t as comfortable, some colleges are doing much more to help than others.", "sentence_answer": "With state funding declining, the University of California has been enrolling fewer in-state students (even as the population keeps growing) and a greater number of affluent students from other countries and states.", "paragraph_id": "5d704ed8c8e4820a9b66eaa8"} +{"question": "When is Juilliard String Quartet playing?", "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": "June 28 at 3 p.m.", "sentence": "June 28 at 3 p.m. $60.", "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": " June 28 at 3 p.m. $60.", "paragraph_id": "5d700e23c8e4820a9b66b9f9"} +{"question": "What does Old expression does Leive equate not everyone feeling about their job?", "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": "We can\u2019t all work in jobs where we feel like our heart is singing every day.", "sentence": "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", "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": " 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", "paragraph_id": "5d701841c8e4820a9b66c448"} +{"question": "What happened in November?", "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": "Mr. Harrell\u2019s mother had died", "sentence": "\u201cHe shook his head yes.\u201d Mr. Harrell\u2019s mother had died in November.", "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": "\u201cHe shook his head yes.\u201d Mr. Harrell\u2019s mother had died in November.", "paragraph_id": "5d701e87c8e4820a9b66ca27"} +{"question": "What border town did the convoy of army trucks deliver the barbed wire and construction equipment to?", "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": "Veliki Obrez", "sentence": "A convoy of army trucks carrying barbed wire and construction equipment arrived in the border town of Veliki Obrez at dawn on Wednesday.", "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": "A convoy of army trucks carrying barbed wire and construction equipment arrived in the border town of Veliki Obrez at dawn on Wednesday.", "paragraph_id": "5d7006ccc8e4820a9b66ac0a"} +{"question": "What were republicans trying to repeal?", "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": "Affordable Care Act", "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d701efdc8e4820a9b66cab1"} +{"question": "Who had had military attacks deplored on them?", "paragraph": "Religious activists in the denomination have been among the most outspoken in recent years over what they regard as Israel\u2019s unjustified repression of Palestinians and their aspirations for an independent state. The activists have deplored militant attacks on Israelis and said they supported Israel\u2019s right to exist but disagreed with its policies. The boycott resolution was the second such measure passed by the church in the past decade but was considerably stronger and more specific than the first resolution. The first resolution, passed in 2005, broadly called for the use of economic leverage, including boycotts and adjustments in foreign aid.", "answer": "Israelis", "sentence": "The activists have deplored militant attacks on Israelis and said they supported Israel\u2019s right to exist but disagreed with its policies.", "paragraph_sentence": "Religious activists in the denomination have been among the most outspoken in recent years over what they regard as Israel\u2019s unjustified repression of Palestinians and their aspirations for an independent state. The activists have deplored militant attacks on Israelis and said they supported Israel\u2019s right to exist but disagreed with its policies. The boycott resolution was the second such measure passed by the church in the past decade but was considerably stronger and more specific than the first resolution. The first resolution, passed in 2005, broadly called for the use of economic leverage, including boycotts and adjustments in foreign aid.", "paragraph_answer": "Religious activists in the denomination have been among the most outspoken in recent years over what they regard as Israel\u2019s unjustified repression of Palestinians and their aspirations for an independent state. The activists have deplored militant attacks on Israelis and said they supported Israel\u2019s right to exist but disagreed with its policies. The boycott resolution was the second such measure passed by the church in the past decade but was considerably stronger and more specific than the first resolution. The first resolution, passed in 2005, broadly called for the use of economic leverage, including boycotts and adjustments in foreign aid.", "sentence_answer": "The activists have deplored militant attacks on Israelis and said they supported Israel\u2019s right to exist but disagreed with its policies.", "paragraph_id": "5d7009a2c8e4820a9b66b2a0"} +{"question": "Who is the founder of Morning Star, a tomato processing plant?", "paragraph": "The public-relations push extends to the very private brothers themselves. In December, David Koch, who lives in New York, sat for an interview with Barbara Walters of ABC and described his liberal beliefs on gay rights and social issues. In April, Charles Koch, who for many years granted only the occasional interview to his hometown newspaper, The Wichita Eagle, answered questions from USA Today. In recent months, Freedom Partners, the nonprofit that oversees the Kochs\u2019 political donor network, has also persuaded some of its donors to put their names to op-ed articles in national and local newspapers, helping shift attention away from the two brothers. Because nonprofits do not disclose their donors, it is impossible to know how much of the Koch network\u2019s spending is underwitten by the Kochs themselves. But several hundred like-minded donors are members of Freedom Partners and more than two dozen donors have signed the op-ed articles, which take up familiar Koch causes like abolishing the Export-Import Bank or cutting the size of the federal government. \u201cCharles Koch\u2019s amazing. He gets death threats all the time, and there\u2019s a lot of misinformation out there,\u201d said Chris Rufer, a self-described libertarian and the founder of Morning Star, the world\u2019s largest tomato processor. \u201cThey called and said, \u2018Would you sign on to this?\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "Chris Rufer", "sentence": "He gets death threats all the time, and there\u2019s a lot of misinformation out there,\u201d said Chris Rufer , a self-described libertarian and the founder of Morning Star, the world\u2019s largest tomato processor.", "paragraph_sentence": "The public-relations push extends to the very private brothers themselves. In December, David Koch, who lives in New York, sat for an interview with Barbara Walters of ABC and described his liberal beliefs on gay rights and social issues. In April, Charles Koch, who for many years granted only the occasional interview to his hometown newspaper, The Wichita Eagle, answered questions from USA Today. In recent months, Freedom Partners, the nonprofit that oversees the Kochs\u2019 political donor network, has also persuaded some of its donors to put their names to op-ed articles in national and local newspapers, helping shift attention away from the two brothers. Because nonprofits do not disclose their donors, it is impossible to know how much of the Koch network\u2019s spending is underwitten by the Kochs themselves. But several hundred like-minded donors are members of Freedom Partners and more than two dozen donors have signed the op-ed articles, which take up familiar Koch causes like abolishing the Export-Import Bank or cutting the size of the federal government. \u201cCharles Koch\u2019s amazing. He gets death threats all the time, and there\u2019s a lot of misinformation out there,\u201d said Chris Rufer , a self-described libertarian and the founder of Morning Star, the world\u2019s largest tomato processor. \u201cThey called and said, \u2018Would you sign on to this?\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The public-relations push extends to the very private brothers themselves. In December, David Koch, who lives in New York, sat for an interview with Barbara Walters of ABC and described his liberal beliefs on gay rights and social issues. In April, Charles Koch, who for many years granted only the occasional interview to his hometown newspaper, The Wichita Eagle, answered questions from USA Today. In recent months, Freedom Partners, the nonprofit that oversees the Kochs\u2019 political donor network, has also persuaded some of its donors to put their names to op-ed articles in national and local newspapers, helping shift attention away from the two brothers. Because nonprofits do not disclose their donors, it is impossible to know how much of the Koch network\u2019s spending is underwitten by the Kochs themselves. But several hundred like-minded donors are members of Freedom Partners and more than two dozen donors have signed the op-ed articles, which take up familiar Koch causes like abolishing the Export-Import Bank or cutting the size of the federal government. \u201cCharles Koch\u2019s amazing. He gets death threats all the time, and there\u2019s a lot of misinformation out there,\u201d said Chris Rufer , a self-described libertarian and the founder of Morning Star, the world\u2019s largest tomato processor. \u201cThey called and said, \u2018Would you sign on to this?\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "He gets death threats all the time, and there\u2019s a lot of misinformation out there,\u201d said Chris Rufer , a self-described libertarian and the founder of Morning Star, the world\u2019s largest tomato processor.", "paragraph_id": "5d701549c8e4820a9b66c15b"} +{"question": "What type of college is Gordon College?", "paragraph": "Such tiptoeing around donors opposed to funding any L.G.B.T. programs is becoming less common, Mr. Henry says. Andrew Watt, president of the Association of Fundraising Professionals, also says he believes that any hesitation to court the L.G.B.T. community as a source of donations, for fear of negative reactions or unwelcome perceptions, is vanishing. \u201cI think we\u2019ve gotten to the point that it\u2019s ceasing to be an issue,\u201d he says. But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College, a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass. Like the Girl Scouts, the college said it was acting in accordance with its core beliefs when, in July 2014, the college\u2019s president, D. Michael Lindsay, along with 13 other evangelical and Roman Catholic leaders, signed a letter to the White House, asking for a religious exemption from a planned order barring federal contractors from discriminating in hiring on the basis of sexual orientation. The on-campus reaction was anger: A petition signed by 3,000 students, faculty and alumni was reportedly sent to Mr. Lindsay, protesting his request for the exemption and accusing him of discrimination. There was other fallout. The mayor of nearby Salem canceled the school\u2019s contract to manage its Old Town Hall, an early 19th-century building now used as an event space and theater.", "answer": "multidenominational Christian liberal arts college", "sentence": "But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College, a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass.", "paragraph_sentence": "Such tiptoeing around donors opposed to funding any L.G.B.T. programs is becoming less common, Mr. Henry says. Andrew Watt, president of the Association of Fundraising Professionals, also says he believes that any hesitation to court the L.G.B.T. community as a source of donations, for fear of negative reactions or unwelcome perceptions, is vanishing. \u201cI think we\u2019ve gotten to the point that it\u2019s ceasing to be an issue,\u201d he says. But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College, a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass. Like the Girl Scouts, the college said it was acting in accordance with its core beliefs when, in July 2014, the college\u2019s president, D. Michael Lindsay, along with 13 other evangelical and Roman Catholic leaders, signed a letter to the White House, asking for a religious exemption from a planned order barring federal contractors from discriminating in hiring on the basis of sexual orientation. The on-campus reaction was anger: A petition signed by 3,000 students, faculty and alumni was reportedly sent to Mr. Lindsay, protesting his request for the exemption and accusing him of discrimination. There was other fallout. The mayor of nearby Salem canceled the school\u2019s contract to manage its Old Town Hall, an early 19th-century building now used as an event space and theater.", "paragraph_answer": "Such tiptoeing around donors opposed to funding any L.G.B.T. programs is becoming less common, Mr. Henry says. Andrew Watt, president of the Association of Fundraising Professionals, also says he believes that any hesitation to court the L.G.B.T. community as a source of donations, for fear of negative reactions or unwelcome perceptions, is vanishing. \u201cI think we\u2019ve gotten to the point that it\u2019s ceasing to be an issue,\u201d he says. But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College, a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass. Like the Girl Scouts, the college said it was acting in accordance with its core beliefs when, in July 2014, the college\u2019s president, D. Michael Lindsay, along with 13 other evangelical and Roman Catholic leaders, signed a letter to the White House, asking for a religious exemption from a planned order barring federal contractors from discriminating in hiring on the basis of sexual orientation. The on-campus reaction was anger: A petition signed by 3,000 students, faculty and alumni was reportedly sent to Mr. Lindsay, protesting his request for the exemption and accusing him of discrimination. There was other fallout. The mayor of nearby Salem canceled the school\u2019s contract to manage its Old Town Hall, an early 19th-century building now used as an event space and theater.", "sentence_answer": "But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College, a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass.", "paragraph_id": "5d7010b5c8e4820a9b66bd44"} +{"question": "Where is Itamar Harel a researcher?", "paragraph": "Even when hobbyists pamper them in aquariums, turquoise killifish survive only a few months, making them among the shortest-lived vertebrates on Earth. So the turquoise killifish may not seem the best animal to study to discover the secrets of a long life. But researchers are finding that this tiny fish ages much as we do, only at a much faster pace. \u201cIt\u2019s a compressed life span,\u201d said Itamar Harel, a postdoctoral researcher at Stanford University. Dr. Harel and his colleagues recently developed a set of tools to probe the biology of the turquoise killifish.", "answer": "Stanford University", "sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s a compressed life span,\u201d said Itamar Harel, a postdoctoral researcher at Stanford University .", "paragraph_sentence": "Even when hobbyists pamper them in aquariums, turquoise killifish survive only a few months, making them among the shortest-lived vertebrates on Earth. So the turquoise killifish may not seem the best animal to study to discover the secrets of a long life. But researchers are finding that this tiny fish ages much as we do, only at a much faster pace. \u201cIt\u2019s a compressed life span,\u201d said Itamar Harel, a postdoctoral researcher at Stanford University . Dr. Harel and his colleagues recently developed a set of tools to probe the biology of the turquoise killifish.", "paragraph_answer": "Even when hobbyists pamper them in aquariums, turquoise killifish survive only a few months, making them among the shortest-lived vertebrates on Earth. So the turquoise killifish may not seem the best animal to study to discover the secrets of a long life. But researchers are finding that this tiny fish ages much as we do, only at a much faster pace. \u201cIt\u2019s a compressed life span,\u201d said Itamar Harel, a postdoctoral researcher at Stanford University . Dr. Harel and his colleagues recently developed a set of tools to probe the biology of the turquoise killifish.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s a compressed life span,\u201d said Itamar Harel, a postdoctoral researcher at Stanford University .", "paragraph_id": "5d7006b5c8e4820a9b66ac02"} +{"question": "Who made the snail art?", "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": "Cracking Art Group", "sentence": "Ms. Klum, auctioning an 11-foot-tall polyurethane snail sculpture by a collective called the Cracking Art Group , decided it must be hers.", "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": "Ms. Klum, auctioning an 11-foot-tall polyurethane snail sculpture by a collective called the Cracking Art Group , decided it must be hers.", "paragraph_id": "5d70204dc8e4820a9b66cc10"} +{"question": "What park does Garcia do his running in?", "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": "Central Park", "sentence": "He runs either in Central Park \u2014 it\u2019s more distant than he had hoped \u2014 or along the East River.", "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": "He runs either in Central Park \u2014 it\u2019s more distant than he had hoped \u2014 or along the East River.", "paragraph_id": "5d7006efc8e4820a9b66ac48"} +{"question": "Which organization does Mr. Mellbin represent?", "paragraph": "The Kabul government\u2019s political struggles have had a direct affect on the morale of the security forces, some officials say. Many of the army and police commanders who were in Kunduz maintain factional loyalties that at times have been at odds with the central government. In the confusion of the Taliban assault, some simply chose not to fight when the moment arrived, some officials claimed. \u201cThe security challenges cannot be seen in isolation,\u201d said Mr. Mellbin, the European Union representative. \u201cThe political space needs to be worked more effectively. If the elite had come together on Kunduz, the situation could have been managed before it became a national security threat.\u201d", "answer": "European Union", "sentence": "\u201cThe security challenges cannot be seen in isolation,\u201d said Mr. Mellbin, the European Union representative.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Kabul government\u2019s political struggles have had a direct affect on the morale of the security forces, some officials say. Many of the army and police commanders who were in Kunduz maintain factional loyalties that at times have been at odds with the central government. In the confusion of the Taliban assault, some simply chose not to fight when the moment arrived, some officials claimed. \u201cThe security challenges cannot be seen in isolation,\u201d said Mr. Mellbin, the European Union representative. \u201cThe political space needs to be worked more effectively. If the elite had come together on Kunduz, the situation could have been managed before it became a national security threat.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The Kabul government\u2019s political struggles have had a direct affect on the morale of the security forces, some officials say. Many of the army and police commanders who were in Kunduz maintain factional loyalties that at times have been at odds with the central government. In the confusion of the Taliban assault, some simply chose not to fight when the moment arrived, some officials claimed. \u201cThe security challenges cannot be seen in isolation,\u201d said Mr. Mellbin, the European Union representative. \u201cThe political space needs to be worked more effectively. If the elite had come together on Kunduz, the situation could have been managed before it became a national security threat.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe security challenges cannot be seen in isolation,\u201d said Mr. Mellbin, the European Union representative.", "paragraph_id": "5d701932c8e4820a9b66c542"} +{"question": "What happened to two of the victim's sisters?", "paragraph": "A kindergartner was killed in his bed in Versailles before dawn Monday when a stranger from Indiana broke into his home, grabbed a kitchen knife and stabbed the boy multiple times, the police said. The police do not know why a man from 200 miles away ended up in the boy\u2019s bedroom, and why he stabbed him. The suspect, Ronald Exantus, 32, of Indianapolis, was charged with murder and first-degree burglary. Deputy Coroner T. A. Rankin identified the boy as Logan Tipton, 6. Two of his sisters suffered non-life-threatening cuts, and the suspect was held by the boy\u2019s father until the police arrived, the arrest citation said. The boy\u2019s family said they do not know the suspect.", "answer": "suffered non-life-threatening cuts", "sentence": "Two of his sisters suffered non-life-threatening cuts , and the suspect was held by the boy\u2019s father until the police arrived, the arrest citation said.", "paragraph_sentence": "A kindergartner was killed in his bed in Versailles before dawn Monday when a stranger from Indiana broke into his home, grabbed a kitchen knife and stabbed the boy multiple times, the police said. The police do not know why a man from 200 miles away ended up in the boy\u2019s bedroom, and why he stabbed him. The suspect, Ronald Exantus, 32, of Indianapolis, was charged with murder and first-degree burglary. Deputy Coroner T. A. Rankin identified the boy as Logan Tipton, 6. Two of his sisters suffered non-life-threatening cuts , and the suspect was held by the boy\u2019s father until the police arrived, the arrest citation said. The boy\u2019s family said they do not know the suspect.", "paragraph_answer": "A kindergartner was killed in his bed in Versailles before dawn Monday when a stranger from Indiana broke into his home, grabbed a kitchen knife and stabbed the boy multiple times, the police said. The police do not know why a man from 200 miles away ended up in the boy\u2019s bedroom, and why he stabbed him. The suspect, Ronald Exantus, 32, of Indianapolis, was charged with murder and first-degree burglary. Deputy Coroner T. A. Rankin identified the boy as Logan Tipton, 6. Two of his sisters suffered non-life-threatening cuts , and the suspect was held by the boy\u2019s father until the police arrived, the arrest citation said. The boy\u2019s family said they do not know the suspect.", "sentence_answer": "Two of his sisters suffered non-life-threatening cuts , and the suspect was held by the boy\u2019s father until the police arrived, the arrest citation said.", "paragraph_id": "5d7005b0c8e4820a9b66a967"} +{"question": "when did Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher abolish tenure?", "paragraph": "In Wisconsin, a proposal pushed by Gov. Scott Walker would remove the notion of tenure in the university system. The bill is expected to go before the state Assembly and Senate this month. But experts say the idea of tenure has such a strong hold in American education that even colleges struggling under dire budgets in other states are unlikely to follow suit \u2014 though they are often limiting tenure. Tenure goes back to medieval times, and the tradition of awarding professors lifetime job guarantees carried over to America, where it began in the late 1700s to protect academic freedom at religious schools. Its grip strengthened in the 1800s when university donors or legislators tried to remove professors whose views they disliked. Britain\u2019s experience may hold some lessons. In 1988, Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher abolished the practice as a cost-cutting move.", "answer": "1988", "sentence": "In 1988 , Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher abolished the practice as a cost-cutting move.", "paragraph_sentence": "In Wisconsin, a proposal pushed by Gov. Scott Walker would remove the notion of tenure in the university system. The bill is expected to go before the state Assembly and Senate this month. But experts say the idea of tenure has such a strong hold in American education that even colleges struggling under dire budgets in other states are unlikely to follow suit \u2014 though they are often limiting tenure. Tenure goes back to medieval times, and the tradition of awarding professors lifetime job guarantees carried over to America, where it began in the late 1700s to protect academic freedom at religious schools. Its grip strengthened in the 1800s when university donors or legislators tried to remove professors whose views they disliked. Britain\u2019s experience may hold some lessons. In 1988 , Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher abolished the practice as a cost-cutting move. ", "paragraph_answer": "In Wisconsin, a proposal pushed by Gov. Scott Walker would remove the notion of tenure in the university system. The bill is expected to go before the state Assembly and Senate this month. But experts say the idea of tenure has such a strong hold in American education that even colleges struggling under dire budgets in other states are unlikely to follow suit \u2014 though they are often limiting tenure. Tenure goes back to medieval times, and the tradition of awarding professors lifetime job guarantees carried over to America, where it began in the late 1700s to protect academic freedom at religious schools. Its grip strengthened in the 1800s when university donors or legislators tried to remove professors whose views they disliked. Britain\u2019s experience may hold some lessons. In 1988 , Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher abolished the practice as a cost-cutting move.", "sentence_answer": "In 1988 , Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher abolished the practice as a cost-cutting move.", "paragraph_id": "5d700c84c8e4820a9b66b7cb"} +{"question": "What will be made for dinner?", "paragraph": "Sunday, we\u2019ll laze around eating eggs-in-a-hole, have leftovers for lunch, then make baked beans for dinner (omit the pork if you like) and eat it with the New England chef Matt Jennings\u2019s delightfully funky take on Boston brown bread. Not for you? Other great recipe ideas for this weekend can be found on Cooking. Save them to your recipe box. Organize them into collections. Rate them with stars. And if you run into problems with them, or with the site or the apps, please don\u2019t hesitate to ask for help. We\u2019re at cookingcare@nytimes.com.", "answer": "baked beans", "sentence": "Sunday, we\u2019ll laze around eating eggs-in-a-hole, have leftovers for lunch, then make baked beans for dinner (omit the pork if you like) and eat it with the New England chef Matt Jennings\u2019s delightfully funky take on Boston brown bread.", "paragraph_sentence": " Sunday, we\u2019ll laze around eating eggs-in-a-hole, have leftovers for lunch, then make baked beans for dinner (omit the pork if you like) and eat it with the New England chef Matt Jennings\u2019s delightfully funky take on Boston brown bread. Not for you? Other great recipe ideas for this weekend can be found on Cooking. Save them to your recipe box. Organize them into collections. Rate them with stars. And if you run into problems with them, or with the site or the apps, please don\u2019t hesitate to ask for help. We\u2019re at cookingcare@nytimes.com.", "paragraph_answer": "Sunday, we\u2019ll laze around eating eggs-in-a-hole, have leftovers for lunch, then make baked beans for dinner (omit the pork if you like) and eat it with the New England chef Matt Jennings\u2019s delightfully funky take on Boston brown bread. Not for you? Other great recipe ideas for this weekend can be found on Cooking. Save them to your recipe box. Organize them into collections. Rate them with stars. And if you run into problems with them, or with the site or the apps, please don\u2019t hesitate to ask for help. We\u2019re at cookingcare@nytimes.com.", "sentence_answer": "Sunday, we\u2019ll laze around eating eggs-in-a-hole, have leftovers for lunch, then make baked beans for dinner (omit the pork if you like) and eat it with the New England chef Matt Jennings\u2019s delightfully funky take on Boston brown bread.", "paragraph_id": "5d703a47c8e4820a9b66e21d"} +{"question": "What american comedian actor do they like?", "paragraph": "I\u2019m realizing that people have their time and they have their guy. In the same way that you have a band: People just love U2, and they go, \u201cThis is my band, and they understand me and they get me. And I don\u2019t like Charli XCX.\u201d It is such an intimate and personal connection that you\u2019re making. But at some point, we\u2019ll be sitting somewhere, sharing a drink, going, \u201cUgh, when Fallon used to come out, he wouldn\u2019t do any of this! He wouldn\u2019t do any of this 3-D virtual camera stuff. He\u2019d just come out and do lip-sync battles, and they were the great days.\u201d", "answer": "Fallon", "sentence": "But at some point, we\u2019ll be sitting somewhere, sharing a drink, going, \u201cUgh, when Fallon used to come out, he wouldn\u2019t do any of this!", "paragraph_sentence": "I\u2019m realizing that people have their time and they have their guy. In the same way that you have a band: People just love U2, and they go, \u201cThis is my band, and they understand me and they get me. And I don\u2019t like Charli XCX.\u201d It is such an intimate and personal connection that you\u2019re making. But at some point, we\u2019ll be sitting somewhere, sharing a drink, going, \u201cUgh, when Fallon used to come out, he wouldn\u2019t do any of this! He wouldn\u2019t do any of this 3-D virtual camera stuff. He\u2019d just come out and do lip-sync battles, and they were the great days.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "I\u2019m realizing that people have their time and they have their guy. In the same way that you have a band: People just love U2, and they go, \u201cThis is my band, and they understand me and they get me. And I don\u2019t like Charli XCX.\u201d It is such an intimate and personal connection that you\u2019re making. But at some point, we\u2019ll be sitting somewhere, sharing a drink, going, \u201cUgh, when Fallon used to come out, he wouldn\u2019t do any of this! He wouldn\u2019t do any of this 3-D virtual camera stuff. He\u2019d just come out and do lip-sync battles, and they were the great days.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "But at some point, we\u2019ll be sitting somewhere, sharing a drink, going, \u201cUgh, when Fallon used to come out, he wouldn\u2019t do any of this!", "paragraph_id": "5d700dccc8e4820a9b66b974"} +{"question": "Chemists were not able to explain how bonds were what during these chemical reactions?", "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": "rearranged", "sentence": "For years, chemists were unable to explain how the bonds were being rearranged .", "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": "For years, chemists were unable to explain how the bonds were being rearranged .", "paragraph_id": "5d7034f2c8e4820a9b66df30"} +{"question": "What was Johann Friedrich Bottger's trade", "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": "apothecary\u2019s apprentice", "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": "5d7008c7c8e4820a9b66b0dd"} +{"question": "How many R.B.I. did The Mets' pitchers earn?", "paragraph": "Afterward, Manager Terry Collins said Cuddyer had been available, but he had waited too long, and the right situation had never arisen, so Cuddyer remained on the bench. The Mets\u2019 lone hit with runners in scoring position Monday came, of course, from their pitcher, Harvey. With the bases loaded in the fourth, he flipped a single into right field, scoring two runs. He had hit a two-run homer in his previous start, in a two-run Mets win. \u201cJust try to put the ball in play,\u201d Harvey said. The Mets\u2019 pitchers have set an example for the whole team, compiling 17 R.B.I., the most of any pitching staff in baseball. Harvey retired the final 14 batters he faced. Some of the outs were well hit, but he pitched as if he wanted to compensate for those five early runs. Ending with a flourish, he struck out Harper looking at a stinging 98-mile-per-hour fastball, on his 99th and final pitch.", "answer": "17", "sentence": "The Mets\u2019 pitchers have set an example for the whole team, compiling 17 R.B.I., the most of any pitching staff in baseball.", "paragraph_sentence": "Afterward, Manager Terry Collins said Cuddyer had been available, but he had waited too long, and the right situation had never arisen, so Cuddyer remained on the bench. The Mets\u2019 lone hit with runners in scoring position Monday came, of course, from their pitcher, Harvey. With the bases loaded in the fourth, he flipped a single into right field, scoring two runs. He had hit a two-run homer in his previous start, in a two-run Mets win. \u201cJust try to put the ball in play,\u201d Harvey said. The Mets\u2019 pitchers have set an example for the whole team, compiling 17 R.B.I., the most of any pitching staff in baseball. Harvey retired the final 14 batters he faced. Some of the outs were well hit, but he pitched as if he wanted to compensate for those five early runs. Ending with a flourish, he struck out Harper looking at a stinging 98-mile-per-hour fastball, on his 99th and final pitch.", "paragraph_answer": "Afterward, Manager Terry Collins said Cuddyer had been available, but he had waited too long, and the right situation had never arisen, so Cuddyer remained on the bench. The Mets\u2019 lone hit with runners in scoring position Monday came, of course, from their pitcher, Harvey. With the bases loaded in the fourth, he flipped a single into right field, scoring two runs. He had hit a two-run homer in his previous start, in a two-run Mets win. \u201cJust try to put the ball in play,\u201d Harvey said. The Mets\u2019 pitchers have set an example for the whole team, compiling 17 R.B.I., the most of any pitching staff in baseball. Harvey retired the final 14 batters he faced. Some of the outs were well hit, but he pitched as if he wanted to compensate for those five early runs. Ending with a flourish, he struck out Harper looking at a stinging 98-mile-per-hour fastball, on his 99th and final pitch.", "sentence_answer": "The Mets\u2019 pitchers have set an example for the whole team, compiling 17 R.B.I., the most of any pitching staff in baseball.", "paragraph_id": "5d7005d5c8e4820a9b66a9ba"} +{"question": "How many said they smoked cigarettes?", "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": "Fewer than one in 50", "sentence": "Fewer than one in 50 students reported smoking cigarettes.", "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": " Fewer than one in 50 students reported smoking cigarettes.", "paragraph_id": "5d700715c8e4820a9b66acd5"} +{"question": "Who is the youngest winner of the Ted Hughes Prize?", "paragraph": "A wunderkind rapper and spoken word performer equally influenced by Wu-Tang Clan and Joyce, Bukowski and Blake; an English poet whose musical sense of language bridges the worlds of rap and traditional lyric verse; a fan favorite at the Glastonbury music festival who became the youngest winner of the Ted Hughes poetry prize. Such dichotomies not only attest to the 29-year-old Kate Tempest\u2019s gift for shattering \u2014 and transcending \u2014 convention and conventional genres, but they also underscore the tensions and contradictions that fuel her dynamic art. Tiresias, the blind seer in Greek mythology who lived as a man and a woman, is the presiding figure in her collection \u201cHold Your Own,\u201d and the contemporary characters in her dazzling story-poem \u201cBrand New Ancients\u201d are also conflicted beings in search of a self. They are torn between confidence and self-loathing, between aching loneliness and the tumult of love, between ambition and a revulsion for the phony accouterments of fame. Ms. Tempest describes these ordinary people as gods, and their quarrels \u2014 so reminiscent of the squabbling among the Greek gods on Mount Olympus \u2014 are both petty and profound.", "answer": "Kate Tempest", "sentence": "Such dichotomies not only attest to the 29-year-old Kate Tempest \u2019s gift for shattering \u2014 and transcending \u2014 convention and conventional genres, but they also underscore the tensions and contradictions that fuel her dynamic art.", "paragraph_sentence": "A wunderkind rapper and spoken word performer equally influenced by Wu-Tang Clan and Joyce, Bukowski and Blake; an English poet whose musical sense of language bridges the worlds of rap and traditional lyric verse; a fan favorite at the Glastonbury music festival who became the youngest winner of the Ted Hughes poetry prize. Such dichotomies not only attest to the 29-year-old Kate Tempest \u2019s gift for shattering \u2014 and transcending \u2014 convention and conventional genres, but they also underscore the tensions and contradictions that fuel her dynamic art. Tiresias, the blind seer in Greek mythology who lived as a man and a woman, is the presiding figure in her collection \u201cHold Your Own,\u201d and the contemporary characters in her dazzling story-poem \u201cBrand New Ancients\u201d are also conflicted beings in search of a self. They are torn between confidence and self-loathing, between aching loneliness and the tumult of love, between ambition and a revulsion for the phony accouterments of fame. Ms. Tempest describes these ordinary people as gods, and their quarrels \u2014 so reminiscent of the squabbling among the Greek gods on Mount Olympus \u2014 are both petty and profound.", "paragraph_answer": "A wunderkind rapper and spoken word performer equally influenced by Wu-Tang Clan and Joyce, Bukowski and Blake; an English poet whose musical sense of language bridges the worlds of rap and traditional lyric verse; a fan favorite at the Glastonbury music festival who became the youngest winner of the Ted Hughes poetry prize. Such dichotomies not only attest to the 29-year-old Kate Tempest \u2019s gift for shattering \u2014 and transcending \u2014 convention and conventional genres, but they also underscore the tensions and contradictions that fuel her dynamic art. Tiresias, the blind seer in Greek mythology who lived as a man and a woman, is the presiding figure in her collection \u201cHold Your Own,\u201d and the contemporary characters in her dazzling story-poem \u201cBrand New Ancients\u201d are also conflicted beings in search of a self. They are torn between confidence and self-loathing, between aching loneliness and the tumult of love, between ambition and a revulsion for the phony accouterments of fame. Ms. Tempest describes these ordinary people as gods, and their quarrels \u2014 so reminiscent of the squabbling among the Greek gods on Mount Olympus \u2014 are both petty and profound.", "sentence_answer": "Such dichotomies not only attest to the 29-year-old Kate Tempest \u2019s gift for shattering \u2014 and transcending \u2014 convention and conventional genres, but they also underscore the tensions and contradictions that fuel her dynamic art.", "paragraph_id": "5d700df5c8e4820a9b66b9ae"} +{"question": "What is the name of the executive director that resigned from the Fund for Public Schools?", "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": "Iris Chen", "sentence": "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", "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 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", "paragraph_id": "5d70888cc8e4820a9b66f47a"} +{"question": "What was the cost of a three-bedroom property?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe had a couple of nonnegotiable things \u2014 outdoor space and nothing smaller than 1,200 square feet,\u201d Ms. Wenk said. After nine months of searching they pounced last year when they learned, through Joanna Mayfield Marks, an agent at Halstead Property, of a 1,500-square-foot condo with two terraces. The four-building complex had three units on the market late last month, ranging from a studio for $559,000 to a three-bedroom for $1.85 million, according to Andrew Booth, an associate broker at the Corcoran Group. The area has \u201cdefinitely become a more popular neighborhood,\u201d said Lea Fulton, an agent at the Ideal Properties Group. \u201cPeople are coming in saying, \u2018Hey, I\u2019m interested in Clinton Hill,\u2019 and before it was \u2018I can\u2019t afford Fort Greene anymore, so I guess I\u2019ll look into Clinton Hill.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "$1.85 million", "sentence": "The four-building complex had three units on the market late last month, ranging from a studio for $559,000 to a three-bedroom for $1.85 million , according to Andrew Booth, an associate broker at the Corcoran Group.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe had a couple of nonnegotiable things \u2014 outdoor space and nothing smaller than 1,200 square feet,\u201d Ms. Wenk said. After nine months of searching they pounced last year when they learned, through Joanna Mayfield Marks, an agent at Halstead Property, of a 1,500-square-foot condo with two terraces. The four-building complex had three units on the market late last month, ranging from a studio for $559,000 to a three-bedroom for $1.85 million , according to Andrew Booth, an associate broker at the Corcoran Group. The area has \u201cdefinitely become a more popular neighborhood,\u201d said Lea Fulton, an agent at the Ideal Properties Group. \u201cPeople are coming in saying, \u2018Hey, I\u2019m interested in Clinton Hill,\u2019 and before it was \u2018I can\u2019t afford Fort Greene anymore, so I guess I\u2019ll look into Clinton Hill.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe had a couple of nonnegotiable things \u2014 outdoor space and nothing smaller than 1,200 square feet,\u201d Ms. Wenk said. After nine months of searching they pounced last year when they learned, through Joanna Mayfield Marks, an agent at Halstead Property, of a 1,500-square-foot condo with two terraces. The four-building complex had three units on the market late last month, ranging from a studio for $559,000 to a three-bedroom for $1.85 million , according to Andrew Booth, an associate broker at the Corcoran Group. The area has \u201cdefinitely become a more popular neighborhood,\u201d said Lea Fulton, an agent at the Ideal Properties Group. \u201cPeople are coming in saying, \u2018Hey, I\u2019m interested in Clinton Hill,\u2019 and before it was \u2018I can\u2019t afford Fort Greene anymore, so I guess I\u2019ll look into Clinton Hill.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "The four-building complex had three units on the market late last month, ranging from a studio for $559,000 to a three-bedroom for $1.85 million , according to Andrew Booth, an associate broker at the Corcoran Group.", "paragraph_id": "5d700a18c8e4820a9b66b391"} +{"question": "What program is the novelist a graduate", "paragraph": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "answer": "New York University\u2019s creative writing program", "sentence": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program , and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches.", "paragraph_sentence": " This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program , and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "paragraph_answer": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program , and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "sentence_answer": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program , and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches.", "paragraph_id": "5d701877c8e4820a9b66c48b"} +{"question": "What league is facing litigation from former players?", "paragraph": "Women\u2019s hockey is a growing sport, evolving through quicker and stronger players who are finally being rewarded for their talents as paid professional athletes. But concussions have kept some of the best players away from the ice for extended periods as the sport struggles to combat an issue that football and men\u2019s hockey have failed at times to properly address. The N.H.L. is facing litigation, with former players accusing the league of glorifying violence and ignoring the dangers of repeated head injuries. \u201cThe amount of players still getting concussions on the national level and college level, it\u2019s too many,\u201d said Pucci, whose sister\u2019s hockey career was also ended by a concussion.", "answer": "The N.H.L.", "sentence": "The N.H.L. is facing litigation, with former players accusing the league of glorifying violence and ignoring the dangers of repeated head injuries.", "paragraph_sentence": "Women\u2019s hockey is a growing sport, evolving through quicker and stronger players who are finally being rewarded for their talents as paid professional athletes. But concussions have kept some of the best players away from the ice for extended periods as the sport struggles to combat an issue that football and men\u2019s hockey have failed at times to properly address. The N.H.L. is facing litigation, with former players accusing the league of glorifying violence and ignoring the dangers of repeated head injuries. \u201cThe amount of players still getting concussions on the national level and college level, it\u2019s too many,\u201d said Pucci, whose sister\u2019s hockey career was also ended by a concussion.", "paragraph_answer": "Women\u2019s hockey is a growing sport, evolving through quicker and stronger players who are finally being rewarded for their talents as paid professional athletes. But concussions have kept some of the best players away from the ice for extended periods as the sport struggles to combat an issue that football and men\u2019s hockey have failed at times to properly address. The N.H.L. is facing litigation, with former players accusing the league of glorifying violence and ignoring the dangers of repeated head injuries. \u201cThe amount of players still getting concussions on the national level and college level, it\u2019s too many,\u201d said Pucci, whose sister\u2019s hockey career was also ended by a concussion.", "sentence_answer": " The N.H.L. is facing litigation, with former players accusing the league of glorifying violence and ignoring the dangers of repeated head injuries.", "paragraph_id": "5d702048c8e4820a9b66cbfe"} +{"question": "What store opened next door?", "paragraph": "Next door is Gucci, the first American store to open under the guidance of the new creative director, Alessandro Michele. His vision \u2014 which emphasizes the brand\u2019s traditional marks, logos and patterns, with a little extra naturalist flair \u2014 is an optimal fit for this location, as close to a fast-food environment as one can get while purchasing a reversible nylon bomber for $1,400, or a polo shirt with a snake embroidered into the collar for $810. The store is large and spare, not contemplative so much as blunt, and emphasizes items (like three-stripe sneakers and logo-print handbags) that are identifiable to even the most confused shopper. The store is currently carrying the cruise collection, but still it captures the conflict between Mr. Michele\u2019s responsibilities to the brand as a source of innovation and as a source of gift-shop totems, two approaches to luxury that don\u2019t always complement each other.", "answer": "Gucci", "sentence": "Next door is Gucci , the first American store to open under the guidance of the new creative director, Alessandro Michele.", "paragraph_sentence": " Next door is Gucci , the first American store to open under the guidance of the new creative director, Alessandro Michele. His vision \u2014 which emphasizes the brand\u2019s traditional marks, logos and patterns, with a little extra naturalist flair \u2014 is an optimal fit for this location, as close to a fast-food environment as one can get while purchasing a reversible nylon bomber for $1,400, or a polo shirt with a snake embroidered into the collar for $810. The store is large and spare, not contemplative so much as blunt, and emphasizes items (like three-stripe sneakers and logo-print handbags) that are identifiable to even the most confused shopper. The store is currently carrying the cruise collection, but still it captures the conflict between Mr. Michele\u2019s responsibilities to the brand as a source of innovation and as a source of gift-shop totems, two approaches to luxury that don\u2019t always complement each other.", "paragraph_answer": "Next door is Gucci , the first American store to open under the guidance of the new creative director, Alessandro Michele. His vision \u2014 which emphasizes the brand\u2019s traditional marks, logos and patterns, with a little extra naturalist flair \u2014 is an optimal fit for this location, as close to a fast-food environment as one can get while purchasing a reversible nylon bomber for $1,400, or a polo shirt with a snake embroidered into the collar for $810. The store is large and spare, not contemplative so much as blunt, and emphasizes items (like three-stripe sneakers and logo-print handbags) that are identifiable to even the most confused shopper. The store is currently carrying the cruise collection, but still it captures the conflict between Mr. Michele\u2019s responsibilities to the brand as a source of innovation and as a source of gift-shop totems, two approaches to luxury that don\u2019t always complement each other.", "sentence_answer": "Next door is Gucci , the first American store to open under the guidance of the new creative director, Alessandro Michele.", "paragraph_id": "5d7008adc8e4820a9b66b085"} +{"question": "What is Alfred Kaszniak's profession?", "paragraph": "In an experiment led by the Stanford psychologist Alia Crum, when people had only 10 minutes to prepare a charismatic speech, simply reframing the stress response as healthy was enough to relax them and reduce their physiological responses, if they tended to be highly reactive. In a nationally representative eight-year study, adults who reported a lot of stress in their lives were more likely to die, but only if they thought stress was harmful. Over a hundred thousand Americans may have died prematurely, \u201cnot from stress, but from the belief that stress is bad for you, \u201d as the health psychologist Kelly McGonigal notes. O.K., so meditation is just one of many ways to fight stress. But there\u2019s another major benefit of meditating: It makes you mindful. After meditating, people are more likely to focus their attention in the present. But as the neuroscientist Richard Davidson and the psychologist Alfred Kaszniak recently lamented, \u201cThere are still very few methodologically rigorous studies that demonstrate the efficacy of mindfulness-based interventions in either the treatment of specific diseases or in the promotion of well-being.\u201d", "answer": "psychologist", "sentence": "In an experiment led by the Stanford psychologist Alia Crum, when people had only 10 minutes to prepare a charismatic speech, simply reframing the stress response as healthy was enough to relax them and reduce their physiological responses, if they tended to be highly reactive.", "paragraph_sentence": " In an experiment led by the Stanford psychologist Alia Crum, when people had only 10 minutes to prepare a charismatic speech, simply reframing the stress response as healthy was enough to relax them and reduce their physiological responses, if they tended to be highly reactive. In a nationally representative eight-year study, adults who reported a lot of stress in their lives were more likely to die, but only if they thought stress was harmful. Over a hundred thousand Americans may have died prematurely, \u201cnot from stress, but from the belief that stress is bad for you, \u201d as the health psychologist Kelly McGonigal notes. O.K., so meditation is just one of many ways to fight stress. But there\u2019s another major benefit of meditating: It makes you mindful. After meditating, people are more likely to focus their attention in the present. But as the neuroscientist Richard Davidson and the psychologist Alfred Kaszniak recently lamented, \u201cThere are still very few methodologically rigorous studies that demonstrate the efficacy of mindfulness-based interventions in either the treatment of specific diseases or in the promotion of well-being.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "In an experiment led by the Stanford psychologist Alia Crum, when people had only 10 minutes to prepare a charismatic speech, simply reframing the stress response as healthy was enough to relax them and reduce their physiological responses, if they tended to be highly reactive. In a nationally representative eight-year study, adults who reported a lot of stress in their lives were more likely to die, but only if they thought stress was harmful. Over a hundred thousand Americans may have died prematurely, \u201cnot from stress, but from the belief that stress is bad for you, \u201d as the health psychologist Kelly McGonigal notes. O.K., so meditation is just one of many ways to fight stress. But there\u2019s another major benefit of meditating: It makes you mindful. After meditating, people are more likely to focus their attention in the present. But as the neuroscientist Richard Davidson and the psychologist Alfred Kaszniak recently lamented, \u201cThere are still very few methodologically rigorous studies that demonstrate the efficacy of mindfulness-based interventions in either the treatment of specific diseases or in the promotion of well-being.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In an experiment led by the Stanford psychologist Alia Crum, when people had only 10 minutes to prepare a charismatic speech, simply reframing the stress response as healthy was enough to relax them and reduce their physiological responses, if they tended to be highly reactive.", "paragraph_id": "5d702325c8e4820a9b66cf59"} +{"question": "Who was the judge for Mr. Fawwaz's trial?", "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": "Lewis A. Kaplan", "sentence": "Mr. Fawwaz\u2019s trial is expected to last about five weeks, the judge, Lewis A. Kaplan of Federal District Court, has said.", "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": "Mr. Fawwaz\u2019s trial is expected to last about five weeks, the judge, Lewis A. Kaplan of Federal District Court, has said.", "paragraph_id": "5d701f24c8e4820a9b66cae9"} +{"question": "Who is Aleix jarvis?", "paragraph": "Delta has its own array of lobbyists, including a former top aide of Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, and Steve Elmendorf, a former top Democratic aide in the House and one of Washington\u2019s pre-eminent schmoozers. The Republican lobbying firm Fierce, Isakowitz and Blalock was all-in for Delta until one of its chiefs, Mark Isakowitz, joined the staff of Senator Rob Portman, Republican of Ohio and a crucial vote on the issue. The renamed Fierce Government Relations soldiers on for Delta, with Kirk Blalock, a senior official in the George W. Bush White House, and Aleix Jarvis, a former aide to Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina, leading the charge.", "answer": "a former aide to Senator Lindsey Graham", "sentence": "The renamed Fierce Government Relations soldiers on for Delta, with Kirk Blalock, a senior official in the George W. Bush White House, and Aleix Jarvis, a former aide to Senator Lindsey Graham , Republican of South Carolina, leading the charge.", "paragraph_sentence": "Delta has its own array of lobbyists, including a former top aide of Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, and Steve Elmendorf, a former top Democratic aide in the House and one of Washington\u2019s pre-eminent schmoozers. The Republican lobbying firm Fierce, Isakowitz and Blalock was all-in for Delta until one of its chiefs, Mark Isakowitz, joined the staff of Senator Rob Portman, Republican of Ohio and a crucial vote on the issue. The renamed Fierce Government Relations soldiers on for Delta, with Kirk Blalock, a senior official in the George W. Bush White House, and Aleix Jarvis, a former aide to Senator Lindsey Graham , Republican of South Carolina, leading the charge. ", "paragraph_answer": "Delta has its own array of lobbyists, including a former top aide of Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, and Steve Elmendorf, a former top Democratic aide in the House and one of Washington\u2019s pre-eminent schmoozers. The Republican lobbying firm Fierce, Isakowitz and Blalock was all-in for Delta until one of its chiefs, Mark Isakowitz, joined the staff of Senator Rob Portman, Republican of Ohio and a crucial vote on the issue. The renamed Fierce Government Relations soldiers on for Delta, with Kirk Blalock, a senior official in the George W. Bush White House, and Aleix Jarvis, a former aide to Senator Lindsey Graham , Republican of South Carolina, leading the charge.", "sentence_answer": "The renamed Fierce Government Relations soldiers on for Delta, with Kirk Blalock, a senior official in the George W. Bush White House, and Aleix Jarvis, a former aide to Senator Lindsey Graham , Republican of South Carolina, leading the charge.", "paragraph_id": "5d700951c8e4820a9b66b1cd"} +{"question": "How many copies in South Korea has Secret Garden Sold?", "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": "430,000", "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d70230bc8e4820a9b66cf22"} +{"question": "Porter Ale House Gastropub is located where?", "paragraph": "10 P.M. (Bravo) BEST NEW RESTAURANT This week\u2019s theme, Battle of the Burger, pits Porter Ale House Gastropub of Austin, Tex., against Tongue & Cheek of Miami. 10 P.M. (Comedy Central) WORKAHOLICS The guys stage an office-wide ditch day after agreeing to hand off a mysterious package for Karl (Karl Newacheck). On \u201cBroad City,\u201d at 10:30, after realizing that they spend too much time with electronics, Abbi (Abbi Jacobson) and Ilana (Ilana Glazer) decide to unplug and spend a day in the park, where they get involved with a wedding for dogs, in-line skating and a medical emergency.", "answer": "Austin, Tex.", "sentence": "10 P.M. (Bravo) BEST NEW RESTAURANT This week\u2019s theme, Battle of the Burger, pits Porter Ale House Gastropub of Austin, Tex. , against Tongue & Cheek of Miami.", "paragraph_sentence": " 10 P.M. (Bravo) BEST NEW RESTAURANT This week\u2019s theme, Battle of the Burger, pits Porter Ale House Gastropub of Austin, Tex. , against Tongue & Cheek of Miami. 10 P.M. (Comedy Central) WORKAHOLICS The guys stage an office-wide ditch day after agreeing to hand off a mysterious package for Karl (Karl Newacheck). On \u201cBroad City,\u201d at 10:30, after realizing that they spend too much time with electronics, Abbi (Abbi Jacobson) and Ilana (Ilana Glazer) decide to unplug and spend a day in the park, where they get involved with a wedding for dogs, in-line skating and a medical emergency.", "paragraph_answer": "10 P.M. (Bravo) BEST NEW RESTAURANT This week\u2019s theme, Battle of the Burger, pits Porter Ale House Gastropub of Austin, Tex. , against Tongue & Cheek of Miami. 10 P.M. (Comedy Central) WORKAHOLICS The guys stage an office-wide ditch day after agreeing to hand off a mysterious package for Karl (Karl Newacheck). On \u201cBroad City,\u201d at 10:30, after realizing that they spend too much time with electronics, Abbi (Abbi Jacobson) and Ilana (Ilana Glazer) decide to unplug and spend a day in the park, where they get involved with a wedding for dogs, in-line skating and a medical emergency.", "sentence_answer": "10 P.M. (Bravo) BEST NEW RESTAURANT This week\u2019s theme, Battle of the Burger, pits Porter Ale House Gastropub of Austin, Tex. , against Tongue & Cheek of Miami.", "paragraph_id": "5d702714c8e4820a9b66d4e7"} +{"question": "Which artist is featured in Roxbury's \"Stillscapes\" exhibit?", "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": "Ann Getsinger", "sentence": "ROXBURY Minor Memorial Library \u201cStillscapes,\u201d paintings by Ann Getsinger .", "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": "ROXBURY Minor Memorial Library \u201cStillscapes,\u201d paintings by Ann Getsinger .", "paragraph_id": "5d7044abc8e4820a9b66e797"} +{"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": "5d7026f6c8e4820a9b66d469"} +{"question": "Who is Tim's wife visiting in the movie, \"Digging for Fire\"?", "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": "some better-off friends", "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d70858dc8e4820a9b66f437"} +{"question": "How is Cromwell usually depicted by historians?", "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": "as an unscrupulous and cruel power-monger", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d707350c8e4820a9b66f216"} +{"question": "When did she flee Europe?", "paragraph": "A friend of mine inherited a \u00adBavarian coffee set from her maternal great-\u00adgrandmother, a woman who fled Europe in the late 1930s, carrying little more than the purpose-built, velvet-lined case that still holds it. That family is scattered across the globe and the way of life the coffee set embodied has vanished, but the dainty china pot and matching cups remain flawless. Porcelain is like that. We all know that the sweep of a careless elbow can shatter it into unmendable bits. But take some basic precautions and in a hundred years it will look as good as new \u2014 its colors undimmed, its whites snowy \u2014 after you and your children are dead and gone. It is fragile, and it is strong.", "answer": "late 1930s", "sentence": "A friend of mine inherited a \u00adBavarian coffee set from her maternal great-\u00adgrandmother, a woman who fled Europe in the late 1930s , carrying little more than the purpose-built, velvet-lined case that still holds it.", "paragraph_sentence": " A friend of mine inherited a \u00adBavarian coffee set from her maternal great-\u00adgrandmother, a woman who fled Europe in the late 1930s , carrying little more than the purpose-built, velvet-lined case that still holds it. That family is scattered across the globe and the way of life the coffee set embodied has vanished, but the dainty china pot and matching cups remain flawless. Porcelain is like that. We all know that the sweep of a careless elbow can shatter it into unmendable bits. But take some basic precautions and in a hundred years it will look as good as new \u2014 its colors undimmed, its whites snowy \u2014 after you and your children are dead and gone. It is fragile, and it is strong.", "paragraph_answer": "A friend of mine inherited a \u00adBavarian coffee set from her maternal great-\u00adgrandmother, a woman who fled Europe in the late 1930s , carrying little more than the purpose-built, velvet-lined case that still holds it. That family is scattered across the globe and the way of life the coffee set embodied has vanished, but the dainty china pot and matching cups remain flawless. Porcelain is like that. We all know that the sweep of a careless elbow can shatter it into unmendable bits. But take some basic precautions and in a hundred years it will look as good as new \u2014 its colors undimmed, its whites snowy \u2014 after you and your children are dead and gone. It is fragile, and it is strong.", "sentence_answer": "A friend of mine inherited a \u00adBavarian coffee set from her maternal great-\u00adgrandmother, a woman who fled Europe in the late 1930s , carrying little more than the purpose-built, velvet-lined case that still holds it.", "paragraph_id": "5d70069dc8e4820a9b66abd4"} +{"question": "where is based drummond ?", "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": "Birmingham, Ala.", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d7024a5c8e4820a9b66d0f4"} +{"question": "How long was the website down for?", "paragraph": "\u201cDo not ignore me, as it will just increase the price,\u201d DD4BC said in one email that was made public. \u201cOnce you pay me you are free from me for the lifetime of your site.\u201d Ted Weisberg, the president of the brokerage firm Seaport Securities, which was hit in June, said that he initially thought the message was a joke. But as he called competitors, he said, he quickly learned that the threat was real. Seaport\u2019s website ended up being down for a day and a half. Mr. Weisberg\u2019s firm did not pay the ransom and repelled the bombardment of traffic with the help of one of its technical providers.", "answer": "a day and a half", "sentence": "Seaport\u2019s website ended up being down for a day and a half .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cDo not ignore me, as it will just increase the price,\u201d DD4BC said in one email that was made public. \u201cOnce you pay me you are free from me for the lifetime of your site.\u201d Ted Weisberg, the president of the brokerage firm Seaport Securities, which was hit in June, said that he initially thought the message was a joke. But as he called competitors, he said, he quickly learned that the threat was real. Seaport\u2019s website ended up being down for a day and a half . Mr. Weisberg\u2019s firm did not pay the ransom and repelled the bombardment of traffic with the help of one of its technical providers.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cDo not ignore me, as it will just increase the price,\u201d DD4BC said in one email that was made public. \u201cOnce you pay me you are free from me for the lifetime of your site.\u201d Ted Weisberg, the president of the brokerage firm Seaport Securities, which was hit in June, said that he initially thought the message was a joke. But as he called competitors, he said, he quickly learned that the threat was real. Seaport\u2019s website ended up being down for a day and a half . Mr. Weisberg\u2019s firm did not pay the ransom and repelled the bombardment of traffic with the help of one of its technical providers.", "sentence_answer": "Seaport\u2019s website ended up being down for a day and a half .", "paragraph_id": "5d703e45c8e4820a9b66e3df"} +{"question": "In the Hunger Games what character is played by Jennifer Lawrence?", "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": "Katniss Everdeen", "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700c4ec8e4820a9b66b751"} +{"question": "what is Ohio States ranking?", "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": "No. 10", "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": "5d702784c8e4820a9b66d54d"} +{"question": "In what town was a Kindergartner killed in his bed?", "paragraph": "A kindergartner was killed in his bed in Versailles before dawn Monday when a stranger from Indiana broke into his home, grabbed a kitchen knife and stabbed the boy multiple times, the police said. The police do not know why a man from 200 miles away ended up in the boy\u2019s bedroom, and why he stabbed him. The suspect, Ronald Exantus, 32, of Indianapolis, was charged with murder and first-degree burglary. Deputy Coroner T. A. Rankin identified the boy as Logan Tipton, 6. Two of his sisters suffered non-life-threatening cuts, and the suspect was held by the boy\u2019s father until the police arrived, the arrest citation said. The boy\u2019s family said they do not know the suspect.", "answer": "Versailles", "sentence": "A kindergartner was killed in his bed in Versailles before dawn Monday when a stranger from Indiana broke into his home, grabbed a kitchen knife and stabbed the boy multiple times, the police said.", "paragraph_sentence": " A kindergartner was killed in his bed in Versailles before dawn Monday when a stranger from Indiana broke into his home, grabbed a kitchen knife and stabbed the boy multiple times, the police said. The police do not know why a man from 200 miles away ended up in the boy\u2019s bedroom, and why he stabbed him. The suspect, Ronald Exantus, 32, of Indianapolis, was charged with murder and first-degree burglary. Deputy Coroner T. A. Rankin identified the boy as Logan Tipton, 6. Two of his sisters suffered non-life-threatening cuts, and the suspect was held by the boy\u2019s father until the police arrived, the arrest citation said. The boy\u2019s family said they do not know the suspect.", "paragraph_answer": "A kindergartner was killed in his bed in Versailles before dawn Monday when a stranger from Indiana broke into his home, grabbed a kitchen knife and stabbed the boy multiple times, the police said. The police do not know why a man from 200 miles away ended up in the boy\u2019s bedroom, and why he stabbed him. The suspect, Ronald Exantus, 32, of Indianapolis, was charged with murder and first-degree burglary. Deputy Coroner T. A. Rankin identified the boy as Logan Tipton, 6. Two of his sisters suffered non-life-threatening cuts, and the suspect was held by the boy\u2019s father until the police arrived, the arrest citation said. The boy\u2019s family said they do not know the suspect.", "sentence_answer": "A kindergartner was killed in his bed in Versailles before dawn Monday when a stranger from Indiana broke into his home, grabbed a kitchen knife and stabbed the boy multiple times, the police said.", "paragraph_id": "5d7005b0c8e4820a9b66a965"} +{"question": "What sate is mentioned in the last few sentences?", "paragraph": "He started the hunt last summer at open houses. There was always \u201cthat essential element that kept you from continuing,\u201d he said. Usually it was size. He was coming from a 5,400-square-foot five-bedroom house, and every one-bedroom he saw seemed small. Places with sufficient space were going for well over $1 million. In one case, he intended to bid, but was told \u201cthere are already three offers beyond the asking price,\u201d he said. \u201cThis does not happen in Florida.\u201d The mother of an employee at Garc\u00eda Media was a friend of Lisa Greenblatt, a saleswoman at Douglas Elliman, who helped him with his search.", "answer": "Florida", "sentence": "\u201cThis does not happen in Florida .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "He started the hunt last summer at open houses. There was always \u201cthat essential element that kept you from continuing,\u201d he said. Usually it was size. He was coming from a 5,400-square-foot five-bedroom house, and every one-bedroom he saw seemed small. Places with sufficient space were going for well over $1 million. In one case, he intended to bid, but was told \u201cthere are already three offers beyond the asking price,\u201d he said. \u201cThis does not happen in Florida .\u201d The mother of an employee at Garc\u00eda Media was a friend of Lisa Greenblatt, a saleswoman at Douglas Elliman, who helped him with his search.", "paragraph_answer": "He started the hunt last summer at open houses. There was always \u201cthat essential element that kept you from continuing,\u201d he said. Usually it was size. He was coming from a 5,400-square-foot five-bedroom house, and every one-bedroom he saw seemed small. Places with sufficient space were going for well over $1 million. In one case, he intended to bid, but was told \u201cthere are already three offers beyond the asking price,\u201d he said. \u201cThis does not happen in Florida .\u201d The mother of an employee at Garc\u00eda Media was a friend of Lisa Greenblatt, a saleswoman at Douglas Elliman, who helped him with his search.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThis does not happen in Florida .\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d70066ac8e4820a9b66ab59"} +{"question": "Lamesa White and her children moved away from where?", "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": "Dallas", "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d704680c8e4820a9b66e863"} +{"question": "On what avenue does the Tracy Mansion reside?", "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": "105 Eighth", "sentence": "At 105 Eighth Avenue, the neoclassical Tracy Mansion, which served for years as a Montessori school, is on the market for $13 million.", "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": "At 105 Eighth Avenue, the neoclassical Tracy Mansion, which served for years as a Montessori school, is on the market for $13 million.", "paragraph_id": "5d708e7ec8e4820a9b66f55c"} +{"question": "Where was the restaurant located?", "paragraph": "We were eating dinner at Houseman, a restaurant opened by the chef Ned Baldwin on the once-quiet far-western side of SoHo, now called Hudson Square. It is a spare, welcoming room, with walls of white brick, warm lighting, smooth wooden tables the color of Bridgehampton sand \u2014 a neighborhood restaurant for those who live amid art and commerce, who travel widely, who want to eat simply and well. There was succulent roast chicken in front of us, and a confitted turkey leg accompanied by bacon and prunes and a slab of grilled bread, a shatteringly crisp fist of fried haddock, a few fingers of juicy sausage. There was a plate of roasted carrots with cottage cheese and pumpkin seeds. There were soft, perfect leeks with fried cauliflower, anchovies and bread crumbs that caught the light from the flickering votive candles on the table. This all made for superb eating.", "answer": "SoHo", "sentence": "We were eating dinner at Houseman, a restaurant opened by the chef Ned Baldwin on the once-quiet far-western side of SoHo , now called Hudson Square.", "paragraph_sentence": " We were eating dinner at Houseman, a restaurant opened by the chef Ned Baldwin on the once-quiet far-western side of SoHo , now called Hudson Square. It is a spare, welcoming room, with walls of white brick, warm lighting, smooth wooden tables the color of Bridgehampton sand \u2014 a neighborhood restaurant for those who live amid art and commerce, who travel widely, who want to eat simply and well. There was succulent roast chicken in front of us, and a confitted turkey leg accompanied by bacon and prunes and a slab of grilled bread, a shatteringly crisp fist of fried haddock, a few fingers of juicy sausage. There was a plate of roasted carrots with cottage cheese and pumpkin seeds. There were soft, perfect leeks with fried cauliflower, anchovies and bread crumbs that caught the light from the flickering votive candles on the table. This all made for superb eating.", "paragraph_answer": "We were eating dinner at Houseman, a restaurant opened by the chef Ned Baldwin on the once-quiet far-western side of SoHo , now called Hudson Square. It is a spare, welcoming room, with walls of white brick, warm lighting, smooth wooden tables the color of Bridgehampton sand \u2014 a neighborhood restaurant for those who live amid art and commerce, who travel widely, who want to eat simply and well. There was succulent roast chicken in front of us, and a confitted turkey leg accompanied by bacon and prunes and a slab of grilled bread, a shatteringly crisp fist of fried haddock, a few fingers of juicy sausage. There was a plate of roasted carrots with cottage cheese and pumpkin seeds. There were soft, perfect leeks with fried cauliflower, anchovies and bread crumbs that caught the light from the flickering votive candles on the table. This all made for superb eating.", "sentence_answer": "We were eating dinner at Houseman, a restaurant opened by the chef Ned Baldwin on the once-quiet far-western side of SoHo , now called Hudson Square.", "paragraph_id": "5d700563c8e4820a9b66a8d7"} +{"question": "In which state did someone die from spice on Wednesday?", "paragraph": "The total number of fatalities nationwide this year is not available, health officials said. One person in Louisiana died Wednesday and two others were in intensive care, said Mark Ryan, the director of the Louisiana Poison Center. \u201cWe had one hospital in the Baton Rouge area that saw over 110 cases in February. That\u2019s a huge spike,\u201d Dr. Ryan said. \u201cThere\u2019s a large amount of use going on. When one of these new ingredients \u2014 something that\u2019s more potent and gives a bigger high \u2014 is released and gets into distribution, it can cause these more extreme effects.\u201d", "answer": "Louisiana", "sentence": "One person in Louisiana died Wednesday and two others were in intensive care, said Mark Ryan, the director of the Louisiana Poison Center.", "paragraph_sentence": "The total number of fatalities nationwide this year is not available, health officials said. One person in Louisiana died Wednesday and two others were in intensive care, said Mark Ryan, the director of the Louisiana Poison Center. \u201cWe had one hospital in the Baton Rouge area that saw over 110 cases in February. That\u2019s a huge spike,\u201d Dr. Ryan said. \u201cThere\u2019s a large amount of use going on. When one of these new ingredients \u2014 something that\u2019s more potent and gives a bigger high \u2014 is released and gets into distribution, it can cause these more extreme effects.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The total number of fatalities nationwide this year is not available, health officials said. One person in Louisiana died Wednesday and two others were in intensive care, said Mark Ryan, the director of the Louisiana Poison Center. \u201cWe had one hospital in the Baton Rouge area that saw over 110 cases in February. That\u2019s a huge spike,\u201d Dr. Ryan said. \u201cThere\u2019s a large amount of use going on. When one of these new ingredients \u2014 something that\u2019s more potent and gives a bigger high \u2014 is released and gets into distribution, it can cause these more extreme effects.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "One person in Louisiana died Wednesday and two others were in intensive care, said Mark Ryan, the director of the Louisiana Poison Center.", "paragraph_id": "5d700aebc8e4820a9b66b518"} +{"question": "What year did Lorraine's mother buy the North Slope townhouse?", "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": "1949", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d708db0c8e4820a9b66f550"} +{"question": "Who had edited or published Robert Hass, Guy Davenport, Wendell Berry, M.F.K. Fisher and Anne Lamott?", "paragraph": "Back when it was the Glad Hand, a guy named John Hamilton tended the bar. \u201cWe used to sit in there and drink beer after he closed the place,\u201d Mr. Seymour recalled, \u201cand plot what the No Name would be like. It was going to be Sausalito\u2019s living room, and it would be crowded from the day it opened.\u201d I didn\u2019t see any reason to go inside Scoma\u2019s; it didn\u2019t seem that the Glad Hand spirit would have survived. After all, the guys who drank there were plotting their escape back in the 1950s. So I continued up the Bridgeway to Poggio, the Italian restaurant where I had planned to meet Jack Shoemaker, Mr. Connell\u2019s longtime editor. Mr. Shoemaker is Bay Area literary history: He has also edited or published Robert Hass, Guy Davenport, Wendell Berry, M.F.K. Fisher and Anne Lamott. But Mr. Connell was one of his first writers, and the No Name years came at the beginning of a 50-year friendship.", "answer": "Jack Shoemaker", "sentence": "So I continued up the Bridgeway to Poggio, the Italian restaurant where I had planned to meet Jack Shoemaker , Mr. Connell\u2019s longtime editor.", "paragraph_sentence": "Back when it was the Glad Hand, a guy named John Hamilton tended the bar. \u201cWe used to sit in there and drink beer after he closed the place,\u201d Mr. Seymour recalled, \u201cand plot what the No Name would be like. It was going to be Sausalito\u2019s living room, and it would be crowded from the day it opened.\u201d I didn\u2019t see any reason to go inside Scoma\u2019s; it didn\u2019t seem that the Glad Hand spirit would have survived. After all, the guys who drank there were plotting their escape back in the 1950s. So I continued up the Bridgeway to Poggio, the Italian restaurant where I had planned to meet Jack Shoemaker , Mr. Connell\u2019s longtime editor. Mr. Shoemaker is Bay Area literary history: He has also edited or published Robert Hass, Guy Davenport, Wendell Berry, M.F.K. Fisher and Anne Lamott. But Mr. Connell was one of his first writers, and the No Name years came at the beginning of a 50-year friendship.", "paragraph_answer": "Back when it was the Glad Hand, a guy named John Hamilton tended the bar. \u201cWe used to sit in there and drink beer after he closed the place,\u201d Mr. Seymour recalled, \u201cand plot what the No Name would be like. It was going to be Sausalito\u2019s living room, and it would be crowded from the day it opened.\u201d I didn\u2019t see any reason to go inside Scoma\u2019s; it didn\u2019t seem that the Glad Hand spirit would have survived. After all, the guys who drank there were plotting their escape back in the 1950s. So I continued up the Bridgeway to Poggio, the Italian restaurant where I had planned to meet Jack Shoemaker , Mr. Connell\u2019s longtime editor. Mr. Shoemaker is Bay Area literary history: He has also edited or published Robert Hass, Guy Davenport, Wendell Berry, M.F.K. Fisher and Anne Lamott. But Mr. Connell was one of his first writers, and the No Name years came at the beginning of a 50-year friendship.", "sentence_answer": "So I continued up the Bridgeway to Poggio, the Italian restaurant where I had planned to meet Jack Shoemaker , Mr. Connell\u2019s longtime editor.", "paragraph_id": "5d701a31c8e4820a9b66c60b"} +{"question": "what state is Scott Walker governor of?", "paragraph": "In Wisconsin, a proposal pushed by Gov. Scott Walker would remove the notion of tenure in the university system. The bill is expected to go before the state Assembly and Senate this month. But experts say the idea of tenure has such a strong hold in American education that even colleges struggling under dire budgets in other states are unlikely to follow suit \u2014 though they are often limiting tenure. Tenure goes back to medieval times, and the tradition of awarding professors lifetime job guarantees carried over to America, where it began in the late 1700s to protect academic freedom at religious schools. Its grip strengthened in the 1800s when university donors or legislators tried to remove professors whose views they disliked. Britain\u2019s experience may hold some lessons. In 1988, Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher abolished the practice as a cost-cutting move.", "answer": "Wisconsin", "sentence": "In Wisconsin , a proposal pushed by Gov. Scott Walker would remove the notion of tenure in the university system.", "paragraph_sentence": " In Wisconsin , a proposal pushed by Gov. Scott Walker would remove the notion of tenure in the university system. The bill is expected to go before the state Assembly and Senate this month. But experts say the idea of tenure has such a strong hold in American education that even colleges struggling under dire budgets in other states are unlikely to follow suit \u2014 though they are often limiting tenure. Tenure goes back to medieval times, and the tradition of awarding professors lifetime job guarantees carried over to America, where it began in the late 1700s to protect academic freedom at religious schools. Its grip strengthened in the 1800s when university donors or legislators tried to remove professors whose views they disliked. Britain\u2019s experience may hold some lessons. In 1988, Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher abolished the practice as a cost-cutting move.", "paragraph_answer": "In Wisconsin , a proposal pushed by Gov. Scott Walker would remove the notion of tenure in the university system. The bill is expected to go before the state Assembly and Senate this month. But experts say the idea of tenure has such a strong hold in American education that even colleges struggling under dire budgets in other states are unlikely to follow suit \u2014 though they are often limiting tenure. Tenure goes back to medieval times, and the tradition of awarding professors lifetime job guarantees carried over to America, where it began in the late 1700s to protect academic freedom at religious schools. Its grip strengthened in the 1800s when university donors or legislators tried to remove professors whose views they disliked. Britain\u2019s experience may hold some lessons. In 1988, Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher abolished the practice as a cost-cutting move.", "sentence_answer": "In Wisconsin , a proposal pushed by Gov. Scott Walker would remove the notion of tenure in the university system.", "paragraph_id": "5d700c84c8e4820a9b66b7c7"} +{"question": "According to reports, how many months will Iranians have to wait before the sanctions are lifted?", "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": "more than a few months", "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d702671c8e4820a9b66d2bb"} +{"question": "Which year did Gary A. Rizzo graduate from college?", "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": "1993", "sentence": "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", "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": "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", "paragraph_id": "5d702b26c8e4820a9b66d899"} +{"question": "What did George say when offered to go to Princeton?", "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": "I refused", "sentence": "Being stubborn, I refused .\u201d", "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": "Being stubborn, I refused .\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d703280c8e4820a9b66ddcc"} +{"question": "What is Avenging Angelo's talent?", "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": "to locate empty parking spots", "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": "5d700c41c8e4820a9b66b72c"} +{"question": "What is the name of a character that is glum, pudgy blob?", "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": "Gary", "sentence": "Only a fool would trade him for Gary , a glum, pudgy blob.", "paragraph_sentence": "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.", "paragraph_answer": "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.", "sentence_answer": "Only a fool would trade him for Gary , a glum, pudgy blob.", "paragraph_id": "5d7079a3c8e4820a9b66f2f4"} +{"question": "How much is the current reward for the safe return of Robert A. Levinson?", "paragraph": "The United States announced Monday that it had increased to $5 million its reward for information that could lead to the safe return of Robert A. Levinson, a former F.B.I. agent who disappeared in Iran in 2007. The move comes as the Obama administration appears to be closing in on an agreement with Iran under which Tehran would accept limits on its nuclear program in return for the lifting of economic sanctions. The fate of Americans who have been detained by Iran \u2014 or in Mr. Levinson\u2019s case who have disappeared there \u2014 is not formally part of the talks. Monday was the eighth anniversary of Mr. Levinson\u2019s disappearance, which occurred during a visit he made to Kish Island, Iran. His family received photographs and a video in late 2010 and early 2011. The F.B.I. offered a $1 million reward in 2012 for information about Mr. Levinson and increased it by $4 million on Monday. Iran has denied that it knows his whereabouts.", "answer": "$5 million its reward", "sentence": "The United States announced Monday that it had increased to $5 million its reward for information that could lead to the safe return of Robert A. Levinson, a former F.B.I. agent who disappeared in Iran in 2007.", "paragraph_sentence": " The United States announced Monday that it had increased to $5 million its reward for information that could lead to the safe return of Robert A. Levinson, a former F.B.I. agent who disappeared in Iran in 2007. The move comes as the Obama administration appears to be closing in on an agreement with Iran under which Tehran would accept limits on its nuclear program in return for the lifting of economic sanctions. The fate of Americans who have been detained by Iran \u2014 or in Mr. Levinson\u2019s case who have disappeared there \u2014 is not formally part of the talks. Monday was the eighth anniversary of Mr. Levinson\u2019s disappearance, which occurred during a visit he made to Kish Island, Iran. His family received photographs and a video in late 2010 and early 2011. The F.B.I. offered a $1 million reward in 2012 for information about Mr. Levinson and increased it by $4 million on Monday. Iran has denied that it knows his whereabouts.", "paragraph_answer": "The United States announced Monday that it had increased to $5 million its reward for information that could lead to the safe return of Robert A. Levinson, a former F.B.I. agent who disappeared in Iran in 2007. The move comes as the Obama administration appears to be closing in on an agreement with Iran under which Tehran would accept limits on its nuclear program in return for the lifting of economic sanctions. The fate of Americans who have been detained by Iran \u2014 or in Mr. Levinson\u2019s case who have disappeared there \u2014 is not formally part of the talks. Monday was the eighth anniversary of Mr. Levinson\u2019s disappearance, which occurred during a visit he made to Kish Island, Iran. His family received photographs and a video in late 2010 and early 2011. The F.B.I. offered a $1 million reward in 2012 for information about Mr. Levinson and increased it by $4 million on Monday. Iran has denied that it knows his whereabouts.", "sentence_answer": "The United States announced Monday that it had increased to $5 million its reward for information that could lead to the safe return of Robert A. Levinson, a former F.B.I. agent who disappeared in Iran in 2007.", "paragraph_id": "5d7004d7c8e4820a9b66a811"} +{"question": "Which Amendment did defense lawyers argue barred superseding state laws by the federal government?", "paragraph": "Defense lawyers had argued in court filings that the charges should be dismissed in part because marijuana\u2019s Schedule I classification was arbitrary and unconstitutional. They asserted that the 10th Amendment barred the federal government from superseding state laws legalizing marijuana for medicinal use. Judge Mueller ruled that any adjustments to the law were better left to Congress. \u201cThis is not the court and this is not the time,\u201d she said Wednesday, according to a report by The Associated Press. A written ruling will be issued by the end of the week. The decision dismayed advocates of marijuana legalization.", "answer": "10th", "sentence": "They asserted that the 10th Amendment barred the federal government from superseding state laws legalizing marijuana for medicinal use.", "paragraph_sentence": "Defense lawyers had argued in court filings that the charges should be dismissed in part because marijuana\u2019s Schedule I classification was arbitrary and unconstitutional. They asserted that the 10th Amendment barred the federal government from superseding state laws legalizing marijuana for medicinal use. Judge Mueller ruled that any adjustments to the law were better left to Congress. \u201cThis is not the court and this is not the time,\u201d she said Wednesday, according to a report by The Associated Press. A written ruling will be issued by the end of the week. The decision dismayed advocates of marijuana legalization.", "paragraph_answer": "Defense lawyers had argued in court filings that the charges should be dismissed in part because marijuana\u2019s Schedule I classification was arbitrary and unconstitutional. They asserted that the 10th Amendment barred the federal government from superseding state laws legalizing marijuana for medicinal use. Judge Mueller ruled that any adjustments to the law were better left to Congress. \u201cThis is not the court and this is not the time,\u201d she said Wednesday, according to a report by The Associated Press. A written ruling will be issued by the end of the week. The decision dismayed advocates of marijuana legalization.", "sentence_answer": "They asserted that the 10th Amendment barred the federal government from superseding state laws legalizing marijuana for medicinal use.", "paragraph_id": "5d700b26c8e4820a9b66b588"} +{"question": "What Disney movie is the basis for 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": "Peter Pan", "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": "5d702091c8e4820a9b66cc67"} +{"question": "Where are Clinton and Sanders competing in the opinion caucus?", "paragraph": "While Republican candidates for the White House want to repeal the Affordable Care Act and generally oppose interfering with the drug industry, Mrs. Clinton and Mr. Sanders are competing fiercely with each other to press for greater competition and new regulations to rein in pharmaceutical companies. Mrs. Clinton announced her patient spending cap as part of a plan that includes requiring most drug makers to spend a defined portion of their profits on research and development, ending tax breaks for pharmaceutical advertising and allowing Americans to import lower-priced drugs from other countries. \u201cIt has gotten to the point where people are being asked to pay not just hundreds but thousands of dollars for a single pill,\u201d said Mrs. Clinton, who laid out her proposals at a forum in Iowa, where she and Mr. Sanders are running closely in opinion polls for the first-in-the-nation caucuses. \u201cThat is not the way the market is supposed to work. That is bad actors making a fortune off of people\u2019s misfortune.\u201d Even before Mrs. Clinton spoke, Mr. Sanders issued a statement reiterating his proposals, made early this month, including letting people buy drugs from Canada and allowing Medicare to negotiate with drug companies over prices (which is also in her plan). He also noted that he has backed medication purchases from Canada since 1999, before Mrs. Clinton joined the Senate.", "answer": "Iowa", "sentence": "\u201cIt has gotten to the point where people are being asked to pay not just hundreds but thousands of dollars for a single pill,\u201d said Mrs. Clinton, who laid out her proposals at a forum in Iowa , where she and Mr. Sanders are running closely in opinion polls for the first-in-the-nation caucuses.", "paragraph_sentence": "While Republican candidates for the White House want to repeal the Affordable Care Act and generally oppose interfering with the drug industry, Mrs. Clinton and Mr. Sanders are competing fiercely with each other to press for greater competition and new regulations to rein in pharmaceutical companies. Mrs. Clinton announced her patient spending cap as part of a plan that includes requiring most drug makers to spend a defined portion of their profits on research and development, ending tax breaks for pharmaceutical advertising and allowing Americans to import lower-priced drugs from other countries. \u201cIt has gotten to the point where people are being asked to pay not just hundreds but thousands of dollars for a single pill,\u201d said Mrs. Clinton, who laid out her proposals at a forum in Iowa , where she and Mr. Sanders are running closely in opinion polls for the first-in-the-nation caucuses. \u201cThat is not the way the market is supposed to work. That is bad actors making a fortune off of people\u2019s misfortune.\u201d Even before Mrs. Clinton spoke, Mr. Sanders issued a statement reiterating his proposals, made early this month, including letting people buy drugs from Canada and allowing Medicare to negotiate with drug companies over prices (which is also in her plan). He also noted that he has backed medication purchases from Canada since 1999, before Mrs. Clinton joined the Senate.", "paragraph_answer": "While Republican candidates for the White House want to repeal the Affordable Care Act and generally oppose interfering with the drug industry, Mrs. Clinton and Mr. Sanders are competing fiercely with each other to press for greater competition and new regulations to rein in pharmaceutical companies. Mrs. Clinton announced her patient spending cap as part of a plan that includes requiring most drug makers to spend a defined portion of their profits on research and development, ending tax breaks for pharmaceutical advertising and allowing Americans to import lower-priced drugs from other countries. \u201cIt has gotten to the point where people are being asked to pay not just hundreds but thousands of dollars for a single pill,\u201d said Mrs. Clinton, who laid out her proposals at a forum in Iowa , where she and Mr. Sanders are running closely in opinion polls for the first-in-the-nation caucuses. \u201cThat is not the way the market is supposed to work. That is bad actors making a fortune off of people\u2019s misfortune.\u201d Even before Mrs. Clinton spoke, Mr. Sanders issued a statement reiterating his proposals, made early this month, including letting people buy drugs from Canada and allowing Medicare to negotiate with drug companies over prices (which is also in her plan). He also noted that he has backed medication purchases from Canada since 1999, before Mrs. Clinton joined the Senate.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt has gotten to the point where people are being asked to pay not just hundreds but thousands of dollars for a single pill,\u201d said Mrs. Clinton, who laid out her proposals at a forum in Iowa , where she and Mr. Sanders are running closely in opinion polls for the first-in-the-nation caucuses.", "paragraph_id": "5d7005f3c8e4820a9b66aa29"} +{"question": "What happened to him?", "paragraph": "A brain infection caused by a parasite was eventually suspected. Slowly, he recovered. \u201cThat changed him; it made him live in the moment,\u201d Julie Trice said. \u201cIt made him realize that tomorrow is not promised, and neither is the next game.\u201d Healthy again, Travis Trice had time to work out and get stronger. \u201cHe got up to maybe 175 pounds,\u201d Izzo said, laughing. \u201cBut this past summer, he really advanced a lot physically. And I think he got more confident, too. Travis has always had a high basketball I.Q., but this season, I saw Travis develop in new ways. The last six weeks, he\u2019s just been electric.\u201d", "answer": "Travis Trice had time to work out and get stronger. \u201cHe got up to maybe 175 pounds,\u201d", "sentence": "Healthy again, Travis Trice had time to work out and get stronger. \u201cHe got up to maybe 175 pounds,\u201d Izzo said, laughing.", "paragraph_sentence": "A brain infection caused by a parasite was eventually suspected. Slowly, he recovered. \u201cThat changed him; it made him live in the moment,\u201d Julie Trice said. \u201cIt made him realize that tomorrow is not promised, and neither is the next game.\u201d Healthy again, Travis Trice had time to work out and get stronger. \u201cHe got up to maybe 175 pounds,\u201d Izzo said, laughing. \u201cBut this past summer, he really advanced a lot physically. And I think he got more confident, too. Travis has always had a high basketball I.Q., but this season, I saw Travis develop in new ways. The last six weeks, he\u2019s just been electric.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "A brain infection caused by a parasite was eventually suspected. Slowly, he recovered. \u201cThat changed him; it made him live in the moment,\u201d Julie Trice said. \u201cIt made him realize that tomorrow is not promised, and neither is the next game.\u201d Healthy again, Travis Trice had time to work out and get stronger. \u201cHe got up to maybe 175 pounds,\u201d Izzo said, laughing. \u201cBut this past summer, he really advanced a lot physically. And I think he got more confident, too. Travis has always had a high basketball I.Q., but this season, I saw Travis develop in new ways. The last six weeks, he\u2019s just been electric.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Healthy again, Travis Trice had time to work out and get stronger. \u201cHe got up to maybe 175 pounds,\u201d Izzo said, laughing.", "paragraph_id": "5d7008c1c8e4820a9b66b0c4"} +{"question": "What is the name of the individual who explained the relevance of the organ to the Roman Catholic Church?", "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": "Msgr. Kieran E. Harrington", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d703899c8e4820a9b66e147"} +{"question": "What did a man use to film a New York city police officer?", "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": "cellphone camera", "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": "5d70179cc8e4820a9b66c393"} +{"question": "In what city or area is the market that was attacked?", "paragraph": "The attack on a market in Baga Sola killed at least 16 people, said Gen. Banyaman Cossingar, the director general of Chad\u2019s gendarmerie, or armed police force. A second group of bombers killed at least 22 people at a refugee camp, he said. General Cossingar gave a preliminary toll before the government released an official count. His figures appeared to include two of the suicide bombers. There were conflicting reports on the number of wounded. The government\u2019s count was 48, while Unicef said at least 53 people were wounded.", "answer": "Baga Sola", "sentence": "The attack on a market in Baga Sola killed at least 16 people, said Gen. Banyaman Cossingar, the director general of Chad\u2019s gendarmerie, or armed police force.", "paragraph_sentence": " The attack on a market in Baga Sola killed at least 16 people, said Gen. Banyaman Cossingar, the director general of Chad\u2019s gendarmerie, or armed police force. A second group of bombers killed at least 22 people at a refugee camp, he said. General Cossingar gave a preliminary toll before the government released an official count. His figures appeared to include two of the suicide bombers. There were conflicting reports on the number of wounded. The government\u2019s count was 48, while Unicef said at least 53 people were wounded.", "paragraph_answer": "The attack on a market in Baga Sola killed at least 16 people, said Gen. Banyaman Cossingar, the director general of Chad\u2019s gendarmerie, or armed police force. A second group of bombers killed at least 22 people at a refugee camp, he said. General Cossingar gave a preliminary toll before the government released an official count. His figures appeared to include two of the suicide bombers. There were conflicting reports on the number of wounded. The government\u2019s count was 48, while Unicef said at least 53 people were wounded.", "sentence_answer": "The attack on a market in Baga Sola killed at least 16 people, said Gen. Banyaman Cossingar, the director general of Chad\u2019s gendarmerie, or armed police force.", "paragraph_id": "5d7012d5c8e4820a9b66bf13"} +{"question": "If the new bid fails to generate more enthusiasm, which city would get a last minute bid?", "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", "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": "5d7061f7c8e4820a9b66f044"} +{"question": "What is Elektron", "paragraph": "It was a brilliant, sunny Saturday, June 11, 1955, and more than 200,000 spectators had showed up in Le Mans for the 24-hour race that was featuring many of the greatest Formula One drivers and endurance racers of the era. There were stars like Juan Manuel Fangio, Stirling Moss, Mike Hawthorn and Peter Collins, and lesser-known drivers like Paul Fr\u00e8re and Olivier Gendebien. It was a great year for the cars, as well, brands like Aston Martin, Ferrari, Jaguar and Porsche. But the attraction of the race that year was to be the return of Mercedes-Benz, which had won the event in 1952, but had then been absent in 1953 and 1954. Its 300 SLR was a prototype based on its winning Formula One car. Its star drivers were Moss and Fangio, sharing the No.19 car. There were two other Mercedes cars, one driven by Karl Kling and Andr\u00e9 Simon, the other by John Fitch and Pierre Levegh. The new Mercedes were exciting to watch. To compensate for their conventional drum brakes, they had a so-called air brake, which looked like the rear trunk of the car opening up to use an aerodynamic drag effect to powerfully brake the car. The body of the 300 SLR was made of an ultralight magnesium alloy called Elektron.", "answer": "ultralight magnesium alloy", "sentence": "The body of the 300 SLR was made of an ultralight magnesium alloy called Elektron.", "paragraph_sentence": "It was a brilliant, sunny Saturday, June 11, 1955, and more than 200,000 spectators had showed up in Le Mans for the 24-hour race that was featuring many of the greatest Formula One drivers and endurance racers of the era. There were stars like Juan Manuel Fangio, Stirling Moss, Mike Hawthorn and Peter Collins, and lesser-known drivers like Paul Fr\u00e8re and Olivier Gendebien. It was a great year for the cars, as well, brands like Aston Martin, Ferrari, Jaguar and Porsche. But the attraction of the race that year was to be the return of Mercedes-Benz, which had won the event in 1952, but had then been absent in 1953 and 1954. Its 300 SLR was a prototype based on its winning Formula One car. Its star drivers were Moss and Fangio, sharing the No.19 car. There were two other Mercedes cars, one driven by Karl Kling and Andr\u00e9 Simon, the other by John Fitch and Pierre Levegh. The new Mercedes were exciting to watch. To compensate for their conventional drum brakes, they had a so-called air brake, which looked like the rear trunk of the car opening up to use an aerodynamic drag effect to powerfully brake the car. The body of the 300 SLR was made of an ultralight magnesium alloy called Elektron. ", "paragraph_answer": "It was a brilliant, sunny Saturday, June 11, 1955, and more than 200,000 spectators had showed up in Le Mans for the 24-hour race that was featuring many of the greatest Formula One drivers and endurance racers of the era. There were stars like Juan Manuel Fangio, Stirling Moss, Mike Hawthorn and Peter Collins, and lesser-known drivers like Paul Fr\u00e8re and Olivier Gendebien. It was a great year for the cars, as well, brands like Aston Martin, Ferrari, Jaguar and Porsche. But the attraction of the race that year was to be the return of Mercedes-Benz, which had won the event in 1952, but had then been absent in 1953 and 1954. Its 300 SLR was a prototype based on its winning Formula One car. Its star drivers were Moss and Fangio, sharing the No.19 car. There were two other Mercedes cars, one driven by Karl Kling and Andr\u00e9 Simon, the other by John Fitch and Pierre Levegh. The new Mercedes were exciting to watch. To compensate for their conventional drum brakes, they had a so-called air brake, which looked like the rear trunk of the car opening up to use an aerodynamic drag effect to powerfully brake the car. The body of the 300 SLR was made of an ultralight magnesium alloy called Elektron.", "sentence_answer": "The body of the 300 SLR was made of an ultralight magnesium alloy called Elektron.", "paragraph_id": "5d705a68c8e4820a9b66ee5c"} +{"question": "What was the two teams in the game Mr. Camara was watching?", "paragraph": "Mr. Camara said he was in the day room, watching a playoff game between the Boston Celtics and Cleveland Cavaliers, when he heard a commotion in the hallway. \u201cMe and other inmates, we hear the walls shaking, doom, doom, doom, doom,\u201d he recalled. \u201cSomebody opened up the door and looked outside, and said, \u2018Yo, that\u2019s JRock they got out there.\u2019 \u201d He was on the floor, face down and handcuffed, several inmates said. In short order, a large group of officers converged around him. The inmates in their affidavits and letters identified nine officers by name as being involved.", "answer": "Boston Celtics and Cleveland Cavaliers", "sentence": "Mr. Camara said he was in the day room, watching a playoff game between the Boston Celtics and Cleveland Cavaliers , when he heard a commotion in the hallway.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Camara said he was in the day room, watching a playoff game between the Boston Celtics and Cleveland Cavaliers , when he heard a commotion in the hallway. \u201cMe and other inmates, we hear the walls shaking, doom, doom, doom, doom,\u201d he recalled. \u201cSomebody opened up the door and looked outside, and said, \u2018Yo, that\u2019s JRock they got out there.\u2019 \u201d He was on the floor, face down and handcuffed, several inmates said. In short order, a large group of officers converged around him. The inmates in their affidavits and letters identified nine officers by name as being involved.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Camara said he was in the day room, watching a playoff game between the Boston Celtics and Cleveland Cavaliers , when he heard a commotion in the hallway. \u201cMe and other inmates, we hear the walls shaking, doom, doom, doom, doom,\u201d he recalled. \u201cSomebody opened up the door and looked outside, and said, \u2018Yo, that\u2019s JRock they got out there.\u2019 \u201d He was on the floor, face down and handcuffed, several inmates said. In short order, a large group of officers converged around him. The inmates in their affidavits and letters identified nine officers by name as being involved.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Camara said he was in the day room, watching a playoff game between the Boston Celtics and Cleveland Cavaliers , when he heard a commotion in the hallway.", "paragraph_id": "5d701fa8c8e4820a9b66cb33"} +{"question": "Does the legislation reprimand groups on the basis of their religious beliefs?", "paragraph": "Nothing could be further from the truth. The legislation is not about punishing one group because of its religious beliefs; it is about acting to make sure that the civil rights of a community of overwhelmingly low-income minority children are not denied and that their constitutional right to a sound basic education is enforced. Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has endorsed the need for action in East Ramapo. Lawmakers should join him, reject the false attacks and act in the interests of the students, who have been failed terribly and must not be made to wait any longer.", "answer": "not about punishing one group because of its religious beliefs", "sentence": "The legislation is not about punishing one group because of its religious beliefs ; it is about acting to make sure that the civil rights of a community of overwhelmingly low-income minority children are not denied and that their constitutional right to a sound basic education is enforced.", "paragraph_sentence": "Nothing could be further from the truth. The legislation is not about punishing one group because of its religious beliefs ; it is about acting to make sure that the civil rights of a community of overwhelmingly low-income minority children are not denied and that their constitutional right to a sound basic education is enforced. Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has endorsed the need for action in East Ramapo. Lawmakers should join him, reject the false attacks and act in the interests of the students, who have been failed terribly and must not be made to wait any longer.", "paragraph_answer": "Nothing could be further from the truth. The legislation is not about punishing one group because of its religious beliefs ; it is about acting to make sure that the civil rights of a community of overwhelmingly low-income minority children are not denied and that their constitutional right to a sound basic education is enforced. Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has endorsed the need for action in East Ramapo. Lawmakers should join him, reject the false attacks and act in the interests of the students, who have been failed terribly and must not be made to wait any longer.", "sentence_answer": "The legislation is not about punishing one group because of its religious beliefs ; it is about acting to make sure that the civil rights of a community of overwhelmingly low-income minority children are not denied and that their constitutional right to a sound basic education is enforced.", "paragraph_id": "5d700a06c8e4820a9b66b358"} +{"question": "Who was this dinner focused on?", "paragraph": "The ties that bound Mr. Ghani to many of the dinner guests on Tuesday reflected a little-noticed story in America\u2019s longest war: After more than 13 years of nation-building in Afghanistan, much of the American national security establishment is intimately familiar with many of the nation\u2019s most senior officials, Mr. Ghani foremost among them, and loath to see a hasty withdrawal lead to a repeat of what has happened in Iraq.", "answer": "Mr. Ghani", "sentence": "The ties that bound Mr. Ghani to many of the dinner guests on Tuesday reflected a little-noticed story in America\u2019s longest war: After more than 13 years of nation-building in Afghanistan, much of the American national security establishment is intimately familiar with many of the nation\u2019s most senior officials, Mr. Ghani foremost among them, and loath to see a hasty withdrawal lead to a repeat of what has happened in Iraq.", "paragraph_sentence": " The ties that bound Mr. Ghani to many of the dinner guests on Tuesday reflected a little-noticed story in America\u2019s longest war: After more than 13 years of nation-building in Afghanistan, much of the American national security establishment is intimately familiar with many of the nation\u2019s most senior officials, Mr. Ghani foremost among them, and loath to see a hasty withdrawal lead to a repeat of what has happened in Iraq. ", "paragraph_answer": "The ties that bound Mr. Ghani to many of the dinner guests on Tuesday reflected a little-noticed story in America\u2019s longest war: After more than 13 years of nation-building in Afghanistan, much of the American national security establishment is intimately familiar with many of the nation\u2019s most senior officials, Mr. Ghani foremost among them, and loath to see a hasty withdrawal lead to a repeat of what has happened in Iraq.", "sentence_answer": "The ties that bound Mr. Ghani to many of the dinner guests on Tuesday reflected a little-noticed story in America\u2019s longest war: After more than 13 years of nation-building in Afghanistan, much of the American national security establishment is intimately familiar with many of the nation\u2019s most senior officials, Mr. Ghani foremost among them, and loath to see a hasty withdrawal lead to a repeat of what has happened in Iraq.", "paragraph_id": "5d7025a5c8e4820a9b66d1f0"} +{"question": "Where is Josh Heupel coaching now?", "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": "Utah State", "sentence": "Coach Bob Stoops replaced the offensive coordinators Josh Heupel (now at Utah State )", "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": "Coach Bob Stoops replaced the offensive coordinators Josh Heupel (now at Utah State )", "paragraph_id": "5d701647c8e4820a9b66c248"} +{"question": "What museum holds the wartime collaboration records?", "paragraph": "While the city of 25,000 may remain a symbol, it may no longer be a scapegoat. Starting this week, the government will begin releasing online 200,000 wartime collaboration records, which have been held at the Police Museum in Paris and have been off limits for 75 years. By 2019, every name in those records will be available to the public. Thierry Wirth, a Vichy historian and author, said that would provide a true picture of France\u2019s \u201ccollective involvement.\u201d \u201cThe Vichy regime was situated here, in the free zone, but the records clearly show that the greatest numbers of collaborationists were, in fact, in the occupied zone, including Paris,\u201d Mr. Wirth said. \u201cMoreover, the region in which we are situated, the Auvergne, had France\u2019s largest force of Resistance fighters, \u2018Maquis du Mont Mouchet.\u2019\u201d", "answer": "Police Museum", "sentence": "Starting this week, the government will begin releasing online 200,000 wartime collaboration records, which have been held at the Police Museum in Paris and have been off limits for 75 years.", "paragraph_sentence": "While the city of 25,000 may remain a symbol, it may no longer be a scapegoat. Starting this week, the government will begin releasing online 200,000 wartime collaboration records, which have been held at the Police Museum in Paris and have been off limits for 75 years. By 2019, every name in those records will be available to the public. Thierry Wirth, a Vichy historian and author, said that would provide a true picture of France\u2019s \u201ccollective involvement.\u201d \u201cThe Vichy regime was situated here, in the free zone, but the records clearly show that the greatest numbers of collaborationists were, in fact, in the occupied zone, including Paris,\u201d Mr. Wirth said. \u201cMoreover, the region in which we are situated, the Auvergne, had France\u2019s largest force of Resistance fighters, \u2018Maquis du Mont Mouchet.\u2019\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "While the city of 25,000 may remain a symbol, it may no longer be a scapegoat. Starting this week, the government will begin releasing online 200,000 wartime collaboration records, which have been held at the Police Museum in Paris and have been off limits for 75 years. By 2019, every name in those records will be available to the public. Thierry Wirth, a Vichy historian and author, said that would provide a true picture of France\u2019s \u201ccollective involvement.\u201d \u201cThe Vichy regime was situated here, in the free zone, but the records clearly show that the greatest numbers of collaborationists were, in fact, in the occupied zone, including Paris,\u201d Mr. Wirth said. \u201cMoreover, the region in which we are situated, the Auvergne, had France\u2019s largest force of Resistance fighters, \u2018Maquis du Mont Mouchet.\u2019\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Starting this week, the government will begin releasing online 200,000 wartime collaboration records, which have been held at the Police Museum in Paris and have been off limits for 75 years.", "paragraph_id": "5d702d68c8e4820a9b66dae9"} +{"question": "Who is the President of Turkey?", "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": "Recep Tayyip Erdogan", "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": "5d700cd5c8e4820a9b66b841"} +{"question": "Name one popular app Google owns.", "paragraph": "Google is a mobile force in many different ways: In the United States and several other countries, search queries to Google on mobile devices now outrank search queries on desktop and laptop computers. It has the world\u2019s largest mobile operating system, Android. It makes billions of dollars a year selling apps through the Google Play Store and owns many of the world\u2019s most popular apps, such as YouTube. But that has created competing priorities because apps have also diluted its position in search. Google claimed 68 percent of mobile search revenue in the United States last year, according to the research firm eMarketer. That lead, while still substantial, was down from 81 percent in 2012, a decline projected to continue as apps occupy more of people\u2019s time.", "answer": "YouTube", "sentence": "It makes billions of dollars a year selling apps through the Google Play Store and owns many of the world\u2019s most popular apps, such as YouTube .", "paragraph_sentence": "Google is a mobile force in many different ways: In the United States and several other countries, search queries to Google on mobile devices now outrank search queries on desktop and laptop computers. It has the world\u2019s largest mobile operating system, Android. It makes billions of dollars a year selling apps through the Google Play Store and owns many of the world\u2019s most popular apps, such as YouTube . But that has created competing priorities because apps have also diluted its position in search. Google claimed 68 percent of mobile search revenue in the United States last year, according to the research firm eMarketer. That lead, while still substantial, was down from 81 percent in 2012, a decline projected to continue as apps occupy more of people\u2019s time.", "paragraph_answer": "Google is a mobile force in many different ways: In the United States and several other countries, search queries to Google on mobile devices now outrank search queries on desktop and laptop computers. It has the world\u2019s largest mobile operating system, Android. It makes billions of dollars a year selling apps through the Google Play Store and owns many of the world\u2019s most popular apps, such as YouTube . But that has created competing priorities because apps have also diluted its position in search. Google claimed 68 percent of mobile search revenue in the United States last year, according to the research firm eMarketer. That lead, while still substantial, was down from 81 percent in 2012, a decline projected to continue as apps occupy more of people\u2019s time.", "sentence_answer": "It makes billions of dollars a year selling apps through the Google Play Store and owns many of the world\u2019s most popular apps, such as YouTube .", "paragraph_id": "5d703329c8e4820a9b66de3e"} +{"question": "Who is the singer for the Guys and Dolls performance?", "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": "Frank Loesser", "sentence": "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 .", "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": "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 .", "paragraph_id": "5d700b12c8e4820a9b66b56d"} +{"question": "What is the real name of Scoop Rosenbaum?", "paragraph": "In this way and in others, Ms. Moss is not so different from Heidi, who calls herself, \u201ca highly informed spectator.\u201d Or from Peggy, who Ms. Moss said that she sometimes imagined as Heidi\u2019s older cousin. \u201cI do think they would have liked each other for sure,\u201d she said. Both triumph in their careers and struggle in their relationships. Scoop Rosenbaum, Heidi\u2019s on-again, off-again boyfriend (played here by Jason Biggs), tells her, pompously and accurately, that she belongs to \u201ca generation of disappointed women. Interesting, exemplary, even sexy, but basically unhappy.\u201d", "answer": "Jason Biggs", "sentence": "Scoop Rosenbaum, Heidi\u2019s on-again, off-again boyfriend (played here by Jason Biggs ), tells her, pompously and accurately, that she belongs to \u201ca generation of disappointed women.", "paragraph_sentence": "In this way and in others, Ms. Moss is not so different from Heidi, who calls herself, \u201ca highly informed spectator.\u201d Or from Peggy, who Ms. Moss said that she sometimes imagined as Heidi\u2019s older cousin. \u201cI do think they would have liked each other for sure,\u201d she said. Both triumph in their careers and struggle in their relationships. Scoop Rosenbaum, Heidi\u2019s on-again, off-again boyfriend (played here by Jason Biggs ), tells her, pompously and accurately, that she belongs to \u201ca generation of disappointed women. Interesting, exemplary, even sexy, but basically unhappy.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "In this way and in others, Ms. Moss is not so different from Heidi, who calls herself, \u201ca highly informed spectator.\u201d Or from Peggy, who Ms. Moss said that she sometimes imagined as Heidi\u2019s older cousin. \u201cI do think they would have liked each other for sure,\u201d she said. Both triumph in their careers and struggle in their relationships. Scoop Rosenbaum, Heidi\u2019s on-again, off-again boyfriend (played here by Jason Biggs ), tells her, pompously and accurately, that she belongs to \u201ca generation of disappointed women. Interesting, exemplary, even sexy, but basically unhappy.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Scoop Rosenbaum, Heidi\u2019s on-again, off-again boyfriend (played here by Jason Biggs ), tells her, pompously and accurately, that she belongs to \u201ca generation of disappointed women.", "paragraph_id": "5d701d0fc8e4820a9b66c890"} +{"question": "What was the score of the first game?", "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": "7-2", "sentence": "Harvey lost the first game, 7-2 , in humbling and conflicting fashion.", "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": "Harvey lost the first game, 7-2 , in humbling and conflicting fashion.", "paragraph_id": "5d700508c8e4820a9b66a861"} +{"question": "Who talked about the new proposals for the Southern Tier?", "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": "Kevin Law", "sentence": "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_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": "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_id": "5d704229c8e4820a9b66e605"} +{"question": "what judge rebuked the arguments?", "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": "Judge Walls", "sentence": "Judge Walls rejected each of those arguments.", "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": " Judge Walls rejected each of those arguments.", "paragraph_id": "5d701d9bc8e4820a9b66c909"} +{"question": "How many years did 2 of the men spend in prison?", "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": "almost 33", "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d7005dbc8e4820a9b66a9d5"} +{"question": "Who was injured?", "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": "Peyton Manning", "sentence": "Osweiler moved to 3-0 since taking over for the injured Peyton Manning .", "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": "Osweiler moved to 3-0 since taking over for the injured Peyton Manning .", "paragraph_id": "5d7030c6c8e4820a9b66dceb"} +{"question": "Who asked lawmakers to vote according to their districts' choices?", "paragraph": "Mr. Milne had asked lawmakers to vote according to their districts\u2019 choices in November, not the statewide popular vote. If every legislator had done so, the outcome would have been a 90-90 tie, according to The Burlington Free Press. (One person did not vote on Thursday.) But at least 20 members ended up voting against their constituents.", "answer": "Mr. Milne", "sentence": "Mr. Milne had asked lawmakers to vote according to their districts\u2019 choices in November, not the statewide popular vote.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Milne had asked lawmakers to vote according to their districts\u2019 choices in November, not the statewide popular vote. If every legislator had done so, the outcome would have been a 90-90 tie, according to The Burlington Free Press. (One person did not vote on Thursday.) But at least 20 members ended up voting against their constituents.", "paragraph_answer": " Mr. Milne had asked lawmakers to vote according to their districts\u2019 choices in November, not the statewide popular vote. If every legislator had done so, the outcome would have been a 90-90 tie, according to The Burlington Free Press. (One person did not vote on Thursday.) But at least 20 members ended up voting against their constituents.", "sentence_answer": " Mr. Milne had asked lawmakers to vote according to their districts\u2019 choices in November, not the statewide popular vote.", "paragraph_id": "5d70398ec8e4820a9b66e1a5"} +{"question": "What is PHA created by?", "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": "It is produced by bacteria", "sentence": "It is produced by bacteria , not by mushrooms.", "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": " It is produced by bacteria , not by mushrooms.", "paragraph_id": "5d701927c8e4820a9b66c539"} +{"question": "Who was the early church separated from because of their views of sexuality?", "paragraph": "It\u2019s not that simple. The debate about race was very specific to America, modernity, the South. (Bans on interracial marriage were generally a white supremacist innovation, not an inheritance from Christendom or common law.) The slave owners and segregationists had scriptural arguments, certainly. But they were also up against one of the Bible\u2019s major meta-narratives \u2014 from the Israelites in Egypt to Saint Paul\u2019s \u201cneither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free.\u201d That\u2019s not the case with sex and marriage. The only clear biblical meta-narrative is about male and female. Sex is an area of Jewish law that Jesus explicitly makes stricter. What we now call the \u201ctraditional\u201d view of sexuality was a then-radical idea separating the early church from Roman culture, and it\u2019s remained basic in every branch of Christianity until very recently. Jettisoning it requires repudiating scripture, history and tradition in a way the end of Jim Crow did not.", "answer": "Roman culture", "sentence": "What we now call the \u201ctraditional\u201d view of sexuality was a then-radical idea separating the early church from Roman culture , and it\u2019s remained basic in every branch of Christianity until very recently.", "paragraph_sentence": "It\u2019s not that simple. The debate about race was very specific to America, modernity, the South. (Bans on interracial marriage were generally a white supremacist innovation, not an inheritance from Christendom or common law.) The slave owners and segregationists had scriptural arguments, certainly. But they were also up against one of the Bible\u2019s major meta-narratives \u2014 from the Israelites in Egypt to Saint Paul\u2019s \u201cneither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free.\u201d That\u2019s not the case with sex and marriage. The only clear biblical meta-narrative is about male and female. Sex is an area of Jewish law that Jesus explicitly makes stricter. What we now call the \u201ctraditional\u201d view of sexuality was a then-radical idea separating the early church from Roman culture , and it\u2019s remained basic in every branch of Christianity until very recently. Jettisoning it requires repudiating scripture, history and tradition in a way the end of Jim Crow did not.", "paragraph_answer": "It\u2019s not that simple. The debate about race was very specific to America, modernity, the South. (Bans on interracial marriage were generally a white supremacist innovation, not an inheritance from Christendom or common law.) The slave owners and segregationists had scriptural arguments, certainly. But they were also up against one of the Bible\u2019s major meta-narratives \u2014 from the Israelites in Egypt to Saint Paul\u2019s \u201cneither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free.\u201d That\u2019s not the case with sex and marriage. The only clear biblical meta-narrative is about male and female. Sex is an area of Jewish law that Jesus explicitly makes stricter. What we now call the \u201ctraditional\u201d view of sexuality was a then-radical idea separating the early church from Roman culture , and it\u2019s remained basic in every branch of Christianity until very recently. Jettisoning it requires repudiating scripture, history and tradition in a way the end of Jim Crow did not.", "sentence_answer": "What we now call the \u201ctraditional\u201d view of sexuality was a then-radical idea separating the early church from Roman culture , and it\u2019s remained basic in every branch of Christianity until very recently.", "paragraph_id": "5d702d08c8e4820a9b66da8b"} +{"question": "For how much longer will nearly ten thousand American troops remain in Afghanistan?", "paragraph": "KABUL, Afghanistan \u2014 With the Afghan security forces gravely challenged by Taliban offensives, the government is moving to rapidly expand the troubled Afghan Local Police program by thousands of members, Afghan and Western officials say. The move to expand the police militias, prompted by the disastrous loss of the northern city of Kunduz to the Taliban almost three weeks ago, is being described by officials speaking privately as an attempt to head off panic in Afghan cities threatened by the insurgents. But the expansion also amounts to an open admission that the United States\u2019 main legacy in Afghanistan \u2014 the creation of nationalized police and army forces numbering more than 350,000 members \u2014 is failing under pressure even before any final American military withdrawal. On Thursday, President Obama called off that pullout, originally due at year\u2019s end, leaving 9,800 American troops in the country for at least another year.", "answer": "at least another year", "sentence": "On Thursday, President Obama called off that pullout, originally due at year\u2019s end, leaving 9,800 American troops in the country for at least another year .", "paragraph_sentence": "KABUL, Afghanistan \u2014 With the Afghan security forces gravely challenged by Taliban offensives, the government is moving to rapidly expand the troubled Afghan Local Police program by thousands of members, Afghan and Western officials say. The move to expand the police militias, prompted by the disastrous loss of the northern city of Kunduz to the Taliban almost three weeks ago, is being described by officials speaking privately as an attempt to head off panic in Afghan cities threatened by the insurgents. But the expansion also amounts to an open admission that the United States\u2019 main legacy in Afghanistan \u2014 the creation of nationalized police and army forces numbering more than 350,000 members \u2014 is failing under pressure even before any final American military withdrawal. On Thursday, President Obama called off that pullout, originally due at year\u2019s end, leaving 9,800 American troops in the country for at least another year . ", "paragraph_answer": "KABUL, Afghanistan \u2014 With the Afghan security forces gravely challenged by Taliban offensives, the government is moving to rapidly expand the troubled Afghan Local Police program by thousands of members, Afghan and Western officials say. The move to expand the police militias, prompted by the disastrous loss of the northern city of Kunduz to the Taliban almost three weeks ago, is being described by officials speaking privately as an attempt to head off panic in Afghan cities threatened by the insurgents. But the expansion also amounts to an open admission that the United States\u2019 main legacy in Afghanistan \u2014 the creation of nationalized police and army forces numbering more than 350,000 members \u2014 is failing under pressure even before any final American military withdrawal. On Thursday, President Obama called off that pullout, originally due at year\u2019s end, leaving 9,800 American troops in the country for at least another year .", "sentence_answer": "On Thursday, President Obama called off that pullout, originally due at year\u2019s end, leaving 9,800 American troops in the country for at least another year .", "paragraph_id": "5d7013b8c8e4820a9b66c050"} +{"question": "How many people got sick from Legionnaire's disease?", "paragraph": "5. New York officials said they had contained the city\u2019s worst outbreak of Legionnaires\u2019 disease, which sickened 101 people and killed 10. But city and state officials sometimes tripped over each other to claim credit for responding. 6. Two Army women have made it through most of the arduous course of the elite Ranger School and stand a strong chance of being the first females to graduate. But if so, they will still be barred from the combat roles their male counterparts qualify for. 7. It\u2019s been a year since the unarmed black youth Michael Brown was fatally shot by a white police officer, at the spot marked by this repaved patch of street. A Times analysis finds that, despite the intervening intense debates and promises of change, Ferguson, Mo., remains one of the most segregated places in the country.", "answer": "101", "sentence": "New York officials said they had contained the city\u2019s worst outbreak of Legionnaires\u2019 disease, which sickened 101 people and killed 10.", "paragraph_sentence": "5. New York officials said they had contained the city\u2019s worst outbreak of Legionnaires\u2019 disease, which sickened 101 people and killed 10. But city and state officials sometimes tripped over each other to claim credit for responding. 6. Two Army women have made it through most of the arduous course of the elite Ranger School and stand a strong chance of being the first females to graduate. But if so, they will still be barred from the combat roles their male counterparts qualify for. 7. It\u2019s been a year since the unarmed black youth Michael Brown was fatally shot by a white police officer, at the spot marked by this repaved patch of street. A Times analysis finds that, despite the intervening intense debates and promises of change, Ferguson, Mo., remains one of the most segregated places in the country.", "paragraph_answer": "5. New York officials said they had contained the city\u2019s worst outbreak of Legionnaires\u2019 disease, which sickened 101 people and killed 10. But city and state officials sometimes tripped over each other to claim credit for responding. 6. Two Army women have made it through most of the arduous course of the elite Ranger School and stand a strong chance of being the first females to graduate. But if so, they will still be barred from the combat roles their male counterparts qualify for. 7. It\u2019s been a year since the unarmed black youth Michael Brown was fatally shot by a white police officer, at the spot marked by this repaved patch of street. A Times analysis finds that, despite the intervening intense debates and promises of change, Ferguson, Mo., remains one of the most segregated places in the country.", "sentence_answer": "New York officials said they had contained the city\u2019s worst outbreak of Legionnaires\u2019 disease, which sickened 101 people and killed 10.", "paragraph_id": "5d700884c8e4820a9b66b035"} +{"question": "What country was the target of harsher sanctions?", "paragraph": "Secretary of State John Kerry met with European ministers over the weekend to discuss harsher economic sanctions against Russia because of the conflict in Ukraine. While that meeting took place in London, Vitaly Mutko, Russia\u2019s minister of sports, tourism and youth, gave one of his periodic reassurances that everything is on target for 2018. It is closer than we may think. \u201cThe eyes of the footballing world will be on St. Petersburg on Saturday 25 July,\u201d read a FIFA reminder last week that the World Cup preliminary draw is just months away.", "answer": "Russia", "sentence": "Secretary of State John Kerry met with European ministers over the weekend to discuss harsher economic sanctions against Russia because of the conflict in Ukraine.", "paragraph_sentence": " Secretary of State John Kerry met with European ministers over the weekend to discuss harsher economic sanctions against Russia because of the conflict in Ukraine. While that meeting took place in London, Vitaly Mutko, Russia\u2019s minister of sports, tourism and youth, gave one of his periodic reassurances that everything is on target for 2018. It is closer than we may think. \u201cThe eyes of the footballing world will be on St. Petersburg on Saturday 25 July,\u201d read a FIFA reminder last week that the World Cup preliminary draw is just months away.", "paragraph_answer": "Secretary of State John Kerry met with European ministers over the weekend to discuss harsher economic sanctions against Russia because of the conflict in Ukraine. While that meeting took place in London, Vitaly Mutko, Russia\u2019s minister of sports, tourism and youth, gave one of his periodic reassurances that everything is on target for 2018. It is closer than we may think. \u201cThe eyes of the footballing world will be on St. Petersburg on Saturday 25 July,\u201d read a FIFA reminder last week that the World Cup preliminary draw is just months away.", "sentence_answer": "Secretary of State John Kerry met with European ministers over the weekend to discuss harsher economic sanctions against Russia because of the conflict in Ukraine.", "paragraph_id": "5d701b8dc8e4820a9b66c6fa"} +{"question": "What's the name of Greece's backsliding exit?", "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": "Grexit", "sentence": "Greece\u2019s backsliding on its pledges has stirred speculation in recent days of a possible \u201c Grexit ,\u201d or Greek exit, from the 19-nation group that uses the euro.", "paragraph_sentence": " Greece\u2019s backsliding on its pledges has stirred speculation in recent days of a possible \u201c Grexit ,\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 \u201c Grexit ,\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": "Greece\u2019s backsliding on its pledges has stirred speculation in recent days of a possible \u201c Grexit ,\u201d or Greek exit, from the 19-nation group that uses the euro.", "paragraph_id": "5d702245c8e4820a9b66ce4b"} +{"question": "which war was the role jazz played during?", "paragraph": "There were two subplots surrounding Armstrong\u2019s East Berlin concert, which I want to dwell on here. The first was the role jazz played during the Cold War. Starting in the mid-1950s, the State Department began sending jazz musicians like Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, Duke Ellington, and Armstrong on tours abroad as good-will ambassadors. Part of the rationale was that jazz was a uniquely American art form that could show off the best of American culture, just as the Russians used ballet troupes to show off their culture. The government also thought that these artists, most of them black, might, by their presence, help diffuse \u201cthe widely shared sense that race was America\u2019s Achilles\u2019 heel internationally,\u201d as Penny M. Von Eschen writes in \u201cSatchmo Blows Up the World,\u201d her book about the jazz tours.", "answer": "first", "sentence": "The first was the role jazz played during the Cold War.", "paragraph_sentence": "There were two subplots surrounding Armstrong\u2019s East Berlin concert, which I want to dwell on here. The first was the role jazz played during the Cold War. Starting in the mid-1950s, the State Department began sending jazz musicians like Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, Duke Ellington, and Armstrong on tours abroad as good-will ambassadors. Part of the rationale was that jazz was a uniquely American art form that could show off the best of American culture, just as the Russians used ballet troupes to show off their culture. The government also thought that these artists, most of them black, might, by their presence, help diffuse \u201cthe widely shared sense that race was America\u2019s Achilles\u2019 heel internationally,\u201d as Penny M. Von Eschen writes in \u201cSatchmo Blows Up the World,\u201d her book about the jazz tours.", "paragraph_answer": "There were two subplots surrounding Armstrong\u2019s East Berlin concert, which I want to dwell on here. The first was the role jazz played during the Cold War. Starting in the mid-1950s, the State Department began sending jazz musicians like Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, Duke Ellington, and Armstrong on tours abroad as good-will ambassadors. Part of the rationale was that jazz was a uniquely American art form that could show off the best of American culture, just as the Russians used ballet troupes to show off their culture. The government also thought that these artists, most of them black, might, by their presence, help diffuse \u201cthe widely shared sense that race was America\u2019s Achilles\u2019 heel internationally,\u201d as Penny M. Von Eschen writes in \u201cSatchmo Blows Up the World,\u201d her book about the jazz tours.", "sentence_answer": "The first was the role jazz played during the Cold War.", "paragraph_id": "5d7018dbc8e4820a9b66c4ea"} +{"question": "Who can help defeat Boko Haram?", "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": "allies", "sentence": "That is not to say that allies cannot help us.", "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": "That is not to say that allies cannot help us.", "paragraph_id": "5d705d9dc8e4820a9b66ef92"} +{"question": "Name a country that has diamond mines?", "paragraph": "Estimates that diamond production will peak by the end of the decade, pushing prices higher, have their supporters and their critics. Most of the world\u2019s diamonds come from a relative handful of mines in Africa, Canada, Russia and a few other places. Alrosa, a Russian diamond producer, has become the largest by volume, though De Beers remains the leader in dollar terms. Mr. Jens of ABN Amro said that he doubted predictions of a looming diamond shortage. New mines may be found, he said, and man-made diamonds \u2014 which are becoming increasingly difficult to distinguish from diamonds dug from the earth \u2014 could satisfy some market demand.", "answer": "Africa", "sentence": "Most of the world\u2019s diamonds come from a relative handful of mines in Africa , Canada, Russia and a few other places.", "paragraph_sentence": "Estimates that diamond production will peak by the end of the decade, pushing prices higher, have their supporters and their critics. Most of the world\u2019s diamonds come from a relative handful of mines in Africa , Canada, Russia and a few other places. Alrosa, a Russian diamond producer, has become the largest by volume, though De Beers remains the leader in dollar terms. Mr. Jens of ABN Amro said that he doubted predictions of a looming diamond shortage. New mines may be found, he said, and man-made diamonds \u2014 which are becoming increasingly difficult to distinguish from diamonds dug from the earth \u2014 could satisfy some market demand.", "paragraph_answer": "Estimates that diamond production will peak by the end of the decade, pushing prices higher, have their supporters and their critics. Most of the world\u2019s diamonds come from a relative handful of mines in Africa , Canada, Russia and a few other places. Alrosa, a Russian diamond producer, has become the largest by volume, though De Beers remains the leader in dollar terms. Mr. Jens of ABN Amro said that he doubted predictions of a looming diamond shortage. New mines may be found, he said, and man-made diamonds \u2014 which are becoming increasingly difficult to distinguish from diamonds dug from the earth \u2014 could satisfy some market demand.", "sentence_answer": "Most of the world\u2019s diamonds come from a relative handful of mines in Africa , Canada, Russia and a few other places.", "paragraph_id": "5d701ebec8e4820a9b66ca53"} +{"question": "Where is open mike night?", "paragraph": "SLEEPY HOLLOW Hudson Valley Writers\u2019 Center Open Mike Night, poetry, fiction, comedy and more. April 17 at 7:30 p.m. $3. Hudson Valley Writers\u2019 Center, 300 Riverside Drive. writerscenter.org; 914-332-5953. TUCKAHOE Westchester Italian Cultural Center \u201cIn the Name of the Father and the Son: Italian Migrations in the Art of Joseph and William Papaleo,\u201d lecture. April 8 at 7 p.m. $15 and $25. Westchester Italian Cultural Center, 1 Generoso Pope Place. 914-771-8700; wiccny.org. WHITE PLAINS ArtsWestchester Veera Hiranandani discusses her book \u201cThe Whole Story of Half a Girl.\u201d April 11 at 2 p.m. Free. ArtsWestchester, 31 Mamaroneck Avenue. artswestchester.org; 914-428-4220.", "answer": "Hudson Valley Writers\u2019 Center, 300 Riverside Drive", "sentence": "Hudson Valley Writers\u2019 Center, 300 Riverside Drive .", "paragraph_sentence": "SLEEPY HOLLOW Hudson Valley Writers\u2019 Center Open Mike Night, poetry, fiction, comedy and more. April 17 at 7:30 p.m. $3. Hudson Valley Writers\u2019 Center, 300 Riverside Drive . writerscenter.org; 914-332-5953. TUCKAHOE Westchester Italian Cultural Center \u201cIn the Name of the Father and the Son: Italian Migrations in the Art of Joseph and William Papaleo,\u201d lecture. April 8 at 7 p.m. $15 and $25. Westchester Italian Cultural Center, 1 Generoso Pope Place. 914-771-8700; wiccny.org. WHITE PLAINS ArtsWestchester Veera Hiranandani discusses her book \u201cThe Whole Story of Half a Girl.\u201d April 11 at 2 p.m. Free. ArtsWestchester, 31 Mamaroneck Avenue. artswestchester.org; 914-428-4220.", "paragraph_answer": "SLEEPY HOLLOW Hudson Valley Writers\u2019 Center Open Mike Night, poetry, fiction, comedy and more. April 17 at 7:30 p.m. $3. Hudson Valley Writers\u2019 Center, 300 Riverside Drive . writerscenter.org; 914-332-5953. TUCKAHOE Westchester Italian Cultural Center \u201cIn the Name of the Father and the Son: Italian Migrations in the Art of Joseph and William Papaleo,\u201d lecture. April 8 at 7 p.m. $15 and $25. Westchester Italian Cultural Center, 1 Generoso Pope Place. 914-771-8700; wiccny.org. WHITE PLAINS ArtsWestchester Veera Hiranandani discusses her book \u201cThe Whole Story of Half a Girl.\u201d April 11 at 2 p.m. Free. ArtsWestchester, 31 Mamaroneck Avenue. artswestchester.org; 914-428-4220.", "sentence_answer": " Hudson Valley Writers\u2019 Center, 300 Riverside Drive .", "paragraph_id": "5d70661ac8e4820a9b66f0a0"} +{"question": "What do people think of the image?", "paragraph": "If his significance is primarily art historical, that of the second figure is, potentially at least, more personal. This one, from the collection of the Bagan Archaeological Museum, is larger, older \u2014 from the 11th century \u2014 and carved from sandstone. Also a seated Buddha, it has in recent years gained a popular religious following as the perceived prototype of an ardently worshiped image at a local shrine. At Asia Society, to my eye, the piece looks only mildly charismatic. Years ago, someone scoured away all traces of the paint that once brightened the figure. And the sandstone surface, which can be so sensuous, looks over-cleaned, sandblasted, dead. But pilgrim-visitors to the Bagan Museum don\u2019t care about any of this. Belief supplies color, texture, life. In the museum, they bow and pray. Religious art, no matter where you find it in a lot of the world, works that way.", "answer": "it has in recent years gained a popular religious following", "sentence": "Also a seated Buddha, it has in recent years gained a popular religious following as the perceived prototype of an ardently worshiped image at a local shrine.", "paragraph_sentence": "If his significance is primarily art historical, that of the second figure is, potentially at least, more personal. This one, from the collection of the Bagan Archaeological Museum, is larger, older \u2014 from the 11th century \u2014 and carved from sandstone. Also a seated Buddha, it has in recent years gained a popular religious following as the perceived prototype of an ardently worshiped image at a local shrine. At Asia Society, to my eye, the piece looks only mildly charismatic. Years ago, someone scoured away all traces of the paint that once brightened the figure. And the sandstone surface, which can be so sensuous, looks over-cleaned, sandblasted, dead. But pilgrim-visitors to the Bagan Museum don\u2019t care about any of this. Belief supplies color, texture, life. In the museum, they bow and pray. Religious art, no matter where you find it in a lot of the world, works that way.", "paragraph_answer": "If his significance is primarily art historical, that of the second figure is, potentially at least, more personal. This one, from the collection of the Bagan Archaeological Museum, is larger, older \u2014 from the 11th century \u2014 and carved from sandstone. Also a seated Buddha, it has in recent years gained a popular religious following as the perceived prototype of an ardently worshiped image at a local shrine. At Asia Society, to my eye, the piece looks only mildly charismatic. Years ago, someone scoured away all traces of the paint that once brightened the figure. And the sandstone surface, which can be so sensuous, looks over-cleaned, sandblasted, dead. But pilgrim-visitors to the Bagan Museum don\u2019t care about any of this. Belief supplies color, texture, life. In the museum, they bow and pray. Religious art, no matter where you find it in a lot of the world, works that way.", "sentence_answer": "Also a seated Buddha, it has in recent years gained a popular religious following as the perceived prototype of an ardently worshiped image at a local shrine.", "paragraph_id": "5d702b96c8e4820a9b66d92d"} +{"question": "Who is the host?", "paragraph": "8 P.M. (Comedy Central) NIGHT OF TOO MANY STARS: AMERICA COMES TOGETHER FOR AUTISM PROGRAMS Jon Stewart hosts; Larry David, Martin Short, Larry Wilmore, Fred Armisen, Andy Cohen, Ilana Glazer, Abbi Jacobson and Susan Sarandon oversee the phone banks; and Bill Burr, Louis C. K., John Oliver, Paul Rudd, Amy Schumer, Steve Buscemi, Steve Carell, Gilbert Gottfried, Maya Rudolph and Sarah Silverman, above, perform in sketches taped at the Beacon Theater in this telethon on behalf of autism awareness and education.", "answer": "Jon Stewart", "sentence": "AMERICA COMES TOGETHER FOR AUTISM PROGRAMS Jon Stewart hosts; Larry David, Martin Short, Larry Wilmore, Fred Armisen, Andy Cohen, Ilana Glazer, Abbi Jacobson and Susan Sarandon oversee the phone banks; and Bill Burr, Louis C. K., John Oliver, Paul Rudd, Amy Schumer, Steve Buscemi, Steve Carell, Gilbert Gottfried, Maya Rudolph and Sarah Silverman, above, perform in sketches taped at the Beacon Theater in this telethon on behalf of autism awareness and education.", "paragraph_sentence": "8 P.M. (Comedy Central) NIGHT OF TOO MANY STARS: AMERICA COMES TOGETHER FOR AUTISM PROGRAMS Jon Stewart hosts; Larry David, Martin Short, Larry Wilmore, Fred Armisen, Andy Cohen, Ilana Glazer, Abbi Jacobson and Susan Sarandon oversee the phone banks; and Bill Burr, Louis C. K., John Oliver, Paul Rudd, Amy Schumer, Steve Buscemi, Steve Carell, Gilbert Gottfried, Maya Rudolph and Sarah Silverman, above, perform in sketches taped at the Beacon Theater in this telethon on behalf of autism awareness and education. ", "paragraph_answer": "8 P.M. (Comedy Central) NIGHT OF TOO MANY STARS: AMERICA COMES TOGETHER FOR AUTISM PROGRAMS Jon Stewart hosts; Larry David, Martin Short, Larry Wilmore, Fred Armisen, Andy Cohen, Ilana Glazer, Abbi Jacobson and Susan Sarandon oversee the phone banks; and Bill Burr, Louis C. K., John Oliver, Paul Rudd, Amy Schumer, Steve Buscemi, Steve Carell, Gilbert Gottfried, Maya Rudolph and Sarah Silverman, above, perform in sketches taped at the Beacon Theater in this telethon on behalf of autism awareness and education.", "sentence_answer": "AMERICA COMES TOGETHER FOR AUTISM PROGRAMS Jon Stewart hosts; Larry David, Martin Short, Larry Wilmore, Fred Armisen, Andy Cohen, Ilana Glazer, Abbi Jacobson and Susan Sarandon oversee the phone banks; and Bill Burr, Louis C. K., John Oliver, Paul Rudd, Amy Schumer, Steve Buscemi, Steve Carell, Gilbert Gottfried, Maya Rudolph and Sarah Silverman, above, perform in sketches taped at the Beacon Theater in this telethon on behalf of autism awareness and education.", "paragraph_id": "5d7005d7c8e4820a9b66a9d0"} +{"question": "What country could resume a military training agreement with Nigeria?", "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": "United States", "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": "5d705d9dc8e4820a9b66ef91"} +{"question": "Where can one view embroidery?", "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": "Neuberger Museum of Art of Purchase College", "sentence": "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": "PURCHASE Neuberger Museum of Art of Purchase College An artist talk by Artie Vierkant.", "paragraph_id": "5d703516c8e4820a9b66df4e"} +{"question": "At what time was the game originally scheduled to start?", "paragraph": "The rain led to a 21-minute delay from the scheduled start time of 1:10 p.m. Even after the Mets recorded the first three outs of the day, bringing about an early seventh-inning stretch, patrons were still trickling in, a mix of fans taking advantage of the opportunity to watch 11-plus innings of baseball and others anticipating the debut of Steven Matz in the second game. Saturday\u2019s attendees were allowed to exchange their tickets for Sunday but were placed in different locations. The confusion even affected those not at the park: WPIX broadcast the end of Saturday\u2019s game before SNY took over for the second game. Collins said his players\u2019 routines would not change much, but the unorthodox circumstances befuddled him to a degree. He was not certain of the technicalities of the rule, but he said he planned to carry Matz as a 26th player because the team was playing an extra game on Sunday and therefore did not have to make a corresponding move to make room for him.", "answer": "1:10 p.m.", "sentence": "The rain led to a 21-minute delay from the scheduled start time of 1:10 p.m. Even after the Mets recorded the first three outs of the day, bringing about an early seventh-inning stretch, patrons were still trickling in, a mix of fans taking advantage of the opportunity to watch 11-plus innings of baseball and others anticipating the debut of Steven Matz in the second game.", "paragraph_sentence": " The rain led to a 21-minute delay from the scheduled start time of 1:10 p.m. Even after the Mets recorded the first three outs of the day, bringing about an early seventh-inning stretch, patrons were still trickling in, a mix of fans taking advantage of the opportunity to watch 11-plus innings of baseball and others anticipating the debut of Steven Matz in the second game. Saturday\u2019s attendees were allowed to exchange their tickets for Sunday but were placed in different locations. The confusion even affected those not at the park: WPIX broadcast the end of Saturday\u2019s game before SNY took over for the second game. Collins said his players\u2019 routines would not change much, but the unorthodox circumstances befuddled him to a degree. He was not certain of the technicalities of the rule, but he said he planned to carry Matz as a 26th player because the team was playing an extra game on Sunday and therefore did not have to make a corresponding move to make room for him.", "paragraph_answer": "The rain led to a 21-minute delay from the scheduled start time of 1:10 p.m. Even after the Mets recorded the first three outs of the day, bringing about an early seventh-inning stretch, patrons were still trickling in, a mix of fans taking advantage of the opportunity to watch 11-plus innings of baseball and others anticipating the debut of Steven Matz in the second game. Saturday\u2019s attendees were allowed to exchange their tickets for Sunday but were placed in different locations. The confusion even affected those not at the park: WPIX broadcast the end of Saturday\u2019s game before SNY took over for the second game. Collins said his players\u2019 routines would not change much, but the unorthodox circumstances befuddled him to a degree. He was not certain of the technicalities of the rule, but he said he planned to carry Matz as a 26th player because the team was playing an extra game on Sunday and therefore did not have to make a corresponding move to make room for him.", "sentence_answer": "The rain led to a 21-minute delay from the scheduled start time of 1:10 p.m. Even after the Mets recorded the first three outs of the day, bringing about an early seventh-inning stretch, patrons were still trickling in, a mix of fans taking advantage of the opportunity to watch 11-plus innings of baseball and others anticipating the debut of Steven Matz in the second game.", "paragraph_id": "5d702605c8e4820a9b66d246"} +{"question": "Why did the mother leave the baby in the manger?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe mother followed the spirit of New York\u2019s \u2018Safe Haven\u2019 Law, which allows a parent to leave a child not older than 30 days with an appropriate person or in a suitable location where the parent promptly notifies an appropriate person of the child\u2019s location,\u201d he said. \u201cIt appears that the mother, in this case, felt her newborn child would be found safely in the church and chose to place the baby in the manger because it was the warmest place in the church, and further she returned the following morning to make certain that the baby had been found.\u201d Detectives from the 102nd Precinct had been reviewing surveillance video of the woman, who, the police said, secretly left the boy in the Church of the Holy Child Jesus and disappeared. One video clip showed the woman, with the infant, entering a dollar store on Jamaica Avenue, in the Richmond Hill neighborhood, around the corner from the church, at 111-11 86th Avenue.", "answer": "it was the warmest place in the church", "sentence": "\u201cIt appears that the mother, in this case, felt her newborn child would be found safely in the church and chose to place the baby in the manger because it was the warmest place in the church , and further she returned the following morning to make certain that the baby had been found.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe mother followed the spirit of New York\u2019s \u2018Safe Haven\u2019 Law, which allows a parent to leave a child not older than 30 days with an appropriate person or in a suitable location where the parent promptly notifies an appropriate person of the child\u2019s location,\u201d he said. \u201cIt appears that the mother, in this case, felt her newborn child would be found safely in the church and chose to place the baby in the manger because it was the warmest place in the church , and further she returned the following morning to make certain that the baby had been found.\u201d Detectives from the 102nd Precinct had been reviewing surveillance video of the woman, who, the police said, secretly left the boy in the Church of the Holy Child Jesus and disappeared. One video clip showed the woman, with the infant, entering a dollar store on Jamaica Avenue, in the Richmond Hill neighborhood, around the corner from the church, at 111-11 86th Avenue.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe mother followed the spirit of New York\u2019s \u2018Safe Haven\u2019 Law, which allows a parent to leave a child not older than 30 days with an appropriate person or in a suitable location where the parent promptly notifies an appropriate person of the child\u2019s location,\u201d he said. \u201cIt appears that the mother, in this case, felt her newborn child would be found safely in the church and chose to place the baby in the manger because it was the warmest place in the church , and further she returned the following morning to make certain that the baby had been found.\u201d Detectives from the 102nd Precinct had been reviewing surveillance video of the woman, who, the police said, secretly left the boy in the Church of the Holy Child Jesus and disappeared. One video clip showed the woman, with the infant, entering a dollar store on Jamaica Avenue, in the Richmond Hill neighborhood, around the corner from the church, at 111-11 86th Avenue.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt appears that the mother, in this case, felt her newborn child would be found safely in the church and chose to place the baby in the manger because it was the warmest place in the church , and further she returned the following morning to make certain that the baby had been found.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d700b00c8e4820a9b66b52d"} +{"question": "How frequently accident has been happening according to Mr. Ingresselino?", "paragraph": "Through the decades, Mr. Ingrasselino would respond as a police officer and chief to a number of tragedies at the crossing, where Midland Avenue intersects with New Jersey Transit tracks at a sharp angle through his Bergen County town. \u201cIt\u2019s not even an accident waiting to happen,\u201d said Mr. Ingrasselino, who retired in 2012. \u201cIt\u2019s an accident that\u2019s been happening, over and over. It\u2019s ridiculous.\u201d The grade crossing is, as it turns out, among the most dangerous in the country, according to a little-known metric devised by the Federal Railroad Administration called the \u201caccident prediction value.\u201d The measure takes into account certain physical characteristics of crossings and recent accidents.", "answer": "over and over", "sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s an accident that\u2019s been happening, over and over .", "paragraph_sentence": "Through the decades, Mr. Ingrasselino would respond as a police officer and chief to a number of tragedies at the crossing, where Midland Avenue intersects with New Jersey Transit tracks at a sharp angle through his Bergen County town. \u201cIt\u2019s not even an accident waiting to happen,\u201d said Mr. Ingrasselino, who retired in 2012. \u201cIt\u2019s an accident that\u2019s been happening, over and over . It\u2019s ridiculous.\u201d The grade crossing is, as it turns out, among the most dangerous in the country, according to a little-known metric devised by the Federal Railroad Administration called the \u201caccident prediction value.\u201d The measure takes into account certain physical characteristics of crossings and recent accidents.", "paragraph_answer": "Through the decades, Mr. Ingrasselino would respond as a police officer and chief to a number of tragedies at the crossing, where Midland Avenue intersects with New Jersey Transit tracks at a sharp angle through his Bergen County town. \u201cIt\u2019s not even an accident waiting to happen,\u201d said Mr. Ingrasselino, who retired in 2012. \u201cIt\u2019s an accident that\u2019s been happening, over and over . It\u2019s ridiculous.\u201d The grade crossing is, as it turns out, among the most dangerous in the country, according to a little-known metric devised by the Federal Railroad Administration called the \u201caccident prediction value.\u201d The measure takes into account certain physical characteristics of crossings and recent accidents.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s an accident that\u2019s been happening, over and over .", "paragraph_id": "5d704afbc8e4820a9b66e96f"} +{"question": "What was \"The Jones\" rebranded as?", "paragraph": "But this year, the hosts of \u201cThe Jones\u201d will be broadcasting for the league itself. A little more than a year ago, \u201cThe Jones\u201d podcast was rebranded as \u201cThe Starters,\u201d a television program shown weeknights on NBATV. It is available to stream live and download as a podcast but it exists primarily as a television broadcast. In its second season, \u201cThe Starters\u201d is growing quickly in popularity. According to the network, viewership has increased by 24 percent this season, with podcast downloads up 22 percent. NBATV says it will continue to raise the show\u2019s profile. Plans for this weekend include an hourlong live show at 6 p.m. Friday, with player interviews and an appearance by the basketball great George Gervin. \u201cThey prove you can be entertaining and smart on TV without being overbearing and loud about it,\u201d said Zach Lowe, an N.B.A. writer for the Grantland website and a podcaster. In the wake of the hit true-crime show \u201cSerial,\u201d podcasts are widely acknowledged to be growing. A recent report from Edison Research indicates a \u201cdramatic increase in podcast consumption.\u201d Jeff Ullrich, the co-founder of the podcasting network Earwolf, says the shift has been palpable.", "answer": "The Starters", "sentence": "A little more than a year ago, \u201cThe Jones\u201d podcast was rebranded as \u201c The Starters ,\u201d a television program shown weeknights on NBATV.", "paragraph_sentence": "But this year, the hosts of \u201cThe Jones\u201d will be broadcasting for the league itself. A little more than a year ago, \u201cThe Jones\u201d podcast was rebranded as \u201c The Starters ,\u201d a television program shown weeknights on NBATV. It is available to stream live and download as a podcast but it exists primarily as a television broadcast. In its second season, \u201cThe Starters\u201d is growing quickly in popularity. According to the network, viewership has increased by 24 percent this season, with podcast downloads up 22 percent. NBATV says it will continue to raise the show\u2019s profile. Plans for this weekend include an hourlong live show at 6 p.m. Friday, with player interviews and an appearance by the basketball great George Gervin. \u201cThey prove you can be entertaining and smart on TV without being overbearing and loud about it,\u201d said Zach Lowe, an N.B.A. writer for the Grantland website and a podcaster. In the wake of the hit true-crime show \u201cSerial,\u201d podcasts are widely acknowledged to be growing. A recent report from Edison Research indicates a \u201cdramatic increase in podcast consumption.\u201d Jeff Ullrich, the co-founder of the podcasting network Earwolf, says the shift has been palpable.", "paragraph_answer": "But this year, the hosts of \u201cThe Jones\u201d will be broadcasting for the league itself. A little more than a year ago, \u201cThe Jones\u201d podcast was rebranded as \u201c The Starters ,\u201d a television program shown weeknights on NBATV. It is available to stream live and download as a podcast but it exists primarily as a television broadcast. In its second season, \u201cThe Starters\u201d is growing quickly in popularity. According to the network, viewership has increased by 24 percent this season, with podcast downloads up 22 percent. NBATV says it will continue to raise the show\u2019s profile. Plans for this weekend include an hourlong live show at 6 p.m. Friday, with player interviews and an appearance by the basketball great George Gervin. \u201cThey prove you can be entertaining and smart on TV without being overbearing and loud about it,\u201d said Zach Lowe, an N.B.A. writer for the Grantland website and a podcaster. In the wake of the hit true-crime show \u201cSerial,\u201d podcasts are widely acknowledged to be growing. A recent report from Edison Research indicates a \u201cdramatic increase in podcast consumption.\u201d Jeff Ullrich, the co-founder of the podcasting network Earwolf, says the shift has been palpable.", "sentence_answer": "A little more than a year ago, \u201cThe Jones\u201d podcast was rebranded as \u201c The Starters ,\u201d a television program shown weeknights on NBATV.", "paragraph_id": "5d7056fec8e4820a9b66ed42"} +{"question": "Which studen mentioned that they were pleased to have real world education rather than book material?", "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": "Mr. Carmona Astor", "sentence": "\u201cI didn\u2019t want to get in a class and just read books,\u201d Mr. Carmona Astor said.", "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": "\u201cI didn\u2019t want to get in a class and just read books,\u201d Mr. Carmona Astor said.", "paragraph_id": "5d702b26c8e4820a9b66d897"} +{"question": "What other option do you have to hear a person's voice?", "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": "call", "sentence": "If you really want to hear someone\u2019s voice, you can simply call her.", "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": "If you really want to hear someone\u2019s voice, you can simply call her.", "paragraph_id": "5d70464ac8e4820a9b66e82f"} +{"question": "In what league Gallardo in?", "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": "American League", "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": "5d7028e7c8e4820a9b66d6af"} +{"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": "5d7026e9c8e4820a9b66d430"} +{"question": "What is the main differentiator according to the author?", "paragraph": "Tights are the main differentiator. In venues, I tend to get cold, so no matter what time of year it is, I\u2019ll wear tights. But for festivals you\u2019re outside and tights are way too hot to handle. That\u2019s pretty much the only difference. What inspires your overall style? Audrey Hepburn is a huge influence on my style. She\u2019s classy, confident and simplistic. She\u2019s a tomboy and also super feminine. Overall, I have a relaxed yet put together kind of thing going on at all times. Except for my hair, I can\u2019t quite seem to keep that together.", "answer": "Tights", "sentence": "Tights are the main differentiator.", "paragraph_sentence": " Tights are the main differentiator. In venues, I tend to get cold, so no matter what time of year it is, I\u2019ll wear tights. But for festivals you\u2019re outside and tights are way too hot to handle. That\u2019s pretty much the only difference. What inspires your overall style? Audrey Hepburn is a huge influence on my style. She\u2019s classy, confident and simplistic. She\u2019s a tomboy and also super feminine. Overall, I have a relaxed yet put together kind of thing going on at all times. Except for my hair, I can\u2019t quite seem to keep that together.", "paragraph_answer": " Tights are the main differentiator. In venues, I tend to get cold, so no matter what time of year it is, I\u2019ll wear tights. But for festivals you\u2019re outside and tights are way too hot to handle. That\u2019s pretty much the only difference. What inspires your overall style? Audrey Hepburn is a huge influence on my style. She\u2019s classy, confident and simplistic. She\u2019s a tomboy and also super feminine. Overall, I have a relaxed yet put together kind of thing going on at all times. Except for my hair, I can\u2019t quite seem to keep that together.", "sentence_answer": " Tights are the main differentiator.", "paragraph_id": "5d700aa4c8e4820a9b66b4ab"} +{"question": "What is closer to Europe than Tora Bora?", "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": "Raqqa", "sentence": "Raqqa is much closer to Europe than Tora Bora.", "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": " Raqqa is much closer to Europe than Tora Bora.", "paragraph_id": "5d703d51c8e4820a9b66e377"} +{"question": "Who is the PR representative for Mr. Abbas?", "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": "Nabil Abu Rudeineh", "sentence": "Nabil Abu Rudeineh , Mr. Abbas\u2019s spokesman, did not return a text message.", "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": " Nabil Abu Rudeineh , Mr. Abbas\u2019s spokesman, did not return a text message.", "paragraph_id": "5d704febc8e4820a9b66eb16"} +{"question": "What title was Cleveland and the Warriors competing for?", "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": "N.B.A. title", "sentence": "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 .", "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": "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 .", "paragraph_id": "5d702607c8e4820a9b66d24c"} +{"question": "What does Poblenou mean/stand for?", "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": "new city", "sentence": "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 \u201c new city ,\u201d a longtime manufacturing zone that declined in the 20th century.", "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 \u201c new 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 \u201c new city ,\u201d a longtime manufacturing zone that declined in the 20th century.", "sentence_answer": "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 \u201c new city ,\u201d a longtime manufacturing zone that declined in the 20th century.", "paragraph_id": "5d7069fbc8e4820a9b66f146"} +{"question": "What is difficult to find when a financial system implodes?", "paragraph": "As was the case in Cyprus during its banking crisis, when a financial system implodes, finding acceptable collateral to swap for desperately needed loans can be difficult. The solution has been for the banks to manufacture and issue billions of euros of short-term bonds, which \u2014 because they carry the guarantee of the Greek government \u2014 can be used as collateral to secure much-needed cash from the European Central Bank. As long as the bank\u2019s problem is access to short-term funds and not solvency, such machinations can work. In the last year or so, Greek banks have issued more than \u20ac50 billion worth of these securities at artificially high interest rates (the higher the rate, the more valuable the collateral becomes in securing loans).", "answer": "acceptable collateral", "sentence": "As was the case in Cyprus during its banking crisis, when a financial system implodes, finding acceptable collateral to swap for desperately needed loans can be difficult.", "paragraph_sentence": " As was the case in Cyprus during its banking crisis, when a financial system implodes, finding acceptable collateral to swap for desperately needed loans can be difficult. The solution has been for the banks to manufacture and issue billions of euros of short-term bonds, which \u2014 because they carry the guarantee of the Greek government \u2014 can be used as collateral to secure much-needed cash from the European Central Bank. As long as the bank\u2019s problem is access to short-term funds and not solvency, such machinations can work. In the last year or so, Greek banks have issued more than \u20ac50 billion worth of these securities at artificially high interest rates (the higher the rate, the more valuable the collateral becomes in securing loans).", "paragraph_answer": "As was the case in Cyprus during its banking crisis, when a financial system implodes, finding acceptable collateral to swap for desperately needed loans can be difficult. The solution has been for the banks to manufacture and issue billions of euros of short-term bonds, which \u2014 because they carry the guarantee of the Greek government \u2014 can be used as collateral to secure much-needed cash from the European Central Bank. As long as the bank\u2019s problem is access to short-term funds and not solvency, such machinations can work. In the last year or so, Greek banks have issued more than \u20ac50 billion worth of these securities at artificially high interest rates (the higher the rate, the more valuable the collateral becomes in securing loans).", "sentence_answer": "As was the case in Cyprus during its banking crisis, when a financial system implodes, finding acceptable collateral to swap for desperately needed loans can be difficult.", "paragraph_id": "5d7026d1c8e4820a9b66d348"} +{"question": "What time was the Sunday game supposed to start?", "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": "1 p.m", "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 .", "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 .", "paragraph_id": "5d703a86c8e4820a9b66e238"} +{"question": "Besides Daryl, who took the stand against AT&T?", "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": "Sandy", "sentence": "After Emily walked out, Sandy turned to Bev and asked, \u201cWho is that person\u2019s mother?\u201d", "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": "After Emily walked out, Sandy turned to Bev and asked, \u201cWho is that person\u2019s mother?\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d7043cec8e4820a9b66e70d"} +{"question": "What state is J. Patryce Design located in?", "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": "N.J.", "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. \u201cSo it has to be right.\u201d", "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. \u201cSo it has to be right.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d704e3ec8e4820a9b66ea71"} +{"question": "What helps some business stay competitive that are available because of the refugees?", "paragraph": "Mr. Firat at the foreign ministry said that the Syrian refugees had caused resentment in some places, but also made cheap labor available that might help some businesses stay competitive. Eskisehir\u2019s economic difficulties, and Turkey\u2019s, go beyond coping with migrants or an interruption in tourism. Many emerging markets are facing difficulties with the slowdown in global trade, Turkey among them. Turkey has long depended on exporting manufactured goods to Europe and the Middle East, two regions where demand is weak right now. That is partly because of geopolitics and partly because Chinese industries with overcapacity at home have been exporting at low prices to Turkey\u2019s longtime markets in the Middle East, Europe and Africa.", "answer": "cheap labor", "sentence": "Mr. Firat at the foreign ministry said that the Syrian refugees had caused resentment in some places, but also made cheap labor available that might help some businesses stay competitive.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Firat at the foreign ministry said that the Syrian refugees had caused resentment in some places, but also made cheap labor available that might help some businesses stay competitive. Eskisehir\u2019s economic difficulties, and Turkey\u2019s, go beyond coping with migrants or an interruption in tourism. Many emerging markets are facing difficulties with the slowdown in global trade, Turkey among them. Turkey has long depended on exporting manufactured goods to Europe and the Middle East, two regions where demand is weak right now. That is partly because of geopolitics and partly because Chinese industries with overcapacity at home have been exporting at low prices to Turkey\u2019s longtime markets in the Middle East, Europe and Africa.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Firat at the foreign ministry said that the Syrian refugees had caused resentment in some places, but also made cheap labor available that might help some businesses stay competitive. Eskisehir\u2019s economic difficulties, and Turkey\u2019s, go beyond coping with migrants or an interruption in tourism. Many emerging markets are facing difficulties with the slowdown in global trade, Turkey among them. Turkey has long depended on exporting manufactured goods to Europe and the Middle East, two regions where demand is weak right now. That is partly because of geopolitics and partly because Chinese industries with overcapacity at home have been exporting at low prices to Turkey\u2019s longtime markets in the Middle East, Europe and Africa.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Firat at the foreign ministry said that the Syrian refugees had caused resentment in some places, but also made cheap labor available that might help some businesses stay competitive.", "paragraph_id": "5d700cb3c8e4820a9b66b810"} +{"question": "What is the position of Deborah J Glick?", "paragraph": "Assemblywoman Deborah J. Glick, a Democrat whose district includes the area and who was a plaintiff in the case, said the decision \u201cputs the limited open space that we jealously guard and protect totally at risk everywhere in the city.\u201d Andrew Berman, the executive director of the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation, said his organization was consulting its lawyers about any other legal recourse that might stop or alter the expansion. \u201cWe\u2019re already suffering from an extreme over-concentration of N.Y.U.-related uses,\u201d Mr. Berman said. \u201cThousands of additional people and millions of additional square feet of construction is eventually going to make the Village feel like a company town.\u201d", "answer": "Assemblywoman", "sentence": "Assemblywoman Deborah J. Glick, a Democrat whose district includes the area and who was a plaintiff in the case, said the decision \u201cputs the limited open space that we jealously guard and protect totally at risk everywhere in the city.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Assemblywoman Deborah J. Glick, a Democrat whose district includes the area and who was a plaintiff in the case, said the decision \u201cputs the limited open space that we jealously guard and protect totally at risk everywhere in the city.\u201d Andrew Berman, the executive director of the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation, said his organization was consulting its lawyers about any other legal recourse that might stop or alter the expansion. \u201cWe\u2019re already suffering from an extreme over-concentration of N.Y.U.-related uses,\u201d Mr. Berman said. \u201cThousands of additional people and millions of additional square feet of construction is eventually going to make the Village feel like a company town.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": " Assemblywoman Deborah J. Glick, a Democrat whose district includes the area and who was a plaintiff in the case, said the decision \u201cputs the limited open space that we jealously guard and protect totally at risk everywhere in the city.\u201d Andrew Berman, the executive director of the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation, said his organization was consulting its lawyers about any other legal recourse that might stop or alter the expansion. \u201cWe\u2019re already suffering from an extreme over-concentration of N.Y.U.-related uses,\u201d Mr. Berman said. \u201cThousands of additional people and millions of additional square feet of construction is eventually going to make the Village feel like a company town.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Assemblywoman Deborah J. Glick, a Democrat whose district includes the area and who was a plaintiff in the case, said the decision \u201cputs the limited open space that we jealously guard and protect totally at risk everywhere in the city.\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d7009ecc8e4820a9b66b328"} +{"question": "How long was the news conference?", "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": "more than three hours long", "sentence": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long .", "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": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long .", "paragraph_id": "5d7012e4c8e4820a9b66bf28"} +{"question": "What is the five-year plan called?", "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": "A2020", "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 \u201c A2020 ,\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 \u201c A2020 ,\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 \u201c A2020 ,\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 \u201c A2020 ,\u201d to broaden the demographics of the group\u2019s membership, staff and governing board.", "paragraph_id": "5d700a43c8e4820a9b66b3dd"} +{"question": "Where is \"An Epilogue for Otro Teatro: True Love\" performed at?", "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": "Gibney Dance: Agnes Varis Performing Arts Center", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d700e77c8e4820a9b66ba6b"} +{"question": "In what series does Mr. Lewis play Nicholas Brody?", "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": "Homeland", "sentence": "\u201cThere\u2019s an important distinction to make,\u201d said Mr. Lewis, best known for playing Nicholas Brody in the series \u201c Homeland .\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 \u201c Homeland .\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 \u201c Homeland .\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 \u201c Homeland .\u201d", "paragraph_id": "5d707350c8e4820a9b66f214"} +{"question": "What country is this story set in?", "paragraph": "\u2b25 \u201cI\u2019d be delighted,\u201d replies John Delahunt, a student at Trinity College, when the young socialite Helen Stokes asks him to accompany her to a hanging. That colorful street entertainment is one of many striking set pieces in THE CONVICTIONS OF JOHN DELAHUNT (Pegasus, $24.95), a remarkable first novel that Andrew Hughes has set in 1840s Dublin and based on crimes of that period. The lovely Helen seems the perfect mate for Delahunt, who was executed, for killing a little boy, in full view of a mob of 10,000 souls in 1842. Hughes challenges historical accounts of Delahunt\u2019s infamous career with an incisive portrait of an impoverished scholar lured into becoming a paid police informant. Urged by his corrupt handlers to bring them murderers (the big money is always in murder), he starts framing innocent people and then, in desperation, begins committing crimes himself. At once a close character study and a sweeping panorama of the era of \u201cdissectionists\u201d who buy bodies for medical research and the \u201cresurrectionists\u201d who dig them up, this fascinating book is a stirring work of fiction and a perceptive chapter in Ireland\u2019s social history. \u2b25", "answer": "Ireland", "sentence": "At once a close character study and a sweeping panorama of the era of \u201cdissectionists\u201d who buy bodies for medical research and the \u201cresurrectionists\u201d who dig them up, this fascinating book is a stirring work of fiction and a perceptive chapter in Ireland \u2019s social history.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2b25 \u201cI\u2019d be delighted,\u201d replies John Delahunt, a student at Trinity College, when the young socialite Helen Stokes asks him to accompany her to a hanging. That colorful street entertainment is one of many striking set pieces in THE CONVICTIONS OF JOHN DELAHUNT (Pegasus, $24.95), a remarkable first novel that Andrew Hughes has set in 1840s Dublin and based on crimes of that period. The lovely Helen seems the perfect mate for Delahunt, who was executed, for killing a little boy, in full view of a mob of 10,000 souls in 1842. Hughes challenges historical accounts of Delahunt\u2019s infamous career with an incisive portrait of an impoverished scholar lured into becoming a paid police informant. Urged by his corrupt handlers to bring them murderers (the big money is always in murder), he starts framing innocent people and then, in desperation, begins committing crimes himself. At once a close character study and a sweeping panorama of the era of \u201cdissectionists\u201d who buy bodies for medical research and the \u201cresurrectionists\u201d who dig them up, this fascinating book is a stirring work of fiction and a perceptive chapter in Ireland \u2019s social history. \u2b25", "paragraph_answer": "\u2b25 \u201cI\u2019d be delighted,\u201d replies John Delahunt, a student at Trinity College, when the young socialite Helen Stokes asks him to accompany her to a hanging. That colorful street entertainment is one of many striking set pieces in THE CONVICTIONS OF JOHN DELAHUNT (Pegasus, $24.95), a remarkable first novel that Andrew Hughes has set in 1840s Dublin and based on crimes of that period. The lovely Helen seems the perfect mate for Delahunt, who was executed, for killing a little boy, in full view of a mob of 10,000 souls in 1842. Hughes challenges historical accounts of Delahunt\u2019s infamous career with an incisive portrait of an impoverished scholar lured into becoming a paid police informant. Urged by his corrupt handlers to bring them murderers (the big money is always in murder), he starts framing innocent people and then, in desperation, begins committing crimes himself. At once a close character study and a sweeping panorama of the era of \u201cdissectionists\u201d who buy bodies for medical research and the \u201cresurrectionists\u201d who dig them up, this fascinating book is a stirring work of fiction and a perceptive chapter in Ireland \u2019s social history. \u2b25", "sentence_answer": "At once a close character study and a sweeping panorama of the era of \u201cdissectionists\u201d who buy bodies for medical research and the \u201cresurrectionists\u201d who dig them up, this fascinating book is a stirring work of fiction and a perceptive chapter in Ireland \u2019s social history.", "paragraph_id": "5d703397c8e4820a9b66deb6"} +{"question": "In what type of building is the museum located?", "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": "a former bank", "sentence": "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.", "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 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.", "paragraph_id": "5d703ee7c8e4820a9b66e438"} +{"question": "What sex was the 8-year-old?", "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": "girl", "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", "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": "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", "paragraph_id": "5d700d55c8e4820a9b66b8e2"} +{"question": "What is the Hudson River Museum's website?", "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": "hrm.org.", "sentence": "914-963-4550; hrm.org.", "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": "914-963-4550; hrm.org. ", "paragraph_id": "5d7069c1c8e4820a9b66f128"} +{"question": "How many seats were contested since they are controlled by the military?", "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": "One-quarter of the seats", "sentence": "One-quarter of the seats were not contested and are controlled by the military.", "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": " One-quarter of the seats were not contested and are controlled by the military.", "paragraph_id": "5d700771c8e4820a9b66ad9b"} +{"question": "What area was Joseph Morelle a majority leader for", "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": "Rochester area", "sentence": "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_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": "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_id": "5d7080fbc8e4820a9b66f3d6"} +{"question": "Who spilled a cup of coffee on themselves?", "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": "a 79-year-old woman", "sentence": "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_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": "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_id": "5d703e36c8e4820a9b66e3d0"} +{"question": "what was the cause of the depression of 70 million people?", "paragraph": "There was no immediate reaction from Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran\u2019s supreme leader, or from his office. The ayatollah, who has the final word on the deal, has often stated that he trusts Iran\u2019s negotiators to make decisions, but warned them not to cross \u201cred lines.\u201d Many in Iran have spent the past week following the news, but also expressing doubt that there would ever be a solution. The sanctions have cut deeply into the lives of ordinary people, contributing to an inflation rate that has exceeded 40 percent, slashing buying power and generally casting a blanket of depression over the nation of 70 million. As the idea of a future without sanctions started to sink in, some became emotional.", "answer": "The sanctions", "sentence": "The sanctions have cut deeply into the lives of ordinary people, contributing to an inflation rate that has exceeded 40 percent, slashing buying power and generally casting a blanket of depression over the nation of 70 million.", "paragraph_sentence": "There was no immediate reaction from Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran\u2019s supreme leader, or from his office. The ayatollah, who has the final word on the deal, has often stated that he trusts Iran\u2019s negotiators to make decisions, but warned them not to cross \u201cred lines.\u201d Many in Iran have spent the past week following the news, but also expressing doubt that there would ever be a solution. The sanctions have cut deeply into the lives of ordinary people, contributing to an inflation rate that has exceeded 40 percent, slashing buying power and generally casting a blanket of depression over the nation of 70 million. As the idea of a future without sanctions started to sink in, some became emotional.", "paragraph_answer": "There was no immediate reaction from Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran\u2019s supreme leader, or from his office. The ayatollah, who has the final word on the deal, has often stated that he trusts Iran\u2019s negotiators to make decisions, but warned them not to cross \u201cred lines.\u201d Many in Iran have spent the past week following the news, but also expressing doubt that there would ever be a solution. The sanctions have cut deeply into the lives of ordinary people, contributing to an inflation rate that has exceeded 40 percent, slashing buying power and generally casting a blanket of depression over the nation of 70 million. As the idea of a future without sanctions started to sink in, some became emotional.", "sentence_answer": " The sanctions have cut deeply into the lives of ordinary people, contributing to an inflation rate that has exceeded 40 percent, slashing buying power and generally casting a blanket of depression over the nation of 70 million.", "paragraph_id": "5d70047bc8e4820a9b66a7e9"} +{"question": "Who scored 18 points for Kentucky?", "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": "Trey Lyles", "sentence": "Trey Lyles scored a career-high 18 points and Aaron Harrison added 16 for Kentucky (28-0, 15-0).", "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": " Trey Lyles scored a career-high 18 points and Aaron Harrison added 16 for Kentucky (28-0, 15-0).", "paragraph_id": "5d7004f0c8e4820a9b66a824"} +{"question": "What is Sheffield economic interest?", "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": "manufacturing", "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": "5d703866c8e4820a9b66e11f"} +{"question": "Which state requires a public records request to view footage?", "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": "Washington State", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d704a24c8e4820a9b66e95c"} +{"question": "What city does this story take place in?", "paragraph": "\u2b25 \u201cI\u2019d be delighted,\u201d replies John Delahunt, a student at Trinity College, when the young socialite Helen Stokes asks him to accompany her to a hanging. That colorful street entertainment is one of many striking set pieces in THE CONVICTIONS OF JOHN DELAHUNT (Pegasus, $24.95), a remarkable first novel that Andrew Hughes has set in 1840s Dublin and based on crimes of that period. The lovely Helen seems the perfect mate for Delahunt, who was executed, for killing a little boy, in full view of a mob of 10,000 souls in 1842. Hughes challenges historical accounts of Delahunt\u2019s infamous career with an incisive portrait of an impoverished scholar lured into becoming a paid police informant. Urged by his corrupt handlers to bring them murderers (the big money is always in murder), he starts framing innocent people and then, in desperation, begins committing crimes himself. At once a close character study and a sweeping panorama of the era of \u201cdissectionists\u201d who buy bodies for medical research and the \u201cresurrectionists\u201d who dig them up, this fascinating book is a stirring work of fiction and a perceptive chapter in Ireland\u2019s social history. \u2b25", "answer": "Dublin", "sentence": "That colorful street entertainment is one of many striking set pieces in THE CONVICTIONS OF JOHN DELAHUNT (Pegasus, $24.95), a remarkable first novel that Andrew Hughes has set in 1840s Dublin and based on crimes of that period.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2b25 \u201cI\u2019d be delighted,\u201d replies John Delahunt, a student at Trinity College, when the young socialite Helen Stokes asks him to accompany her to a hanging. That colorful street entertainment is one of many striking set pieces in THE CONVICTIONS OF JOHN DELAHUNT (Pegasus, $24.95), a remarkable first novel that Andrew Hughes has set in 1840s Dublin and based on crimes of that period. The lovely Helen seems the perfect mate for Delahunt, who was executed, for killing a little boy, in full view of a mob of 10,000 souls in 1842. Hughes challenges historical accounts of Delahunt\u2019s infamous career with an incisive portrait of an impoverished scholar lured into becoming a paid police informant. Urged by his corrupt handlers to bring them murderers (the big money is always in murder), he starts framing innocent people and then, in desperation, begins committing crimes himself. At once a close character study and a sweeping panorama of the era of \u201cdissectionists\u201d who buy bodies for medical research and the \u201cresurrectionists\u201d who dig them up, this fascinating book is a stirring work of fiction and a perceptive chapter in Ireland\u2019s social history. \u2b25", "paragraph_answer": "\u2b25 \u201cI\u2019d be delighted,\u201d replies John Delahunt, a student at Trinity College, when the young socialite Helen Stokes asks him to accompany her to a hanging. That colorful street entertainment is one of many striking set pieces in THE CONVICTIONS OF JOHN DELAHUNT (Pegasus, $24.95), a remarkable first novel that Andrew Hughes has set in 1840s Dublin and based on crimes of that period. The lovely Helen seems the perfect mate for Delahunt, who was executed, for killing a little boy, in full view of a mob of 10,000 souls in 1842. Hughes challenges historical accounts of Delahunt\u2019s infamous career with an incisive portrait of an impoverished scholar lured into becoming a paid police informant. Urged by his corrupt handlers to bring them murderers (the big money is always in murder), he starts framing innocent people and then, in desperation, begins committing crimes himself. At once a close character study and a sweeping panorama of the era of \u201cdissectionists\u201d who buy bodies for medical research and the \u201cresurrectionists\u201d who dig them up, this fascinating book is a stirring work of fiction and a perceptive chapter in Ireland\u2019s social history. \u2b25", "sentence_answer": "That colorful street entertainment is one of many striking set pieces in THE CONVICTIONS OF JOHN DELAHUNT (Pegasus, $24.95), a remarkable first novel that Andrew Hughes has set in 1840s Dublin and based on crimes of that period.", "paragraph_id": "5d703397c8e4820a9b66deb4"} +{"question": "When was the last pavilion?", "paragraph": "Ms. Chalabi, a daughter of Ahmad Chalabi, the onetime United States-backed Iraqi opposition leader, said her foundation asked to represent Iraq again after organizing the last pavilion, in 2013. The government gave approval and curatorial \u201ccarte blanche,\u201d she said, but no money. The foundation chose Philippe Van Cauteren, artistic director of the S.M.A.K. contemporary art museum in Ghent, Belgium, to put together the exhibition, and funded it with 600,000 euros (about $675,000) from private Iraqi companies and individuals.", "answer": "in 2013", "sentence": "Ms. Chalabi, a daughter of Ahmad Chalabi, the onetime United States-backed Iraqi opposition leader, said her foundation asked to represent Iraq again after organizing the last pavilion, in 2013 .", "paragraph_sentence": " Ms. Chalabi, a daughter of Ahmad Chalabi, the onetime United States-backed Iraqi opposition leader, said her foundation asked to represent Iraq again after organizing the last pavilion, in 2013 . The government gave approval and curatorial \u201ccarte blanche,\u201d she said, but no money. The foundation chose Philippe Van Cauteren, artistic director of the S.M.A.K. contemporary art museum in Ghent, Belgium, to put together the exhibition, and funded it with 600,000 euros (about $675,000) from private Iraqi companies and individuals.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Chalabi, a daughter of Ahmad Chalabi, the onetime United States-backed Iraqi opposition leader, said her foundation asked to represent Iraq again after organizing the last pavilion, in 2013 . The government gave approval and curatorial \u201ccarte blanche,\u201d she said, but no money. The foundation chose Philippe Van Cauteren, artistic director of the S.M.A.K. contemporary art museum in Ghent, Belgium, to put together the exhibition, and funded it with 600,000 euros (about $675,000) from private Iraqi companies and individuals.", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Chalabi, a daughter of Ahmad Chalabi, the onetime United States-backed Iraqi opposition leader, said her foundation asked to represent Iraq again after organizing the last pavilion, in 2013 .", "paragraph_id": "5d70140bc8e4820a9b66c06d"} +{"question": "Where was Mr. Sverstiuk exiled?", "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": "Siberia", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d7044f1c8e4820a9b66e7bf"} +{"question": "How much is the Decide Now app?", "paragraph": "Sometimes, of course, you want an app to make the decision for you without any of your input. That\u2019s where Decide Now, $1 on iOS, is great. Think of it like a wheel of fortune. You spin the on-screen wheel that\u2019s labeled with different options and go with the one that\u2019s selected by the marker when the wheel finally stops spinning. The app has many wheel options preloaded \u2014 like your options for a night on the town \u2014 or you can enter them. Decision Maker by Jonathan Chow is a similar, free Android app, although it\u2019s not as attractive. But remember: The app doesn\u2019t have to live with the consequences of your decision. Quick Call\n Lumific is an intelligent photo gallery app that\u2019s just hit Google\u2019s Android app store after being in testing for a while. The app promises to organize your messy smartphone photo archive for you, including automatically choosing what it thinks is the best photo from a group of similar ones and even straightening up images you\u2019ve snapped that are askew. It\u2019s free \u2014 so give it a spin.", "answer": "$1", "sentence": "That\u2019s where Decide Now, $1 on iOS, is great.", "paragraph_sentence": "Sometimes, of course, you want an app to make the decision for you without any of your input. That\u2019s where Decide Now, $1 on iOS, is great. Think of it like a wheel of fortune. You spin the on-screen wheel that\u2019s labeled with different options and go with the one that\u2019s selected by the marker when the wheel finally stops spinning. The app has many wheel options preloaded \u2014 like your options for a night on the town \u2014 or you can enter them. Decision Maker by Jonathan Chow is a similar, free Android app, although it\u2019s not as attractive. But remember: The app doesn\u2019t have to live with the consequences of your decision. Quick Call Lumific is an intelligent photo gallery app that\u2019s just hit Google\u2019s Android app store after being in testing for a while. The app promises to organize your messy smartphone photo archive for you, including automatically choosing what it thinks is the best photo from a group of similar ones and even straightening up images you\u2019ve snapped that are askew. It\u2019s free \u2014 so give it a spin.", "paragraph_answer": "Sometimes, of course, you want an app to make the decision for you without any of your input. That\u2019s where Decide Now, $1 on iOS, is great. Think of it like a wheel of fortune. You spin the on-screen wheel that\u2019s labeled with different options and go with the one that\u2019s selected by the marker when the wheel finally stops spinning. The app has many wheel options preloaded \u2014 like your options for a night on the town \u2014 or you can enter them. Decision Maker by Jonathan Chow is a similar, free Android app, although it\u2019s not as attractive. But remember: The app doesn\u2019t have to live with the consequences of your decision. Quick Call Lumific is an intelligent photo gallery app that\u2019s just hit Google\u2019s Android app store after being in testing for a while. The app promises to organize your messy smartphone photo archive for you, including automatically choosing what it thinks is the best photo from a group of similar ones and even straightening up images you\u2019ve snapped that are askew. It\u2019s free \u2014 so give it a spin.", "sentence_answer": "That\u2019s where Decide Now, $1 on iOS, is great.", "paragraph_id": "5d705bdec8e4820a9b66ef09"} +{"question": "Who is the president of France's soccer federation?", "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": "No\u00ebl Le Gra\u00ebt", "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": "5d7005b7c8e4820a9b66a96f"} +{"question": "Where is the hospital located?", "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": "Dix Hills, N.Y", "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": "5d7073acc8e4820a9b66f220"} +{"question": "Who thought Westbrook was a cat-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": "Dwyane Wade", "sentence": "Dwyane Wade hedged.", "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": " Dwyane Wade hedged.", "paragraph_id": "5d705660c8e4820a9b66ed1f"} +{"question": "Of the people killed in the attack, were civilians targeted?", "paragraph": "MOGADISHU, Somalia \u2014 Somali troops ended a 16-hour siege at a hotel in Somalia\u2019s capital on Saturday, during which gunmen killed 15 people, officials said. The Shabab, a militant Islamist group that routinely strikes government and business sites here in the capital, claimed responsibility for the attack, which also left at least 13 people wounded, Somali officials said. An elite American-trained counterterrorism unit rescued 50 hostages being held by the gunmen at the Maka al-Mukarama Hotel, said Mohamed Abdi Hayir, the minister of information, tourism and culture. The five attackers killed 15 people, Mr. Hayir said: Somalia\u2019s ambassador to Switzerland, a consultant for the Somali Central Bank, six civilians, three hotel guards and four government soldiers. All the gunmen were killed, Mr. Hayir added. The attack began on Friday afternoon around 4 p.m., witnesses said, when a car bomber detonated explosives at a rear gate of the hotel, which is popular with government officials and foreigners. Gunmen quickly overpowered security guards and took control of the hotel before an elite police antiterrorism unit stormed the hotel compound.", "answer": "Somalia\u2019s ambassador to Switzerland, a consultant for the Somali Central Bank, six civilians, three hotel guards and four government soldiers.", "sentence": "The five attackers killed 15 people, Mr. Hayir said: Somalia\u2019s ambassador to Switzerland, a consultant for the Somali Central Bank, six civilians, three hotel guards and four government soldiers. All the gunmen were killed, Mr. Hayir added.", "paragraph_sentence": "MOGADISHU, Somalia \u2014 Somali troops ended a 16-hour siege at a hotel in Somalia\u2019s capital on Saturday, during which gunmen killed 15 people, officials said. The Shabab, a militant Islamist group that routinely strikes government and business sites here in the capital, claimed responsibility for the attack, which also left at least 13 people wounded, Somali officials said. An elite American-trained counterterrorism unit rescued 50 hostages being held by the gunmen at the Maka al-Mukarama Hotel, said Mohamed Abdi Hayir, the minister of information, tourism and culture. The five attackers killed 15 people, Mr. Hayir said: Somalia\u2019s ambassador to Switzerland, a consultant for the Somali Central Bank, six civilians, three hotel guards and four government soldiers. All the gunmen were killed, Mr. Hayir added. The attack began on Friday afternoon around 4 p.m., witnesses said, when a car bomber detonated explosives at a rear gate of the hotel, which is popular with government officials and foreigners. Gunmen quickly overpowered security guards and took control of the hotel before an elite police antiterrorism unit stormed the hotel compound.", "paragraph_answer": "MOGADISHU, Somalia \u2014 Somali troops ended a 16-hour siege at a hotel in Somalia\u2019s capital on Saturday, during which gunmen killed 15 people, officials said. The Shabab, a militant Islamist group that routinely strikes government and business sites here in the capital, claimed responsibility for the attack, which also left at least 13 people wounded, Somali officials said. An elite American-trained counterterrorism unit rescued 50 hostages being held by the gunmen at the Maka al-Mukarama Hotel, said Mohamed Abdi Hayir, the minister of information, tourism and culture. The five attackers killed 15 people, Mr. Hayir said: Somalia\u2019s ambassador to Switzerland, a consultant for the Somali Central Bank, six civilians, three hotel guards and four government soldiers. All the gunmen were killed, Mr. Hayir added. The attack began on Friday afternoon around 4 p.m., witnesses said, when a car bomber detonated explosives at a rear gate of the hotel, which is popular with government officials and foreigners. Gunmen quickly overpowered security guards and took control of the hotel before an elite police antiterrorism unit stormed the hotel compound.", "sentence_answer": "The five attackers killed 15 people, Mr. Hayir said: Somalia\u2019s ambassador to Switzerland, a consultant for the Somali Central Bank, six civilians, three hotel guards and four government soldiers. All the gunmen were killed, Mr. Hayir added.", "paragraph_id": "5d702c87c8e4820a9b66da1b"} +{"question": "who came in first in the Boston Marathon?", "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": "Meb Keflezighi", "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.", "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": "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.", "paragraph_id": "5d702992c8e4820a9b66d723"} +{"question": "What did Evelyn Roth do to stand up from the rest?", "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": "crocheted heat-repelling car covers from discarded videotape film", "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": "5d702b75c8e4820a9b66d908"} +{"question": "Where does Dr. Kenneth Covinsky practice?", "paragraph": "On average, the out-of-pocket cost for a patient with dementia was $61,522 \u2014 more than 80 percent higher than the cost for someone with heart disease or cancer. The reason is that dementia patients need caregivers to watch them, help with basic activities like eating, dressing and bathing, and provide constant supervision to make sure they do not wander off or harm themselves. None of those costs were covered by Medicare. For many families, the cost of caring for a dementia patient often \u201cconsumed almost their entire household wealth,\u201d said Dr. Amy S. Kelley, a geriatrician at Icahn School of Medicine at Mt. Sinai in New York and the lead author of the paper published on Monday in the Annals of Internal Medicine. \u201cIt\u2019s stunning that people who start out with the least end up with even less,\u201d said Dr. Kenneth Covinsky, a geriatrician at the University of California in San Francisco. \u201cIt\u2019s scary. And they haven\u2019t even counted some of the costs, like the daughter who gave up time from work and is losing part of her retirement and her children\u2019s college fund.\u201d", "answer": "University of California", "sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s stunning that people who start out with the least end up with even less,\u201d said Dr. Kenneth Covinsky, a geriatrician at the University of California in San Francisco.", "paragraph_sentence": "On average, the out-of-pocket cost for a patient with dementia was $61,522 \u2014 more than 80 percent higher than the cost for someone with heart disease or cancer. The reason is that dementia patients need caregivers to watch them, help with basic activities like eating, dressing and bathing, and provide constant supervision to make sure they do not wander off or harm themselves. None of those costs were covered by Medicare. For many families, the cost of caring for a dementia patient often \u201cconsumed almost their entire household wealth,\u201d said Dr. Amy S. Kelley, a geriatrician at Icahn School of Medicine at Mt. Sinai in New York and the lead author of the paper published on Monday in the Annals of Internal Medicine. \u201cIt\u2019s stunning that people who start out with the least end up with even less,\u201d said Dr. Kenneth Covinsky, a geriatrician at the University of California in San Francisco. \u201cIt\u2019s scary. And they haven\u2019t even counted some of the costs, like the daughter who gave up time from work and is losing part of her retirement and her children\u2019s college fund.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "On average, the out-of-pocket cost for a patient with dementia was $61,522 \u2014 more than 80 percent higher than the cost for someone with heart disease or cancer. The reason is that dementia patients need caregivers to watch them, help with basic activities like eating, dressing and bathing, and provide constant supervision to make sure they do not wander off or harm themselves. None of those costs were covered by Medicare. For many families, the cost of caring for a dementia patient often \u201cconsumed almost their entire household wealth,\u201d said Dr. Amy S. Kelley, a geriatrician at Icahn School of Medicine at Mt. Sinai in New York and the lead author of the paper published on Monday in the Annals of Internal Medicine. \u201cIt\u2019s stunning that people who start out with the least end up with even less,\u201d said Dr. Kenneth Covinsky, a geriatrician at the University of California in San Francisco. \u201cIt\u2019s scary. And they haven\u2019t even counted some of the costs, like the daughter who gave up time from work and is losing part of her retirement and her children\u2019s college fund.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s stunning that people who start out with the least end up with even less,\u201d said Dr. Kenneth Covinsky, a geriatrician at the University of California in San Francisco.", "paragraph_id": "5d70310bc8e4820a9b66dcff"} \ No newline at end of file